Home » Twelve-Year-Old-Me Wants Both Of These: 1980 Fiat X1/9 vs 1985 Dodge Shelby Charger

Twelve-Year-Old-Me Wants Both Of These: 1980 Fiat X1/9 vs 1985 Dodge Shelby Charger

Sbsd 6 29 2023
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Welcome back to Shitbox Showdown! Today I’m dragging you all along on another trip down memory lane; I hope you don’t mind. But before we get into all that, let’s see how our cop cars did yesterday:

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That’s what I expected. The Taurus is a cool idea, but a good ol’ V8 Panther is hard to deny. Personally, I might hold out for a livery-spec Town Car instead of a cop-spec Crown Vic, for the cushy interior.

Remember the cars you loved as a kid? How many of them have you since realized are kind of lame? Happens to all of us. But the thing I’ve been noticing is that as I get older, the “kind of lame” cars are the ones I actually crave. Maybe it’s just a natural result of aging to the point where I don’t give a shit what anyone thinks of what I drive, or maybe it’s because most new cars are just so damn boring that a silly throwback is an enticing alternative. These two were both cars I thought were the coolest things on the road when I was in junior high. Thirty-year-old me wouldn’t have been caught dead in them, but fifty-year-old me thinks maybe twelve-year-old me was on to something. Let’s check them out and see if you agree.

1980 Fiat X1/9 – $4,995

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Engine/drivetrain: 1.5 liter overhead cam inline 4, five-speed manual, RWD

Location: Portland, OR

Odometer reading: 61,000 miles

Runs/drives? Starts and runs, but needs old gas cleaned out

I mean, come on. How can you not love a mid-engined Italian sports car, even a tiny one? Fiat’s little X1/9 is the real deal, too. It was designed by Marcello Gandini at Bertone, who also designed the Lamborghini Miura and Countach and several other cars you’ve had posters of. Its little 1.5 liter four-cylinder engine was designed by Aurelio Lampredi, famed Ferrari engine designer. Heavy hitters, both. But instead of the stratospheric asking prices of their other creations, this gold X1/9 can be had for comparative pocket change.

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The X1/9’s basic layout is a formula that would later be copied wholesale by Pontiac engineers for the Fiero: Take the engine, drivetrain, and suspension from a front-wheel-drive economy car and relocate it all to just behind the seats of a small doorstop-shaped sports coupe. The X1/9 takes its engine and drivetrain from the Fiat 128, a charming, boxy little sedan that’s another personal favorite of mine. The seller says this car’s engine will run, but has some old bad gas that needs to be cleaned out of the tank (and pump, and filter, and lines, and injectors). If the rest of the car checks out mechanically, the best solution might be the famed “Italian tuneup.”

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The X1/9 has a removable targa roof, which stores in the frunk when removed. Unlike some other targa-top cars I could mention (C4 Corvette, I’m looking at you), the X1/9 doesn’t turn into a shaky, floppy mess with its roof off. Fiat designed this car to meet safety standards that never came to be, and as a result, it’s a rigid platform.

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The natural enemy of all Fiats from this era is rust, of course, and despite being a west coast car, this one has not escaped its wrath. The back edge of the trunk lid and the bottoms of the doors are getting a bit bubbly. It also has a little wrinkle on the right front corner below the headlight; hopefully the headlight still pops up all right. But overall, it’s exactly the condition I like for a car like this: just a little scruffy around the edges, but still looks good when you turn and look back at it in the parking lot.

1985 Dodge Shelby Charger – $4,000

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Engine/drivetrain: Turbocharged 2.2 liter overhead cam inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD

Location: El Cerrito, CA

Odometer reading: listed as 111,111 (probably means unknown)

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Runs/drives? Doesn’t say, but I’m going to assume it does

When I visited my dad in Las Vegas a couple of years ago, we took a tour of the Shelby American factory. There was a smallish museum attached to the factory with a lot of cool cars in it, but I was dismayed that not a single one of them was a product of Shelby’s involvement with Chrysler Corporation in the 1980s. There was a wall mural, but no cars. Not even this one, the most obvious choice, the one that started it all: the Dodge Shelby Charger.

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It’s a simple formula, and one that Carroll Shelby knew well: Stick the biggest engine in the smallest car, and go tear shit up. For mid-1980s Chrysler, there was no “biggest engine;” the overhead-cam 2.2 liter four was pretty much it. But starting in 1984, it gained a turbocharger, and it woke up the little L-body Omni and Charger nicely. The four-door Omni version was called the GLH, which stood for “Goes Like Hell,” and for an econobox at that time, it most certainly did.

