Welcome to day two of our price-doubling game! Today our budget is $2,000, and both of these cars are a little under that. But you’ll need some wiggle room in the budget to take care of a few things.
Yesterday we were only allowed to spend a grand, and surprisingly, both our choices were decent runners with livable interiors. But as several of you pointed out, if you’re looking for cheap cars, running costs are going to be important as well, so you’re better off picking the car that uses less fuel, all things considered. The four-cylinder Cavalier goes probably twice as far on a gallon of gas as the big F-150 does, which makes it the logical choice here.
I have to agree. Besides, I’m one of those weirdos who’s genuinely a fan of the GM J-cars, as well as their slightly larger N-body cousins, so I’m going to lean that way anyway. And the Cavalier is a stick, which I’ll always give preference to.
So what does $2,000 buy you these days? Something a bit nicer, with a lot fewer miles. You still can’t expect perfection, but you can drive off in relative certainty that you’ll make it home. These two are similar: both wagons, both manuals, and both economy-minded, but from different eras. They’ll both need a little tinkering if you want them to be at their best, though. Let’s see which one you think is a better deal.
1997 Ford Escort LX wagon – $1,700
Engine/drivetrain: 2.0-liter overhead cam inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Odometer reading: 175,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well, daily-driven until recently
If you’re not familiar with the second- and third-generation US-spec Ford Escort, frankly, you’re kind of missing out. I know that sounds funny, but it’s a delightful little car for what it is. The secret is the Mazda-derived chassis, the same platform as the BG-chassis Mazda 323 and Protege. It handles way better than the earlier Escort, and manual-transmission-equipped models like this one have that same great shifter feel as Mazda’s FWD offerings. It’s no Miata, no one is saying it is, but it’s a better car to drive than you think.
Mazda didn’t share its engines with the Escort, except for the GT hatchback from the previous version. Other Escorts got by with Ford’s tried-and-true CVH four, punched out to 2.0 liters and bumped up to 110 horsepower in this one. It’s nowhere near as refined as its Toyota or Honda competitors, nor even Mazda’s engines, but it’s a good solid little engine capable of covering a lot of miles while not using much fuel. This one runs and drives well, and the seller says it was daily-driven not too long ago.
This Escort is from Ford’s “oval” design era when the Taurus looked like a catfish and the F-150 just looked melted. Ford only changed the front sheetmetal between the second and third generation, so the Escort isn’t as committed to the bit as the Taurus was on the outside, but it makes up for it inside. Just look at that jellybean-shaped center console. Hopefully the tape player works because no standard DIN-mount stereo is going to fit. We do know the air conditioner doesn’t work, sadly. You can always try charging it up and see what happens, I suppose.
It’s faded and tired-looking outside, but basically presentable. Luckily it has lived its whole life in California and Arizona, so there are no real worries about rust. You’ll want to polish or replace the headlights; like most cars of this era, they’re sandblasted opaque.
2006 Scion xB – $1,700
Engine/drivetrain: 1.5-liter dual overhead cam inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: San Jose, CA
Odometer reading: 165,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives “like a boss,” but won’t pass smog
This car, every regular Autopian reader knows. The first-generation Toyota bB, sold here as the xB under Toyota’s erstwhile youth-oriented brand Scion, was the original “Autopian Test Car,” subjected to all manner of indignities before being unceremoniously dumped and later revived by a reader. The little wagon is now a bona-fide rallycross hero, resplendent in tri-color stripes and sporting an impressive array of driving lights. If you would like an Autopian Test Car of your own, you’re in luck; this car is the same spec, only set up more for California boulevards than for Midwestern dirt tracks.
The heart of the xB is a 1.5-liter twin-cam four, with variable valve timing. This one is equipped with a five-speed manual, as they all should be. The seller sings its praises, but admits the check engine light is on – as well as the vehicle stability and traction-control lights. No idea why. It might all be related, but whatever it is prevents this car from obtaining that all-important California document: a smog certificate. If you’re not in California, don’t sweat it, I guess, but if you are, or anywhere else where those warning lights mean a failed inspection, you’ll need to take care of it.
