You know what....these were really GREAT CARS. Today people live like bohemian prince and princesses with every excess know and available but I realize only now how the simple hard working clean living American lifestyle was embodied in the KCar. Pure and simple rugged durable and efficient well built cars. I have a feeling KCars will be reimagined and return again in some form. So will good simple american values. The times we live in now are corrupted by excess in all things and I can say I feel lucky to have lived during an earlier simpler time. Thank you for that lord. And thanks for posting this wonderful video from deep in the heart of the American memory. Thanks
I totally agree life was soo much simpler back in the 80s . I remember these K cars they were right for the times and were fairly reliable . My parents drove mid and full-sized cars RWD cars from Chrysler and GM back in those days .
As a mechanic i can agree.. Basic .sinple.reliable..good on gas. Had really good sound system. Brakes..seats and ride were as good as full size Lincoln. I had several. FAR superior to the volare line of cars. Drove mine from Miami to Quebec canada numerous times.
They may have been GREAT CARS, but they were kinda of expensive for what you got. The MSRP of a 1982 Reliant Custom was about $7,000 (NADA Guide as a reference) , which the Inflation Calculator tells us is about $19,000 in 2020. I don't know about you, but I'd rather get something like a 2020 Subaru Impreza (made in Indiana) for $18,600, and save the $400. At least Air-Conditioning and a decent radio come with the Subaru.
@@bob3zaaafs Not to mention the safety features and increases in overall engineering, reliability and paint/corrosion that all cars have today. Even a modern VW has 12 year rust and corrosion warranty these days - back then a Ziebart or Rusty Jones treatment would've been upsold to you for $500 more for a supposed "lifetime" corrosion warranty - where in reality the company went bust in 1988 and so did its insurance underwriters. Indeed, today you get a lot more reliability, features and safety for LESS money than in the early 80s.
Frank Converse who was doing Chrysler LeBaron commercials at the time....is the narrator/host. He starred in the TV Show, N.Y.P.D. and also "Coronet Blue"
My first car in '97 was a 1983 Dodge aries 2 door. My grandmother gave it to me. Hated it at the time because all my buddies had slammed imports but now I am glad it was my first.
@@Thugman98 they're pretty solid cars I still have a 1988 Dodge Shadow 2 door coupe , never has left me stranded exept when the alternator belt snapped
@@omarsmith8523 I know.....I was being sarcastic....it's not motivational or beautiful...this isn't a video about good triumphing over evil...it's a promotional video for a long dead economy car.
My uncle bought a 1988 in 1992 and drove it for 13 years. He said it was a good car but it just went from home to work and back and that was it. I don't think he ever took it for a long distance.
And President-elect Ronald Reagan said he did not care if Chrysler went belly up and floated down the stream. Thank God for President Jimmy Carter and Lee Iacocca's deal or there would be no Chrysler.
Were standards for aerodynamics different back then I just hoping people just believe what they say? That windshield is fairly upright compared to a lot of today's cars.
We had a 1986 Dodge 600 convertible turbo. Fooled a lot of other brands when I left them in the dust. I put a computer chip in that was offered by Chrysler that gave me lots more power
So if Chrysler Europe, in particular the French Company Simca, didn't happen then how likely was the K Car to exist? It was Chrysler Europe that was responsible for the Horizon and I'd imagine it gave Chrysler a leg up for the K Car. Also, I wonder how Chrysler would have done without buying AMC?. Jeep and the LH platform, with DNA for the Eagle Premier?. I'm glad Chrysler is still alive, but I am concerned for its future.
I read that the Lyn Townsend was keen to have the Chrysler Corporation match GM and Ford and be a true world player. They already had Simca but the purchase of the Rootes group in the sixties as I have read was there downfall. They were faced with an outdated product line and crippling industrial disputes. The end result was Chrysler had to pour in a lot of money to get new cars happening and in the meantime update what they had to work with and at the same time advertise to the UK car buying public who they were. A lot of money was diverted to that at the expense of their own market and product development and to the other countries they had an interest in. Something had to give......and it did. I am glad Chrysler is still around too. Very glad, but I am worried about their future too.