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This car has had its original turbocharged 2.2 replaced by a later “Turbo II” engine. I know there are differences, and I know it means a bump in power, but I don’t know the specifics. I do know we have at least one commenter who will happily explain it; I’ll leave it to them to do so. The seller doesn’t say whether this car runs and drives or not, but I am operating under the assumption that it is able to leave this driveway under its own power.

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The engine isn’t the only part of this car that came from a different car. Shelby Chargers were pretty thoroughly color-coordinated; the paint color (blue with silver stripes, silver with blue stripes, burgundy with silver stripes, or black with silver stripes) matched the interior. This car’s seats appear to have come from a silver and blue Shelby. The partial blue stripes visible on the roof are also suspect; I wonder if this might be the by-product of two wrecks. A smattering of “spare parts” of various color schemes are also included.

So there they are: A pair of cars that a younger version of myself would have gone nuts over. They’re in a bit rougher shape than they were back then, but then, so am I. And I have to admit, nostalgic as I feel towards them both, I’d probably be better off with model kits of them than the real thing. Still, it’s cool to know that they’re still out there, still broadly viable, and still more or less affordable. I’d have a hard time choosing, but I don’t have to – you do.

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Oh, and by the way, a quick programming note: due to some discussions on Discord, I’m going to try going back to the original Friday formula tomorrow, and have a run-off between the week’s four winners. So choose wisely today – whatever wins, you’re gonna see it again.

(Image credits: Craigslist sellers)

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Boulevard_Yachtsman
Boulevard_Yachtsman
1 year ago

My uncle had a blue and silver Shelby like this. 12-year old me wanted that car bad. 16-year old me got to rebuild an ’85 Duster Turismo from the boss’s boneyard instead. I did like the way that car looked, but with a 3-speed slush-box backing up the carbureted 2.2, it was just disappointing to drive in every way. My friend’s beat up Omni with the same engine was much more fun to drive simply because it had a stick shift. So, I voted for the Charger with the idea that I could finally obtain the “correct” version of my first regularly-driven car.

Of course, after reading rootwyrm’s take on this, I wouldn’t mind rescinding that Shelby-vote as it’s now obvious the turbo-conversion puts it well outside of my “guy who messes around with cars on the weekend” level of DIY mechanic ability. I never paid much attention to the X1/9, but the specs do sound fun.

All that said, these asking prices kinda suck. However, they are making me feel alright with my recent purchase of a 2000 Jaguar XK8 convertible that runs, drives, looks amazing from 10 feet, and even has working AC for $4K.

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
1 year ago

Don’t Dodge it, Fix It Again, Tony!

Duke of Kent
Duke of Kent
1 year ago

The Challenger has a cooler name. The X1/9 sounds like an algebra problem, but I’m a geek who likes math, so I’ll go with the Fiat.

Gilbert Wham
Gilbert Wham
1 year ago
Reply to  Duke of Kent

Challenger, Scmallenger. The X/19 name sounds like a spaceship, and if you stuck some fins and lasers where the wheels go, it would look like it ought to be shot out of a launch tube from Babylon 5 or Battlestar Galactica.

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
1 year ago
Reply to  Gilbert Wham

But Challenger was an actual spaceship…
(You’re not wrong, though, and I picked the Colonial Viper X1/9, too)

Lokki
Lokki
1 year ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

That “spaceship” Challenger suffered from some quality problems too…

Thomas Metcalf
Thomas Metcalf
1 year ago
Reply to  Duke of Kent

X1/9 is either an algebra problem or a top contender for the name of Elon Musk’s next kid.

A. Barth
A. Barth
1 year ago
Reply to  Duke of Kent

The Challenger does have a cooler name, but it’s not in the Showdown: this is a Charger. 🙂

So far the Challenger name has been applied only to the original E-bodies and to the modern two-door equivalent. That’s good.

The Charger name, unfortunately, has been applied to these FWD 4-cylinder crapcans and to a four-door whatever. I am slightly bitter about this.

TriangleRAD
TriangleRAD
1 year ago
Reply to  A. Barth

So far the Challenger name has been applied only to the original E-bodies and to the modern two-door equivalent. That’s good.

Aren’t you forgetting something?

AlterId
AlterId
1 year ago
Reply to  TriangleRAD

No louvers on the rear side windows of the example at the link, though. Did they remove them later in the Challenger’s run, or did the photographer confuse that with the badge-engineered and louver-deengineered Plymouth Sapporo, which looked like it carried the micro-personal luxury coupe theme a little better?

Sgtyukon
Sgtyukon
1 year ago

If the ad doesn’t say whether the car runs, why would you assume it does? I’d assume it doesn’t. I guess I’d go with the Fiat too.

LTDScott
LTDScott
1 year ago

Huh, I went to the Shelby museum in Vegas like 10 years ago before they moved and as the former owner of two different Omni GLHs I was stoked to see an Omni GLHS in the museum. Bummer that’s not the case anymore.