The inside looks pretty good; it’s amazing what not being covered in food debris will do for the interior of an xB. It could use a cleaning, and the shift knob is strangely broken, but otherwise it’s in decent condition.
It looks good outside, but it has a salvage title; apparently it was rear-ended years ago. It has been used as a daily driver for years since then, though, and it has fairly new tires and a fresh alignment. The trim below the rear bumper is missing, of course; I haven’t seen one of these with that trim intact in years.
Little station wagons are wonderful things, especially lightweight ones with stickshifts like these. You can haul stuff while getting decent mileage, and when you’re not hauling stuff, you won’t hate driving them. You’ll just have to put in a little work to get either one of these in tip-top shape, but they’re both drivable as they sit. Which one better suits your needs?
(Image credits: sellers)
Wow, I hate both of these w/ a passion…so it’s the lesser of 2 evils…and that’s the Fix Or Repair Daily Escort (I’ll take a hot escort too!) At least it has the Mazda chassis and it’s a wagon…the xB is not, to me it’s just a box of trash. I can’t even w/ those ugly awful box cars…they look atrocious and make me sick (xB is not a car name…”I drive an xB” You sound like a fool)
I have a friend who had one of the first gen xBs. Despite its A/T, it was a fun little car to drive around town. It cornered surprisingly well for an econobox.
I imagine the Ford would be less wearying on a long freeway slog. But I remember her giving me a lift in the Scion to the airport that involved some freeway miles, and it wasn’t so bad that it left negative impressions.
The Scion’s styling seemed weird initially, but grew on me. The Nissan Cube of that era was so much weirder and never grew on me.
the salvage title on the xB would give me pause, but the CEL and dash lights can often be solved with a handful of easy fixes, a low battery can set off those same dash lights.
keep up simple maintenance and it can last you until the heat death of the universe.
Scion for me as I always loved the first gen xB.
Scion all day. We’re OBD2 here in AZ and I’m betting, it’s a simple fix, I know these throw CEL+Traction codes for stupid reasons. Some not needing anything but a battery reset. At $1700, this is a no brainer.
I’m not sure what the Scion is… but it is NOT a wagon.
It’s what you want it to be.
Wagon? Sure
SUV? Why not.
Hatchback? Yep.
‘mini’-Van? Of course.
Hay-toting vehicle for your farm? Tow vehicle for your skidoo/seadoo/motorcycle? Camper-van? Easy enough.
The title for mine says Station Wagon
Salvage title? Warning lights? I’m leaning toward the Ford, with some trepidation. I once owned a 1987 Escort (actually, a Mercury Lynx, but whatever) and it was OK for the first 70k miles, and a shitbox after that. But this generation’s Mazda heritage counts for something, and I’d be worried about what other problems bedevil that Scion beyond the smog/warning lights.
for the scion, the warning lights can be fixed by looking at a handful of easy fixes, it could be a simple as a low battery and it would trigger those dash lights.
Absolutely going with the Scion here, I’ve always loved the first gen XB and I still sort of want one. With the stability and traction control lights coming on along with the CEL, my guess it’s for a wheel speed sensor or something similar to that. I had a Mazda that would set the CEL, traction control, and ABS lights when it had a sensor going bad. But either way, I live in Michigan so as long as it runs fine that CEL doesn’t bother me one bit.
I would b=venture to say the scion may have had a low battery, or still does. get an economy Never start and clear the codes, then fix whatever codes pop up. Also I live in a state wihout CARB nazi’s so I would happily take the manual cube over the less fun wagon, I could probably get the cube registered and get a little bit better deal to boot.
The safe choice is probably the Escort, and it’d be reliable enough. But the Scion has character, and being a manual, it’s probably pretty fun. The smog stuff is worrisome, but hopefully it’s no big deal. At this price, the salvage title isn’t too scary.
Smog stuff can be linked to a million things but generally all fairly easy to repair.
Voted Scion. Kind of crazy how it seemed like a lot more seniors bought those than kids. Esp. considering the marketing with hip hop hamsters and such. Going no to just about all flavors of the Escort. Too many bad memories of lousy cars.
I believe the hamster commercials were Kia counterpart, the Kia Soul. Scion did release some really fun commercials for these too, though!
