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  • Geo Metro vs. Ford Festiva...

    Used from another forum......I didn't see it here, so I thought I'd post it.

    Geo Metro vs. Ford Festiva.
    (Author unknown)

    I borrowed my wife's Geo Metro last night. One liter of raw power, three cylinders of asphalt-tearing terror on thirteen-inch rims. It's stock, alright, nothing done to it, but it pushes the barely 2000 pounds of metro around with AUTHORITY. I'm always catching mopeds and 18-wheelers by surprise...

    I was headed back from Baskin Robbins with my manly triple-latte cappuccino blast ("No Cinnamon, ma'am, I take it BLACK"), when I stopped at a streetlight. As the Metro throbbed its throaty idle around me, I sipped my bold beverage and wiped the white froth my stiff upper lip. I was minding my own business, but then I heard a rev from the next lane. I turned, made eye contact, then let my eyes trace over the competition. Ford Festiva-a late model, could be trouble. Low profile tires, curb feelers, and school-bus yellow paint. Yep, a hot rod, for sure. The howl of his motor snapped my reverie, and I looked back into the driver's eyes, nodded, then blipped my own throttle. As I tugged on my driving gloves and slipped on my sunglasses (gotta look cool to be fast, and I am *dang* cool, hence...), the night was split with the sound of seven screaming cylinders...

    Then the light turned... I almost had him out of the hole, my three pounding cylinders thrusting me at least a millimeter back into my seat, as smoke pouring from my front right tire... my unlimited slip differential was letting me down! I saw in the corner of my eyes, a yellow snout gaining, and I heard the roar of his four cylinders. He slung by me, right front wheel juddering against the pavement, and he flashed me a smile as his .3 extra liters of motor stretched its legs. I kept my foot gamely in it, though, waiting for the CHECK ENGINE light to blink on in the one-gauge (no tachometer here!) instrument panel. I saw a glimpse of chrome under his bumper, and knew the ugly truth... He was running a custom exhaust-probably a 2-into-1 dual exhaust...maybe event cutouts! dang his hot-rod soul! The old lady passing us on the crosswalk cast a dirty look in our boy-racer direction... Yet still I persisted, with my three pumping pistons singing a heady high-pitched song, wound fully out.

    Though only a few handfuls of seconds had passed, we were nearing the crosswalk at the other side of the intersection, and I heard the note of his engine change as he made his shift to second, and I saw his grin in his rearview mirror fade as he missed the shift! I rocketed by, shifting, and nursed the clutch gently in to keep from bogging, keeping my motor spinning hot and pulling me ahead, now trailing a cloud of stinking clutch smoke. Not ready to give up so easily, he left his foot in it, revving, and I heard one wheel *almost* chirp as he finally found second and dropped the clutch. We careened over the crosswalk, now going at least 15 miles per hour. A bicyclist passed us, but intent on the race as we were, neither of us batted an eye.

    He pulled slowly abreast of me, and neck and neck, we made the shift to third, the scream of motors deafening all pedestrians within a five foot circle. He nosed ahead as we passed 30 miles an hour, then eased in front of me, taunting, as we shifted into fourth. I was staring up the dual 6" chrome tips of his exhaust, snarling, my cappuccino forgotten, as he lifted a little to take the next corner.

    I saw my opportunity, and counting on the innate agility of my trusty steed, I pulled wide into the number two lane and kept my foot buried in carpet. Slowly, I inched around him, feeling my Metro roll slowly to the left as I came abreast in the midst of this gradual sweeping turn. I felt the Geo ease onto its suspension stops, and felt the right rear wheel slowly leave the ground - no matter, though, because my drive wheels, up front, were pulling me through the corner, and around the Festiva ...

    The Ford driver beat his wheel in rage as my wife's car eased past him on the outside, my P165/55R13's screaming in protest, as we raced to the next light. We coasted down, neck-and neck, to the red light. I tightened my driving gloves, ready for another round, when this WIMP meekly flipped his turn signal and made a right. I drove off sipping my masculine drink, awash in my sheer virility, looking for other unwitting targets.... Perhaps a Yugo, or maybe even a Volkswagen Van!
    1967 GTA 351 Roller GT40
    1988 Festiva LX B5 Turbo, MegaSquirt, Aspire Swap
    2008 Sport Trac Adrenalin
    2013 Escape 2.0 EcoBoost

    Governments rest on the consent of the governed, and that it is the right of the people to alter or abolish them whenever they become destructive of the ends for which they were established.