Isis
Isis
1 year ago

I know the fiat started out as unreliable crap, but a turbododge in that questionable kind of condition isn’t going to be any better if it even runs at all.

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
1 year ago

Really surprised at the results so far, those fiats are so terribly engineered and designed that they’re always cheap because they’re always broken.

The Shelby Charger OTOH, well, say what you want about the car, but the powerplant is great! I’ve driven a couple GLH cars and they friggin scoot, boys!

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 year ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

“Really surprised at the results so far, those fiats are so terribly engineered and designed that they’re always cheap because they’re always broken”

Mine wasn’t. Fuel injection and electronic ignition made a world of difference on the later ones.

Plus rust isn’t a thing where I live.

Last edited 1 year ago by Cheap Bastard
Nsane In The MembraNe
Nsane In The MembraNe
1 year ago

I think the Fiat is going to run away with this. It’s a manual, mid engine, RWD, Italian sports car with a roof that comes off for fuck it money. Yeah, I know it’ll have a bunch of issues, but that’s half the fun with owning an old sports car. I think this would make for a wonderful weekend/project car for someone who’s good with a wrench or has enough disposable income that they don’t mind helping their local mechanic who specializes in Italian stuff put his or her kids through college.

That being said, I do think the Shelby Charger is kind of neat and I’ve always liked the concept of a light or light-ish weight coupe with an over strung 4 popper. The SVO Mustang from this era is cool as hell and I came very close to buying an HPP S550 a few years ago. I maintain that that was a cool car that didn’t get enough love.

Anyway, you can beat the crap out of it on track then get 30 MPG cruising on your way home. I think that’s neat and the weight savings/handling benefits over using a bigger engine can be pretty significant. Either way…fun picks today!

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 year ago

I’m voting for the X1/9. Always loved the design of these cars and they are an absolute hoot to drive. Fast? Only in your imagination. Put a curve in its path, though, and it will outquick most anything. And the top comes off! Just don’t open a Coke around it because you know what that does to rust.

Last edited 1 year ago by Canopysaurus
Luxobarge
Luxobarge
1 year ago

If I’m going buy an unreliable ’80s performance car, I at least want it to have some flair. Voted Fiat.

InWayOverMyHead
InWayOverMyHead
1 year ago

What are the chances that rusty old turbo even spins? Fiat please.

XLEJim700
XLEJim700
1 year ago

X

Mark it Fiat, Dude.

FloridaNative
FloridaNative
1 year ago

I really liked both of these as a young’un myself as well. The mismatches of the Charger give the edge to the X1/9 today.

Last edited 1 year ago by FloridaNative
Gene1969
Gene1969
1 year ago

This is easy for me.
I was 16 when that Charger was for sale and lived less than twenty blocks away from Chrysler World Headquarters.

I’ll take that Charger all day.

XXLTall
XXLTall
1 year ago

At my HS job fast-food joint in the early 90s co-workers owned both of these cars in similar shape. The Shelby was the dork who insisted it and he was cool. The X1/9 was owned by the player dude that got more girls than any fast food worker should. So obvious winner.

Thx1138
Thx1138
1 year ago

Fiat wins the race! I would say that the Shelby has been put together with bits and pieces from many donor cars when I look at it and who knows if they have done the proper running of a turbo from that era with giving it a chance to cool down when done.

The Fiat reminds me of my post surgery car (Alfa Romeo Spider) that I got running but got so many tickets parking it on the street due to my driveway being high enough to rip off the exhaust that it was better to get rid of it than fight the tickets (in my county you have to move a vehicle every 72 hours and I was an easy ticket for parking enforcement to fill the quota every week).

I wonder if you are 6′ if you will fit in the car without extra work?

Alexk98
Alexk98
1 year ago

Cars like these I treat like I’m buying the seller as much as the car. I voted Dodge, not because it’s the car I’d rather have, but the seller I’d rather deal with. The X1/9 listing is rubbing me in all the wrong ways, and it seems to need about 3-4k in parts and labor to be worth about 9-10k, assuming the rust is truly not that bad beyond whats seen. The charger on the other hand, well, it’s crap, but appropriately priced given the decent amount of extra parts included and Turbo II swap.

10001010
10001010
1 year ago

Of these two which would look cooler broken down on the side of I-10 between Hankamer and Anahuac? When both are actually running which will be more fun to drive?

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 year ago
Reply to  10001010

Fiat on both counts.

Arrest-me Red
Arrest-me Red
1 year ago

Take the Dodge here, don’t want the “pleasure” of a Fiat.

Icouldntfindaclevername
Icouldntfindaclevername
1 year ago

My Internet money goes to the X1/9. My best friend had one back in high school. That thing was a hoot to drive.