@@area51isreal71 Rootes Group F’K up other highly profitable Chrysler operations beside Simca! Chrysler Australia was staved of funding in the early to mid 70’s which sadly forced them into bed with Mitsubishi which lead to the eventual take over in 1980 of CAL! AMC roll in Chrysler’s comeback shouldn’t be understated! Only for the Daimler merger to screw it all up 🤬
@@Channel-cm7yc Chrysler bought Rootes Group and Simca in the mid 1960's. The Omni, which bought Chrysler time and front wheel drive, was essentially a Simca design. The Omni paved the way for the K cars.
We had a 1984 Aries and a 1985 Reliant. They both had braking and hesitation problems. Every suggestion We made to the dealer as to what was wrong with them, We got the same answer. We have never had that problem, so We don't think that's what's wrong with them. I will never own a Chrysler product Again!!!
Happy that my family never bought one of these turds. We had full size Oldsmobiles that my dad bought 2-3 years old. Loaded and rode like a cloud. I couldn’t imagine a road trip in one of these clown cars
@@thefinalroman never any problem with the 307’s we had. Dad averaged 23mpg on highway. Gas was cheap then. He wanted comfort and luxury for our family and we did huge road trips. Maybe your 307 needed a tune up?!
These cars were p.o.s. we had a kcar..she struggled to get up to 35 and top speed was 40 lol...nobody knew what was wrong..my mom bought it new from the dealer to..lasted about 5 months b4 the things above started.
Working for MOPAR dealerships all my life, these were TURDS from day one. What the engineers design and perfect in the Drawing rooms and laboratories are ruined by Accountants. Looking to cut costs at every stage of Production means a system that was designed to reliable, ended up failing. This caused by accepting the lowest bid from suppliers. Shame, it was a cheap car, that could have been somewhat reliable. Chrysler Dropped the ball on this and many other vehicle due to this failed edict.
What ball was dropped? At that time who wasn’t dropping it? Guess you’d forgotten consider the Ford Pinto an Lee Iacocca creation oh yes let’s not forget the Chevy Vega disaster. Yes costs were cut, but in deeper channels. Timing chains where dropped in favor of timing belts etc etc. but who at that time wasn’t doing that. I guess you’d know since I’m sure you bought them and drove them 100’s of thousands of miles right? I did and my experience was nothing close to a disaster many claim. But then I take of my stuff and most do not and thus this crazy bias is made up!
@@Channel-cm7yc . I drove more of these S**t boxes than anyone you know. I'm not going to get lectured by anyone. I know exactly what these cars were, low cost, cheap Transportation that proved unreliable. The only thing I liked about these vehicles is that when someone brought one in for service you could sell a lot or repair work. Everything Wore out. 100% junk. The only saving grace is the best K Cars were the last year of Production. Fuel Injection made them a bit better in the driveability category, and the redesigned interior made them a bit more plush. That's it. The models with the 2.6 Mitsu engine were a Disaster.
@@mikegimenez2629 2.6 was trash but 2.2 2.5's are still going strong today while most other 80's cars are long dead... th-cam.com/video/tBGBMl6QSEQ/w-d-xo.html
The K-cars were pretty reliable compared to many other domestic cars of the same period. And, they were worlds better than the horrible Aspen/Volare. Ironic they were being delivered on a GMC Brigadier transporter at 13:26.
Because We had 2 K cars and the 1984 Model wouldn't stop and We went down a bank, flipped it over landed on the wheels. It did $4700 worth of damage to it. Then My Sister was driving it later and She nearly hit a kid from a stopped School bus and plowed up a person's yard to keep from hitting the kid. There really wasn't any body damage that time, She was just shook up really bad.
@@jacobfleming565 I had a 1985 K car. It would hesitate and I nearly got ran over by a Tractor Trailer. Thankfully I cut it off on the shoulder of the Road. We also Bought a 1985 Full Sized Truck. I had problems with the Brakes too. No wrecks, but they didn't work right.
We also bought something like a 1982 K car because My Mom liked them because 6 people could ride in them. It was a Straight Gear transmission. Actually it was probably the best one that We had although it had a hole in the Exhaust system.
