I’m told there’s some sort of election happening today? Here in America? I think they’re picking a new set of aldermen or a new comptroller or something like that? I’m not really sure, as I don’t think it’s been getting all that much publicity in the media. Now that I think about it, I may have gotten some fundraising emails from the big political parties. I want to say one are the Whigs, and then there’s the Neo-Monaerchists? Is that right? Seems close enough. Anyway, we decided to have our own little election.
What is our election about? It’s about something deeply, richly American, something important and vital, not like whatever trivial showdown is happening tonight. It’s an election about something that matters: what is the best Chrysler K-car variant to, uh, rule America, I guess?
Yes, K-cars! The front-wheel-drive platform that usually came with an anemic 2.2-liter four-banger (there were exceptions with turbos and a Mitsubishi four, for example) and often with all-I-had-handy-was-a-ruler styling. These cars saved Chrysler from disaster and allowed them to pay off their bankruptcy loans early.
There were a lot of cars built on the K platform or modified versions of the platform, but we just picked six of them – in long, involved primaries, of course – and now you get to vote for which K will Rule Them All. Like that ring in those long-ass movies and books about wizards and elves and smurfs and shit.
So, with that, let’s look at our candidates!
The original, basic K-Car! These came in Dodge and Plymouth flavors, in sedans, two-doors, and wagons, but they were all pretty much the same. I have direct experience with these from back in the day, and I can say from experience that these were, charitably, crap.
But, they were inexpensive crap that looked decent and did their jobs, for the most part, and were not terrible on gas mileage, and that went a long way in early 1980s America.
Sure, I once saw my friend close the driver’s door and a four-inch bolt clanged out onto the pavement, but that doesn’t mean these boxy things weren’t, for Chrysler, the right car at the right time. Because they were.
Was an upmarket K-car possible? Hell yeah it was, and the New Yorker proved it! These cars were on the vanguard of digital dashboards and, yes, their Texas Instruments-supplied voice synthesis systems I really do believe made Americans aware of the usage of the word “ajar,” at least in relation to doors.
The interiors were quite plush, and they had that vinyl quarter-roof, which I don’t recommend you look too carefully at, lest you discover that it was made from a half-assed fiberglass cap glued on back there.
The Chrysler minivans of the 1980s were genuine successes, and were pretty fantastic vehicles – perhaps the best of the K-cars, in some ways. Built on modified K-car platforms, these were marvels of packaging efficiency with their transverse FWD layouts that left pretty much everything from the front axle back available for people or stuff.
A real re-birth of the minivan concept, these were the backbone of American familial transport for years and years.
In some ways, this may be the oddest of the K-cars (not counting the not-exactly K-car Maserati TC by Chrysler) with its convertible top and faux wood-paneled sides. It had to be decades since a non-station wagon dared to wear fake wood before the LeBaron brought it back, and that was a bold move.
What else out there has a look and feel like a woody LeBaron droptop? Hardly anything.
I think the Laser, along with its sibling Dodge Daytona, were pretty bold competitors to other sporty/muscle sort of cars available at the time. Unlike the Mustang or even a Toyota Supra, the Laser was a FWD sporty car, and made about 145 horsepower, pretty decent for the time.
These weren’t especially great, but they weren’t bad, either! And that drop-down side window line is pretty fun, right?
These are pretty amazing limos for a number of reasons: it’s a four-cylinder limo, which is already unusual, though the Mitsubishi-sourced engine under that hood does have hemispherical combustion chambers, so it’s a true hemi.
They’re long, but also oddly narrow, and overall while they do have limosinic proportions, they’re not all that big. And the interiors! They’re absolutely velour-slathered! If you love velour, like, really love velour, you can’t get anything better than one of these velour cocoons.
Okay! Those are your candidates! Each offers their own highly specific set of charms and foibles, like all good political candidates, so you need to carefully consider everything and balance all of that information with the needs of yourself, your family, and, yes, the nation.
It’s time to vote! Take your time! Consider carefully, and remember that your vote is private!
Once you voted, please enjoy this I VOTED sticker you can print out and affix to your clothes with a blot of mustard.