    --JEFFERSON DAVIS

  • #2
    First of all that was an extremely freaking hilarious read!!!! Second how bored do you think this guy was?
    Last edited by 91mcnasty; 01-16-2012, 05:44 PM.
    1992 white L, Bp, American racing 13's, stock trans.
    1991 White L, BP/F5MR, protege header, full aspire swap with gr2's, seats, and sway bar, 15" konig's, short throw, escort console.
    1991 blue L, 5 speed.
    1988 red L-plus-all stock.

    Comment


    • #3
      thats funny stuff and he seems to be a pretty good writer too
      -90 festiva - bp swap "relentless" (thanks matt) aspire swap, pacesetter, underdrive pulley
      -90 festiva - surf blue (undetermined destiny) wanna keep but wifey says noooooooo

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      • #4
        http://www.fordfestiva.com/forums/sh...eo+Metro+night.

        It has been posted before. But still a great story!
        -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Nancy- 1.8L BP, aspire swap, g-trans
        The Adventures of Nancy! Build Thread
        -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

        My Musica! Click me!

        Comment


        • #5
          classic, but not even close lol. festy's eat XFIs for breakfast
          Trees aren't kind to me...

          currently: 2 88Ls (Scrappy and Jersey), 88LX, 90L(Pepe), 91L, 91GL (Skippy) 93 GL Sport (the Mighty Favakk), 94 (Bruce) & 95 Aspire SEs, 97 Aspire (The Joker),
          94 Justy 4WD, 87 Fiero GT, plus 2 parts cars. That's my fleet.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by FestYboy View Post
            classic, but not even close lol. festy's eat XFIs for breakfast
            Except in mpgs!
            -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Nancy- 1.8L BP, aspire swap, g-trans
            The Adventures of Nancy! Build Thread
            -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            My Musica! Click me!

            Comment


            • #7
              LOL - I didn't like the ending.. but we all know Festy's PWN Metro's in performance. I'm finally going to tag and insure my SVTiva this week so I can put 'er on the highway and work the final bugs out.
              1967 GTA 351 Roller GT40
              1988 Festiva LX B5 Turbo, MegaSquirt, Aspire Swap
              2008 Sport Trac Adrenalin
              2013 Escape 2.0 EcoBoost

              Governments rest on the consent of the governed, and that it is the right of the people to alter or abolish them whenever they become destructive of the ends for which they were established.

              --JEFFERSON DAVIS

              Comment


              • #8
                I once met a guy admiring my Festiva who had run a pizza joint. He said they'd used Geos and Festivas for delivery, but they gave up on Geos pretty rapidly.

                In my own experience, my daughter's '88L spent at least half of its 50Kmi before we got it as a pizza delivery vehicle (and on top of that, the first owner's son was a recovering heroin addict). The greasy seats advertised its past, and was one of the first things that went in favor of a tan LX interior. It took at least three cleanings before the headliner quit beading up nicotine orange when we'd hit it with 409 spray and a month of running the heater in the summer with the windows open for the residual cigarette fumes to bake out of the ductwork. The oil level didn't register on the dipstick. You get the picture, zero maintenance. But then it went on to take my daughter thru 4yrs of college plus at least the first year of her first job. (It got its 5spd after her freshman year, and was she ever happy!) The only thing I ever did to the motor besides a tuneup and religious oil changes was to change the valve cover gasket. With a little work they couldda still been delivering pizzas with it.

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                • #9
                  Over here ALL geos/sprints etc got some kind of LCA cancer , theres a spot where the LCA grabs the floor , and its always rotted out.

                  And theres no easy way to repair this.

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                  • #10
                    Metros, Sprints and Fireflys are even more rare then Festys in this neck of the woods now due to premature-rusted LCA mounts, gas tanks and brake lines. I did stumble upon a not-winter driven Metro 2 door convertible with OEM Suzuki twin cam turbo in it a few years ago though. Q ship for sure but I never saw it move.

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