Yes Mr. Iacocca, these K-series cars were better than the junk your Chrysler was putting out in 70s but NO WAY they compared better than Toyota, Honda and Volvo. The first vehicle I ever owned that actually made it past 100,000 miles was a Toyota Celica and the thing wasn't even 'breathing heavy'. My current Volvo has over 344K; original engine, tranny, suspension, cat convertor and the AC and power steering still work. ZERO body rot also. NEVER on an American car.
The disparity between how Chrysler presents these cars and how crappy they actually were is unreal. My grandfather had an 84 Reliant. Biggest piece of junk car he ever owned. As it was constantly in the repair shop, the owner of our local Texaco station finally told him to stop buying Chrysler products, period. Same with his Lebanon sedan - constantly in the shop. All these years later and Chrysler continues to build total pieces of junk with the reliability ratings to prove it.
@@Channel-cm7yc Which is why Chrysler dropped The Mitsubishi, and kept the 2.2. It's not just that commenter. Most mainstream media consumers automatically assume that any union made, American manufacturer's products are worse than the Japanese.
"K-Car Superstar" is a catchy tune and all, but trying to rhyme "asking for" and "superstar" in the chorus is grating. Couldn't have spent five more minutes on the lyrics?
Total garbage. Just like the garbage the current Chrysler builds, "The New Chrysler" built nothing but crap. They haven't built a good car since before the oil embargo of 1973.
Say whatever about these cars, I have a soft spot for them. Wish people had keep them around they are always a treat to see them !
I daily drive mine.
I just bought an 86 Conv. it's a great car and parts are almost free. There are enough Chevelles and Mustangs too look at. I get more looks in my car.
I have about 10 that i cycle through monthly. Great cars barely use any fuel
I just bought an 88
I have a 1991 AY series New Yorker Fifth Avenue mark cross edition that I am restoring
You know what....these were really GREAT CARS. Today people live like bohemian prince and princesses with every excess know and available but I realize only now how the simple hard working clean living American lifestyle was embodied in the KCar. Pure and simple rugged durable and efficient well built cars. I have a feeling KCars will be reimagined and return again in some form. So will good simple american values. The times we live in now are corrupted by excess in all things and I can say I feel lucky to have lived during an earlier simpler time. Thank you for that lord. And thanks for posting this wonderful video from deep in the heart of the American memory. Thanks
I totally agree life was soo much simpler back in the 80s . I remember these K cars they were right for the times and were fairly reliable . My parents drove mid and full-sized cars RWD cars from Chrysler and GM back in those days .
As a mechanic i can agree..
Basic .sinple.reliable..good on gas. Had really good sound system.
Brakes..seats and ride were as good as full size Lincoln.
I had several.
FAR superior to the volare line of cars.
Drove mine from Miami to Quebec canada numerous times.
They may have been GREAT CARS, but they were kinda of expensive for what you got. The MSRP of a 1982 Reliant Custom was about $7,000 (NADA Guide as a reference) , which the Inflation Calculator tells us is about $19,000 in 2020. I don't know about you, but I'd rather get something like a 2020 Subaru Impreza (made in Indiana) for $18,600, and save the $400. At least Air-Conditioning and a decent radio come with the Subaru.
@@bob3zaaafs Not to mention the safety features and increases in overall engineering, reliability and paint/corrosion that all cars have today. Even a modern VW has 12 year rust and corrosion warranty these days - back then a Ziebart or Rusty Jones treatment would've been upsold to you for $500 more for a supposed "lifetime" corrosion warranty - where in reality the company went bust in 1988 and so did its insurance underwriters.
Indeed, today you get a lot more reliability, features and safety for LESS money than in the early 80s.
That guy's hair piece is symbolic of the K car's quality and performance.
My first car was an '87 Reliant K. Never knew it had its own theme song! 😲
My Dad brother. And. I. All owned. Kcars. Thanks
These were AWESOME cars, just right for the time. Wish we had alternatives like this now when car companies in the US companies abandoning cars.
I Totally agree , I really hate those crossovers we have today umm back then cars had more character and style .