Chronometric
Chronometric
1 year ago

I had a Dodge Daytona Turbo. It was an utter POS in terms of quality, design, drivability, and reliability. The X1/9 looks like a major headache but it’s rare, exotic, and cool.

Last edited 1 year ago by Chronometric
A. Barth
A. Barth
1 year ago
Reply to  Chronometric

I had a non-turbo Daytona and, like yours, it was a POS in all major respects.

In my unbiased opinion, the Fiat looks like a good time.

George Daily
George Daily
1 year ago
Reply to  Chronometric

I had a ’84 Turbo 5 speed. My first brand new car. What a POS! constantly broke down in the worst places. Mid Town Tunnel, Montauk Point, Middle of no where North Carolina. Finally I was sitting at a light in neutral and the trans exploded. My mechanic took it off my hands to rebuild for his daughter and gave me his ’65 Galaxy convertible in exchange. Best car deal I ever had!

Geoff Buchholz
Geoff Buchholz
1 year ago

When I was eleven years old, a family friend shopping for cars took me on a test drive in an X1/9. I was instantly smitten, and I still am. We’ll take the Fiat.

Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
1 year ago

“But the thing I’ve been noticing is that as I get older, the “kind of lame” cars are the ones I actually crave. Maybe it’s just a natural result of aging to the point where I don’t give a shit what anyone thinks of what I drive, or maybe it’s because most new cars are just so damn boring that a silly throwback is an enticing alternative. These two were both cars I thought were the coolest things on the road when I was in junior high. Thirty-year-old me wouldn’t have been caught dead in them, but fifty-year-old me thinks maybe twelve-year-old me was on to something.”

This is me, almost 100% the same. Which is why I own both a Yugo and a ’77 Porsche 924, the slowest, least desirable Porsche of all time. Don’t get me wrong, I still have other allegedly “cooler” vehicles, but what I come to find out as I get older is that sometimes the more interesting cars are the ones you form a better relationship with. Both the Yugo and the 924 have character in spades, and getting to know and understand them better makes the ownership experience pretty rewarding.

I think when you get to a certain age maybe also you realize that you really don’t care whether someone else’s car makes more power than yours. There’s always a bigger fish out there somewhere.

As far as these two, I have to go with the Fiat, because why the hell not a Fiat, plus the engine drives the rear wheels as nature intended for sporty cars, and also you can say you own a genuine Gandini creation. However, I’ve only sat in one X1/9 in my life and when I did I came to realize that Gandini didn’t anticipate fellas 6’4″ sitting in his car, and the back of my head hits the targa bar. I’m fairly sure that I wouldn’t be able to get into the car at all with the top in place. In spite of this, I still want one, this is how stupid I am.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 year ago
Reply to  Matt Sexton

There are usually tall guy modifications, lowered seats and the like. You’ll be fine haha

Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
1 year ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

See, this is the kind of optimism I need in my car life!

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 year ago
Reply to  Matt Sexton

haha I have seen a 6′ 6″ guy fold himself out of an Elise. I don’t recall the mods he made, but he managed to get a car that stock felt perfectly designed for a 5′ 9″ guy, and make it comfortable, or at least doable for him.

Gilbert Wham
Gilbert Wham
1 year ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

Can’t a fellow also stuff a fiat Uno turbo engine into these without too much trouble? Then you can snap oversteer into a tree clad in Gandini-styled metalwork! La Bella figura!

Droid
Droid
1 year ago
Reply to  Gilbert Wham

molto bello!

Millermatic
Millermatic
1 year ago
Reply to  Matt Sexton

As a fellow old transaxle Porsche owner… I’m still amazed how low that car is to the ground compared to… pretty much everything. It took me a while to learn that, unlike my Outback, my legs are _not_ the first thing that has to go into the car. (Fall in, butt first).

I’ll take the Fiat, please…

Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
1 year ago
Reply to  Millermatic

I’ll rotate cars in and out of the fourth garage stall, where the truck usually sits, and when the Porsche is in there it’s amazing how small it is!

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 year ago

Also, I am in the same boat, 12 year old me had very strange taste, and I went through a phase where I hated it, but now at 35 I am heading right back there. Looking for a Rav4 convertible currently.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 year ago
Reply to  IanGTCS

Oh I plan to! trouble is finding one. I have only managed to find one for sale in the states, and it’s rusty and the guy won’t answer me about how bad it is or send pics so that answers that question. Gotta sell one of my other cars then I’ll start looking more aggressively, and I will likely end up grabbing one from Japan.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 year ago

Easy choice for me again here, while the Dodge would be fun, I have little desire for a FWD sports car. Fiat all the way. Even with the dubious reputation for reliability, and their amazing ability to “add lightness” by rusting even in California.

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