Crawling From The Wreckage
Friday, September 19, 2025
1989 Oldsmobile Touring Sedan - The Illusion of Affluence
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
1960 Pontiac Catalina - Jet Age Dreams
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
1956 Lincoln Premiere - Lavender Creme Puff
Saturday, September 13, 2025
1974 Jensen Interceptor III - What Does Zuckerberg Know (That I Don't?)
Thursday, September 11, 2025
1983 Oldsmobile 98 Regency - Stab It and Steer!
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
1978 Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais - Tell Me Why
1977 Chrysler New Yorker - What Would Don Draper Think?
I rubbed my eyes twice this morning when this 1977 Chrysler New Yorker popped up on Facebook Marketplace with an asking price of just $4,500. She looks super clean, just under 80,000-miles on her 48-year-old ticker, 440 V-8 engine, leather interior. Something's got to be wrong, right?
Well, yeah. There is. Turns out she's not running, issues with the engine's timing chain. The nylon timing gears got old, brittle and either wore down or broke off throwing off timing. Thrown timing could damage engine internals so, in addition to the expense of fixing the timing problems, you might be looking at some serious internal engine repair. However, don't look at this as so much as a challenge but as an opportunity to turn this near two-and-a-half-ton monster into the sleeper of your dreams! How fast shall we spend?
To be safe, budget around $6,000 to do anything right which, of course, negates any value proposition the car might have had. I'd toss the 440, swap in a HEMI although the cost of them varies as greatly as the number of different ones made over the last twenty-years or so; any of them a serious upgrade from the 440. Keep in mind, ball parking an estimate to fix the timing issues on the 440 will run at least $2,000. And then what do you have if that was all it needed? A 1977 Chrysler New Yorker that's as doggish as it was the day it left the factory.
Power, though, is nothing without control and we've all driven cars that were fast and furious in a straight line. Going around corners these Chrysler C-bodies are more Kenworth than Carrera. There's not much in the way of after-market suspension modifications out there for them, in particular if you want to keep the cars stock looking like I would. Sadly, there's only so much you can do.
These big Mopar two-door sedans, forget the four-doors, are some of my favorite cars of the 1970's. Why? Obviously, I have a longing for a benevolent, patriarchal "alpha-male" figure in my life, that I never had, that would drive such an automobile. By the late '70's, though, that "Don Draper" that walked the walk and talked the talk were day had fallen out of fashion. Additionally, growing up with wanting for everything, my childhood longing has a tendency to manifest itself in romanticizing the audacious trappings of the wealthy from my youth. And you thought I simply liked these cars. Which, of course, I do although through older, foggier goggles, I see them for what they are as opposed to what I want them to be.
Much like many a wealthy looking person who's actually penniless, with Chrysler pushing out enormous dream boats like this in the mid-to-late-'70's, you wouldn't have a clue the company was on the brink of bankruptcy if you didn't know better. And, like many a wealthy (looking) person headed for that financial brick wall, it wasn't one single event that led them to that point but years of bad choices and bad planning. Or a lack of planning.
Chrysler made these cake toppers, which I think are better "Cadillacs" than anything General Motors pushed out in the 1970's, through 1978. The awful "R-body" New Yorker followed, which didn't come as a coupe, from 1979 through 1981 before Chrysler's great K-Car epoch came into being that I wanted and still want nothing to do with.
Don Draper looked away in disgust too longing for a car like this. Imagine what he'd think of it if it had a HEMI?