The Caravan/Voyager were the real heroes in saving the company. The Daytona was very good looking. I had one. That’s all the good I can say.
I have had a number of company cars over the years. An ’84 Dodge Reliant s/w replaced the ’76 Dodge Coronet s/w I had been saddled with prior. It was a huge step forward from that barge that could barely get out of its own way with its malaise era 318.
I mean, I don’t think the K gets much better than the Caravan and variants. Make mine a turbo. Or hell, I’d honestly be cool with a commercial version as well.
Long wheelbase Caravan. Remove the rear seats and haul 4 small motorcycles or 1 ’73 Rupp 440 Magnum.
My grandfather had a New Yorker Mark Cross Edition – Burgundy on Burgundy. Landau roof. The plush leather seats. Reading lamp in the back. The voice telling young kid me the door was ajar. It was the best car in my book as a kid.
It was just like this one except for the exterior color. I want to ride in that interior now.
https://bringatrailer.com/listing/1990-chrysler-new-yorker-2/
My parents carted me around in a brown Plymouth Reliant sedan with roll up windows, before upgrading to a Reliant wagon (red, not brown). Not as fun as the New Yorker.
That interior. You just know you could take a nap while it rolls down the highway (slowly).
Minivan is closest to full-size van: minivan wins. It’s that simple.
Limo is second and New Yorker a distant third.
Also, an anecdote from a sibling who had a high school classmate with a Reliant:
“He used to put it in reverse, stomp the gas, and then as it was moving backwards shift into drive. The wheel spinout looked cool. I asked him, “Is that bad for the transmission?” “Nah, it’s fine.”. Two months later, “[friend], want to hang out?” “I can’t go anywhere, my car needs a new transmission.””
You and your van misinformation damaging this election! 😉
I knew people in high school too who did just that with their cars; not having a car then, I was aghast but also not knowing a ton about cars either, I was like “um, okay” when I got that sort of explanation. Looking back on it all, I’m kinda amazed they held up as long as they did, though I do recall plenty of “oh, my car’s in the shop” kinda talk.
This is a tough one. The Aries/Reliant were necessary crap, the minivans truly innovative, and the Laser/Daytona actually rather cool looking. The LeBaron convertible and New Yorker are just attempts at K-luxury. The real winner should be the minivans, though I like the Laser/Daytona the most. Think I’ll cast my vote for the most ridiculous, laughable one: the Executive Limousine, and that’s only because the K-Lambo never made it past the idea stage.
A nice guy brought a New Yorker to a car show. It was a beautiful example and the interior is nicer than my living room. However, as an engineer, I just can’t get over the crappy mechanicals, cheap materials, and slipshod assembly.
Good marketing somehow convinced people to pay premium prices for a K-car with chrome and some post-Corinthian leather.
It’s odd now to think about what the luxury car market looked like back then, isn’t it? European stuff was the purview of the very well off, and the Asian offerings hadn’t arrived yet. So domestics it was, but after the land barges of the ’70s, it was angular, smaller, and more tech-y, which usually meant balky digital dashes, but with the old school flourishes you mention.
You managed not to list either of my parent’s K cars, an Aries longroof and a Dodge 400. The Aries broke a camshaft just driving along one day, and that was not a car that had ever been driven particularly hard. In any case the executive limo is the stupid choice and I’m going for it.
I voted for the Laser because I didn’t see you say it couldn’t be the turbo version…
I am certain I have never heard or read that last sentence before.
Are you from the Midwest, by chance?
(‘It could be worse’)
My first was a K-car. 1987 LeBaron Sedan. They’re hard to find and didn’t make it on the ticket. It looked just like a short version of the limo, or a cheaper version of the New Yorker. Anyhoo, it started on fire in the parking lot of a casino in 1999 or so. Good stuff! That was the day that I learned what fire retardant powder tastes like, that it’s a really bad sign if the paint on your hood starts to bubble like a mud pot, and that it’s not OK to mix-n-match roller rockers from two different but mostly the same engines. K cars, man. Life was good back then.
On behalf of a one Art Vandelay, I had to vote for the K-car ‘vert… The Chrysler LeBaron Town & Country Convertible.