You could actually fix these in your drive way, parts were cheap and easy to replace. Drove 3 model years to the ground as a young adult.
Frank Converse who was doing Chrysler LeBaron commercials at the time....is the narrator/host. He starred in the TV Show, N.Y.P.D. and also "Coronet Blue"
My first car in '97 was a 1983 Dodge aries 2 door. My grandmother gave it to me. Hated it at the time because all my buddies had slammed imports but now I am glad it was my first.
The K-car single handily saved Chrysler just as the Taurus saved Ford
And as the government saved GM.
Yeah but who or what will save Ford and Chrysler now. They’re both in serious trouble right now.
Im diggin that song in the beginning.
"Fuel Injection" by Alan Hawkshaw. You can find it on several Bruton Music albums.
@@VectraQS thanks. I went and found it and even hit the like button on a few others as well.
My favorite car forever
This video is nothing short of amazing lol
Red Green's favorite car along with the Ford Panther Platform
I want to buy a K car now
@@Thugman98 they're pretty solid cars I still have a 1988 Dodge Shadow 2 door coupe , never has left me stranded exept when the alternator belt snapped
Such a Beautiful and Motivational Video!
Thanks!!😅
Beautiful?
Motivational?
What video were you watching?
@@pcressma The one that I watched 6 months ago, about the Kcar
@@omarsmith8523 I know.....I was being sarcastic....it's not motivational or beautiful...this isn't a video about good triumphing over evil...it's a promotional video for a long dead economy car.
Well it's how you look at it I guess 😅
My uncle bought a 1988 in 1992 and drove it for 13 years. He said it was a good car but it just went from home to work and back and that was it. I don't think he ever took it for a long distance.
And President-elect Ronald Reagan said he did not care if Chrysler went belly up and floated down the stream. Thank God for President Jimmy Carter and Lee Iacocca's deal or there would be no Chrysler.
Fuck the bailouts anyways, it's all for big corporations,
Honestly wouldnt have lost much
@@jacobfleming565 well tell that to the 10,000 or so Chrysler workers In Detroit, but it's cool, we still here putting them together, bye Felicia
Did he really say that or is that uaw propaganda?
@@AaronGranda-g5r Google it.
The music video at the end is peak early 80's lol
Were standards for aerodynamics different back then I just hoping people just believe what they say? That windshield is fairly upright compared to a lot of today's cars.
We had a 1986 Dodge 600 convertible turbo. Fooled a lot of other brands when I left them in the dust. I put a computer chip in that was offered by Chrysler that gave me lots more power
So if Chrysler Europe, in particular the French Company Simca, didn't happen then how likely was the K Car to exist? It was Chrysler Europe that was responsible for the Horizon and I'd imagine it gave Chrysler a leg up for the K Car. Also, I wonder how Chrysler would have done without buying AMC?. Jeep and the LH platform, with DNA for the Eagle Premier?. I'm glad Chrysler is still alive, but I am concerned for its future.
I read that the Lyn Townsend was keen to have the Chrysler Corporation match GM and Ford and be a true world player. They already had Simca but the purchase of the Rootes group in the sixties as I have read was there downfall. They were faced with an outdated product line and crippling industrial disputes. The end result was Chrysler had to pour in a lot of money to get new cars happening and in the meantime update what they had to work with and at the same time advertise to the UK car buying public who they were. A lot of money was diverted to that at the expense of their own market and product development and to the other countries they had an interest in. Something had to give......and it did. I am glad Chrysler is still around too. Very glad, but I am worried about their future too.
If Chrysler hadn't purchased AMC, the replacement for the Dynasty would have been another K car variant, with very formal styling.
@@area51isreal71 Rootes Group F’K up other highly profitable Chrysler operations beside Simca!
Chrysler Australia was staved of funding in the early to mid 70’s which sadly forced them into bed with Mitsubishi which lead to the eventual take over in 1980 of CAL!
AMC roll in Chrysler’s comeback shouldn’t be understated! Only for the Daimler merger to screw it all up 🤬
They kind of buying power didn’t come along until the minivans came out!
