1986 Chevrolet Spectrum

Summary:

Perfect car for a teen in the 80s

Faults:

No issues, but the car emitted a rotten egg smell which I was told was related to the catalytic converter.

General Comments:

This was my first car when I turned 16. It was silver and had a burgundy interior. It was a good little car that got me from point A to B without issue. I went off to college, graduated and ended up living in another state. There was a point where I didn't return home for 10 years. My parents used it as a trade in to purchase a new car for themselves, so sadly I never got to see the car after my last visit home in '93.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Don't Know

Review Date: 16th September, 2019

1986 Chevrolet Spectrum

Summary:

It was a good little car

Faults:

Nothing.

General Comments:

I was in the military when I bought the Spectrum as my first car in 1987. I drove that car home on every three day or four day weekend (from N.C. to Miami, FL) and never had a problem. It was great on gas, I kept it clean and detailed, and well maintained.

If I had that car today, my daughters would be driving it today. The key is to stay on top of the vehicle maintenance and take care of the car. It was great 1st car.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Don't Know

Review Date: 15th March, 2018

1986 Chevrolet Spectrum 1.5

Summary:

The worst and first new car I owned

Faults:

Worst engine ever made.

I have had 45 cars.

The timing belt broke. because the water pump pulley failed at 40,000 miles, destroying the engine.

Since it happened on vacation, it was towed to the nearest Chevy dealer.

1 month later, we picked it up to have the timing gear fall off, because of the shortcut the dealer admitted to in arbitration. Wow.

We ran to Toyota. (in fairness it was built by Isuzu, but the dealer was bad too.)

General Comments:

Stay far away from anything Isuzu, or timing belt driven cars.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Don't Know

Review Date: 5th January, 2010

6th Jan 2010, 16:19

If you don't wish to run a car with a timing belt, your choice of transportation would be restricted to older OHV motors, or more expensive European models that run chains.

A water pump failure can be detected by the needle on the temp gauge rising steadily as the car idles or moves.

7th Jan 2010, 15:14

Not true at all. Not only are OHV engines still made today, but many cars now use timing chains. The Honda Civic, for example, uses a timing chain. Finding an OHC engine with a chain is not that hard to do.

1986 Chevrolet Spectrum Hatchback 1.4L ?

Summary:

Typical 80's vintage GM garbage

Faults:

Timing belt broke at 45,000 miles. Since this is an interference-type engine, it required a complete engine re-build. This was a $1200 repair bill (in 1989 $'s).

Fuel pump and hose failed at 50,000 miles. Gasoline poured out from under vehicle on the middle of a major interstate bridge, where the car died. Despite the fact that this problem was the source of a major factory recall, Chevrolet failed to inform me of this and I ended up paying $550 (in 1990 $'s) out of pocket for the repair.

Speedometer cable failure at 65,000 miles.

EVAP canister failure at 65,000 miles.

Clutch failure at 70,000 miles.

General Comments:

This was the worst car I have ever owned. The amount I spent in repairs in the first year of ownership could have afforded me a brand new Nissan Sentra. I bought the Spectrum when it was 3 years old with 45,000 miles on the ODO.

The good things about owning a Spectrum:

1. I'm actually a mechanic today thanks to all the work I was forced to do to keep this car running. I learned most of what I now know out of necessity due to this little beast.

2. It drove great in the snow. The thin tires and front wheel drive was great on ski trips. The only major winter problem I had was when the heater core broke in negative 10 degree F temps in the middle of nowhere in British Columbia.

That's about it. The Chevy Spectrum is a rolling deathtrap. I know this because I was making a lot of trips to the pick-a-part wrecking yards whenever something failed in my car, which was often. I can't remember a single wrecked Spectrum that looked like it didn't involve a fatality.

The next car I purchased was a Saturn, which turned out to be another piece of garbage. I'll never own another GM.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? No

Review Date: 13th November, 2009

14th Nov 2009, 22:14

Your "GM garbage" was actually built by Isuzu, who sold the same car as the I-mark before deserting the N American market altogether.

16th Nov 2009, 15:47

There's something tragi-comic about a company that built wondrous 5-8 liter Cadillacs, Buicks, and Oldsmobiles being pilloried over a 'Spectrum' - a cart for the less well off.

Folks, your driving experience is doomed, not by GM, but by what's been done to us all, GM included. Quite simply we're radically worse off than our progenitors.

19th Sep 2019, 13:15

Most of my GM cars and trucks have been V8s. Timing chain models. Never had an engine failure. I was proactive on maintenance. Saved money in the long run.