I saw a silver 1983 Volvo 240 on the road today...looked like new. It reminded me that my mom's best friend bought a silver GL with a blue velour/cordorouy interior. Best I can remember it had slotted wheel covers. When I saw it for the first time I was amazed. It had the most beautiful interior I had ever seen. It was the first year for the new smaller bumpers and it had the quad headlights still. I still think that was the prettiest Volvo I ever saw. Here is the closest LOOKING one I found on the web.
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Anybody own a Volvo 240?
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Until about six months ago I had a 1972 Volvo 142 Type R. Loved that car! Definitely boxy and was the precursor of the 2 series. The Type R meant that it had the GT dash gauges and overdrive. It was a very comfortable ride and had a fairly reliable Bosch D-jetronic fuel injection.Oscar
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I've always wanted a Manual Wagon 240, I was trying to find one before I bought my MR2 as my first car.Current cars:
1993 Ford Festiva 5-Speed - Festiclese III - Cousin of the Banhammer - "The Jalopnik Car"
1984 Toyota Cressida - 2JZGE Swap, Turbocharged.
2013 Mazda Mazda2 - Exhaust and Wheels (the daily)
2002 Toyota Tundra - V6/Auto/2WD - The Tow Vehicle.
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I've owned several Volvos. The diesel engine was 6cyl made by VW, made for a delivery van in Europe. If you find one in really good shape WITH a manual transmission, WITH a turbo, then may be ok. Expensive to work on. Also RUN from the V6 gas engine, it was made by Peugeot/Renault, so-so gas mileage and again rare VERY EXPENSIVE parts. Actually same engine that was used in DeLorean, just without turbo.
The traditional number system on Volvos was if number ended in 2, it was 2 door, if ended in 4, it was a 4 door sedan, if ended in 5, then it was a wagon. The 140/240 series was 4 cylinder, the 160/260 series was 6 cylinder. Thus a 245 would be a 4 cyl wagon. They got away from this in 80 and just called them 240/260.
My favorite Volvo was the old Amazon, the 120 series (it was 4cyl, not 2 cyl, so numbering system not always consistant), looked like a mini version of 1940s American car. They were from 50s and 60s so had rust problems. The 140 series probably most practical. Lighter weight and little more compact than the 240 series, but lot more modern than 120 series. Also had the old bulletproof B18/B20 pushrod engine (the 160 had B30, a straight six cylinder version of the B20). The only weakness to those engines was some had soft factory cam. Lobes on cam will wear down to where valves barely open. It is amazing how related the 120/140/240 series cars are, model developement at Volvo was evolutionary, both engines and bodies.Last edited by Banana Bonanza; 10-04-2009, 06:53 AM.
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I love old boxy Volvos, plus the 1800 series, plus the 120 series!
Gotta have round headlights 'cause I hate the rectangular ones.
Here you go, pretty boxy blue...linked since the "file was too large":
Oh, and have any of you seen one of these in the U.S? Ever?
It's a Volvo 343, with a CVT. Back in the mid or late eighties, OSU had one parked in back of the old Engineering building. Evidently, they were studying it. OSU's was silver and I don't recall ever seeing it driving. To the best of my knowledge, it was about VW Dasher sized--maybe a bit smaller.
KarlLast edited by Safety Guy; 10-06-2009, 12:34 PM.'93GL "Prettystiva" ticking B3 and 5 speed, backup DD; full swaps in spring!
'91L "AquaMutt" my '91L; B6 swap/5 speed & Aspire brakes, DD/work car
'92L "Twinstiva" 5sp, salvage titled, waiting for repairs...
'93GL "Luxstiva," '94 B6 engine & ATX; needs overhauled
'89L "Muttstiva," now a storage bin, future trailer project
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