@@Channel-cm7yc Chrysler bought Rootes Group and Simca in the mid 1960's. The Omni, which bought Chrysler time and front wheel drive, was essentially a Simca design. The Omni paved the way for the K cars.
Between my parents and I we had 3, 2 84 Reliants and an 88 Reliant. Still have my 84, although it needs some tlc.
K-Car program started from Aug 1976.
Even today, these cars are under - appreciated ...they helped pull Chrysler out of bankruptcy, and I suspect, were decent enough vehicles...😊
Old school bmx..
We had a 1984 Aries and a 1985 Reliant. They both had braking and hesitation problems. Every suggestion We made to the dealer as to what was wrong with them, We got the same answer. We have never had that problem, so We don't think that's what's wrong with them. I will never own a Chrysler product Again!!!
Smart move ,things have not changed much at Chrysler. I can see customers saying the same things about the Chrysler new line up of Fiat vehicles.
Oro en polvo!
Quality must reach uncommon heights?That’s not saying much.
OH no, not the Chevy Caprice Classic umm the Caprice were great cars built like Sherman Tanks ..
I made fun of these cars over the years. I loved my Taurus. I always thought the K Cars were boxy and clunky. You don't see many of them anymore.
The female vocalist sounds a lot like the one who did the “America’s Burger King” ads.
Those dummies do not look comfortable in the back seat. I remember these ugly things from the 1980’s.
The one couple with the Volvo should’ve kept their car.
interesting car
The narrator the actor Frank Converse.
Thanks, great speaking voice. He really can Converse!?
AKA Will Chandler!
Wow, so much hype over the K-car that the company should have changed the spelling to "Khrysler"! _(9/17/2022)_
It's morning in America.
Was this a political ad?
Yes trade in your 77 Impala for a tiny kcar the size of a Nash rambler
Happy that my family never bought one of these turds. We had full size Oldsmobiles that my dad bought 2-3 years old. Loaded and rode like a cloud. I couldn’t imagine a road trip in one of these clown cars
You do understand its supposed to be small right? You act like thats a bad thing. Im a gm fan and gm was definitely making shittier cars at the time
My olds 307 got 1/3rd Mpg of a K car. Good luck going anywhere today in one of those GM gas hogs. That is if the quadrajunk carb even lets it start...
@@thefinalroman never any problem with the 307’s we had. Dad averaged 23mpg on highway. Gas was cheap then. He wanted comfort and luxury for our family and we did huge road trips. Maybe your 307 needed a tune up?!
@@carsjt1076 the quadrabog got scrapped for a Holley and finally it ran..
You shouldn't insult Singer Sewing Machines like that.
These cars were p.o.s. we had a kcar..she struggled to get up to 35 and top speed was 40 lol...nobody knew what was wrong..my mom bought it new from the dealer to..lasted about 5 months b4 the things above started.
Working for MOPAR dealerships all my life, these were TURDS from day one. What the engineers design and perfect in the Drawing rooms and laboratories are ruined by Accountants. Looking to cut costs at every stage of Production means a system that was designed to reliable, ended up failing. This caused by accepting the lowest bid from suppliers. Shame, it was a cheap car, that could have been somewhat reliable. Chrysler Dropped the ball on this and many other vehicle due to this failed edict.
What ball was dropped? At that time who wasn’t dropping it? Guess you’d forgotten consider the Ford Pinto an Lee Iacocca creation oh yes let’s not forget the Chevy Vega disaster.
Yes costs were cut, but in deeper channels. Timing chains where dropped in favor of timing belts etc etc. but who at that time wasn’t doing that.
I guess you’d know since I’m sure you bought them and drove them 100’s of thousands of miles right? I did and my experience was nothing close to a disaster many claim. But then I take of my stuff and most do not and thus this crazy bias is made up!
@@Channel-cm7yc . I drove more of these S**t boxes than anyone you know. I'm not going to get lectured by anyone. I know exactly what these cars were, low cost, cheap Transportation that proved unreliable. The only thing I liked about these vehicles is that when someone brought one in for service you could sell a lot or repair work. Everything Wore out. 100% junk. The only saving grace is the best K Cars were the last year of Production. Fuel Injection made them a bit better in the driveability category, and the redesigned interior made them a bit more plush. That's it. The models with the 2.6 Mitsu engine were a Disaster.
