Discarded EVs are starting to appear in the Ewe Pullets of the land.
And be sure to ignore “unwarranted adverse publicity” in the media.
The last model year for the first-generation Mustang.
Not so weird—just go to the junkyard and get better ones.
One of the wildest production cars ever made meets an unexpected fate.
A tiny Dodge pickup with 80 oil-burning Mitsubishi horses under the hood.
The slightly upscale sibling to the Ford Tempo sedan.
That's $121/day in 2022 dollars, by the way.
Complete with the ultra-rare 4.3-liter Oldsmobile Diesel V6!
What else do you need?
The 626k-mile 1988 Accord didn't stay on top for long.
A bit of Japan in the Mile High City.
Fits your paisley headbands and Beethoven bust with its fold-down rear seat.
The 'Turbo' part was pure marketing magic during the 1980s.
Big straight-six, four-speed manual, rear-wheel drive, no air conditioning.
Yes, AM/FM/cassette/CB radios were a thing in 1981!
No, it's not related to the Chevrolet 4.3-liter V6.
The Kodak Pony 828 was one prestige step above the Brownie, the Chevrolet of Kodaks.
Elegance. Luxury. Front-wheel drive. A Crystal Key. Everything!
Manny, Moe, and Jack had affordable plastic seat covers for your Detroit sled's living-room-like interior in 1959.
That S-15 is your ticket to the real world.
That's right, there was a time when Americans could buy oil-burning Corollas!
Bought a 1988 Toyota Camry or Honda Accord? Feel the regret now, sucker!
Remember the Chevy Monza? This is its Oldsmobile twin.
If you wanted affordable luxury with plenty of gingerbread in the '70s, the Gran Torino Brougham fit the bill.
The golden-badged King of the Cavaliers.
And that includes silver vinyl upholstery!
A 600,000-mile Mercedes-Benz reigned supreme for years, but now Honda is on top.
138 Cu Ft, W/W Carpet!
You'll find 100 Black Ice Little Trees for every Green Apple.