Shoot, that’s right. The Soul had the hamsters and the Scion had those commercials that showed a million ways to customize it. Totally mixed them up.
Scion also had some really sick music they’d reach out to popular bands to collab on. Revocation comes to mind
the “olds” got into them simply from wandering into the dealership and seeing them in the showroom for a cheap price. It had nothing to do with the actual advertising lol
I voted Scion, despite the one thing that always bugged me about the first-gen xB: the character line on the side ought to go all the way around the tailgate, not stop at the rear. The back end of the car looks weird to me, like they forgot to complete it.
I know I’ll be in the minority with this crowd. Manual wagons do really well here. But I just can’t with any flavor of Ford Escort. I’ve just always despised those things.
On the other side of this coin is the toaster inspired box on wheels! Yes, please!!!
I’m also in the xB camp. I hate Escorts, they were just old enough to proliferate my High School auto-shop garage, working on them was absolute misery, I never want to touch one again. Coincidentally I’ve also worked on several xBs, and didn’t find them nearly as hateful, and they are surprisingly fun to drive, plus I know a guy with a turbo kit sitting in his garage.
Tell me more about this turbo kit…
A friend built a custom turbo kit for his xB back in the day, it got totalled and before turning it over to the insurance he pulled his kit off. It should also work on an xS, Echo and Yaris as they were all basically the same car. Charge pipe routing might have to be addressed though.
If he ever wants to get rid of it, I’d happily slap it on the rallyxB. The big tires help in the mud but they did hamper acceleration somewhat.
My first car was a 1984 Ford Escort wagon. If it could survive 16 year old me beating the crap out of it, I’ll take the risk on the bubble wagon. Besides I really dislike the xB…never liked it at all.
A running Toyota, made in this century, selling for less than 2G is a steal, any day of the week.
Toyota is weird in that most of the time the CEL will automatically disable the stability/traction control systems so clear the CEL and the others will go away. I’d run the codes to see what’s up with it, but assuming it’s nothing crazy, I’m going Scion. If it’s something major, then I guess I’m walking because the only reason to buy an escort is to make jokes, and while this one is perfect for that, it’s not funny enough to buy. But man just this escort probably has lots of junk in the trunk if you know what I mean!
How can I pass up a manual wagon with Split Port Induction?
Escort.
I’d take either, but I LOVE the xB. It will be a treasure a decade from now.
The Scion needs a wheel speed sensor for the ABS code. As for the powertrain code, hopefully it’s an easy one. ‘Cuz I want nothing to do with that Escort.
My best friend from college had an Escort wagon from this generation he traded for a Scion xB also of this generation. The Scion was nicer.
When new, both were considered better cars than they really had a right to be, and both are top-tier in terms of efficient practicality. Both being manual also makes this a hard choice.
I voted Escort for two reasons:
1) Those warning lights on the Toyota could indicate electrical gremlins that will be the bane of the buyer’s existence
2) With a little paint correction (probably just a good buff, it’s red after all), I could proudly roll the Escort into the next Radwood.
1) As the owner of the rallyxB, the warning lights don’t slow you down at all. Every light is illuminated on mine. The salvage title doesn’t matter either.
2) You are correct, I can’t take it to Radwood 🙁
The Toyota wins by default.
Too bad Ford didn’t at least put the Zetec in that wagon (it was only offered on the ZX2). That wouldn’t come until the Focus a few years later.
That Escort looks like the Wish version of my Sportwagen, which is basically the Temu version of the Audi, which I guess is the Amazon version of a car that actually works consistantly. An ouroborus of suck basically
I’ll take the box
Ouroboros of suck
Quite the well-crafted phrase there
Props for fitting a square Scion and a round Escort in the same article.
Beware googling ’round escort’…
I read that had to look, that was a mistake.
Live and let live, you know.
Just don’t try stick a square Scion into a round Escort.
That only gets weirder when you start mulling over the definition of scion–a descendant or heir, especially of a wealthy or powerful family.
I have an irrationaly negative reaction to the box cars of this era, so I’ll happily take the bubble escort – which is indeed a lowkey hoot to drive.