@@mikegimenez2629 2.6 was trash but 2.2 2.5's are still going strong today while most other 80's cars are long dead...
th-cam.com/video/tBGBMl6QSEQ/w-d-xo.html
The K-cars were pretty reliable compared to many other domestic cars of the same period. And, they were worlds better than the horrible Aspen/Volare. Ironic they were being delivered on a GMC Brigadier transporter at 13:26.
I noticed that too. Dodge discontinued its "Big Horn" tractors after 1975. Even at that time, there were hardly any of those left around.
Well, if nothing else, at least working class people could afford a new car back then. 🤔🙄
Well if this is true thank god for president cater great man
They should have went bankrupt before the K-Car!!!!
Damn right they should #fuckthebailouts
Why
Because We had 2 K cars and the 1984 Model wouldn't stop and We went down a bank, flipped it over landed on the wheels. It did $4700 worth of damage to it. Then My Sister was driving it later and She nearly hit a kid from a stopped School bus and plowed up a person's yard to keep from hitting the kid. There really wasn't any body damage that time, She was just shook up really bad.
@@jacobfleming565 I had a 1985 K car. It would hesitate and I nearly got ran over by a Tractor Trailer. Thankfully I cut it off on the shoulder of the Road. We also Bought a 1985 Full Sized Truck. I had problems with the Brakes too. No wrecks, but they didn't work right.
We also bought something like a 1982 K car because My Mom liked them because 6 people could ride in them. It was a Straight Gear transmission. Actually it was probably the best one that We had although it had a hole in the Exhaust system.
I own one of those....worst car among others made by Chrysler Corp...41 mpg...lmao
You would have had to live through owning one to understand it. The dealerships didn't care if the cars tried to kill You.
A car with a Singer sewing machine as a motor comes to mind as a description for the Aries & Reliant.
rolling piles
dodge romney
I sold "K" cars....Sorry.
How could you! Just kidding. Ha ha!
I still have mine today.. 1985 lebaron turbo.. 350,000 miles and still going strong
Ohh......and 1 more thing.
If you can find a better car....BUY IT!
The one & only Lee Iacocca ❤
These cars got a lot better once fuel injection came along..
Yes Mr. Iacocca, these K-series cars were better than the junk your Chrysler was putting out in 70s but NO WAY they compared better than Toyota, Honda and Volvo. The first vehicle I ever owned that actually made it past 100,000 miles was a Toyota Celica and the thing wasn't even 'breathing heavy'. My current Volvo has over 344K; original engine, tranny, suspension, cat convertor and the AC and power steering still work. ZERO body rot also. NEVER on an American car.
The disparity between how Chrysler presents these cars and how crappy they actually were is unreal. My grandfather had an 84 Reliant. Biggest piece of junk car he ever owned. As it was constantly in the repair shop, the owner of our local Texaco station finally told him to stop buying Chrysler products, period. Same with his Lebanon sedan - constantly in the shop. All these years later and Chrysler continues to build total pieces of junk with the reliability ratings to prove it.
THE MOST GOD AWFUL JUNK THERE EVER WAS. Only one that was even close to good was those that had the Mitsubishi engine
Those were the ones that broke lmao
@@Channel-cm7yc Which is why Chrysler dropped The Mitsubishi, and kept the 2.2. It's not just that commenter. Most mainstream media consumers automatically assume that any union made, American manufacturer's products are worse than the Japanese.
So much work to make such an ugly car.
Cute song but not as good as the new chevrolet and chevy citation jingles.
Corny but nice promotional film.
"K-Car Superstar" is a catchy tune and all, but trying to rhyme "asking for" and "superstar" in the chorus is grating. Couldn't have spent five more minutes on the lyrics?
Total garbage. Just like the garbage the current Chrysler builds, "The New Chrysler" built nothing but crap. They haven't built a good car since before the oil embargo of 1973.
1973 and Prior was the last time Chrysler had good-looking cars.