Really, though, didn’t half of the innards make their way into the Neon and then from the Neon to the PT Cruiser?
Oh, I’m totally writing in.
LeBaron GTS and Dodge Lancer.
Look them up. Easily the best-looking Ks.
This is the BEST answer!
Yeah, that GTS was a good looking car.
I believe the Whigs ran against the Tories. However I voted for the minivan because it is the only one that was actually special and competent for what it was. The rest cheap reliable knock offs.
Write-in vote for the Lemons K-car wagon that traveled the country being driven by different teams
I voted for the limo because it’s big and very really classy, probably the classiest car to ever exist. We love the limo, don’t we folks?
No, we love the Puerto Ricans.
Even if Trump said they live in a shit hole country.
They had immense hurricane damage and he just threw rolls of paper towels to them.
What a heartless idiot.
I really thought it would be abundantly clear that my comment was a joke
Not an issue amigo.
I understood you 100%.
And agreed 100%.
All hail the idiot in chief…
Appreciated the Laser, and always had a soft spot for the very tufted seats in the NYer, but the king has to be the Caravan/Voyager by virtue of inventing a new class of family vehicle that completely took the industry by storm. Humble, useful vehicles, perfect for the segment for which they were intended.
I believe we are voting on the county commissioner for the taxing of sewage utilities in agriculture. There are 14 candidates and only 5 are dead!
The Caravan. While the names of the others are recognizable names, they are not really cars that changed anything. That/those minivans were recognizable on the road, and they changed how a lot of families traveled. The others belong on Meh Mondays from the old site.
When I was active duty USAF, I had a special assignment one day where I was to drive around our Colonel and a General from Thailand.
In an Air Force Blue Reliant K.
It was not a good day.
Oh, if I had a million dollars to see this.
I voted for the base K-car. BUT the best one was the long roof LeBaron Woodie Town & Country 2.2 Turbo. That thing flat out embarrasses any other wagon of the time. And that vibration on turbo spoil up? Sublime!
Yeah you are right. Turbo woody wagon wins. A buddy of mine seriously considered one in half way decent condition a few years ago. Asking price was like $4500? Registered, running, driving.
Buehler’s Mom had one of those:
Katie Bueller: I just picked up Jeannie at the police station! She got a speeding ticket, another speeding ticket, and I lost the Vermont deal because of her!
Tom Bueller: I think we should shoot her.
There can be only one – here in the Thanksgiving season: The woody convertible!
https://www.imcdb.org/v030793.html
The radio still works.
How do you know where we’re going with this?
The Executive Limo is one of the dumbest cars ever made and thus one of the best.
If you have to have a K car, at least it is unique, and your kids can truthfully say that they got dropped off at school in a limousine.
Missing the Lancer/Lebaron or anything Shelby’d, I’m going with the choice of potential Canadian millionaires, the Reliant.
“I own a minor-league hockey team!”
My sister won a K car in 1981. You could peel back the plastic lining on a bottle top on a glass bottle of Coke (or in her case, Tab), and if it showed the car, you won. She had just turned 16, and my parents weren’t going to let her get her own car, so it was totally meant to be.
We were an Oldsmobile family, and we had the big wagons. So when my dad opened up the hood on the K-car, he shouted to my mom “Jesus Christ, Phyllis, the fan is plastic!”
That would have been incredible for a 16 year old. How long did the K car last her? I always envisioned these as having a good run of about 3 years before they were scrapped.
The car lasted about 8 years. Ended up with an issue where it wouldn’t hold an alignment, but it always started and always worked. Of course, the only options it had were an automatic transmission, full width hubcaps, and an AM radio, so what’s not to work? I also think it had power steering. My sister replaced the radio with an AM/FM cassette player, and got a second speaker for the back shelf, so it was STEREO!
COTD
“Plastics. There’s a great future in Plastics.”
Nice reference. No Alfa for my sister. In fact, when we were at the dealership, picking up the car, she asked if she could swap it for the little Dodge 024, something sporty. The dealership would only give a wholesale credit for the K car, and my dad would have to pay the difference, and that wasn’t happening…