Toyota is a pretty buttoned-down car company. Most of its economy cars are designed to be user-friendly at the expense of fun, but there have been moments in its history when it let its hair down just a little. Today, we’re going to look at two such vehicles – even though one is disguised as a Pontiac.
Looking at yesterday’s results, as of this moment, we have a first – a legitimate 50-50 tie. Half of you prefer the rusty stoner van, and half of you want the funhouse Charger. I guess that means it falls to me to cast the tiebreaking vote.
I chose the Charger. I do appreciate a good old van, but if I were ever to get one, it would be older than this one and look less like an HVAC company’s cast-off. Besides, the smell of certain recreational substances turns my stomach, and I have a feeling such a smell would be unavoidable in that van. The Charger is very near my old stomping grounds, actually; I used to live just down the road in Little Canada. I’d stop in at my favorite hobby shop on the way.

When you think “Toyota Corolla,” you probably picture a four-door sedan, likely in silver or white or beige, with a sensible automatic transmission. They are excellent cars. They’re not much fun, though. You can get a fun Corolla, of course, and you could get one in days past as well. It’s just that most buyers didn’t go for them. Today, we’re going to look at a couple of older models that could be quite a bit more entertaining than the average rental-spec model.
1989 Toyota Corolla GT-S – $4,700

Engine/drivetrain: 1.6-liter DOHC inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: Fort Worth, TX
Odometer reading: 214,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
The seller of this car says he’s selling it for his daughter, “for safety reasons.” It took me a minute to understand that; it’s not that unsafe of a car – oh wait. He’s talking about Craigslist crazies. Yeah, that makes more sense. Then the question is, why is she selling it at all? It’s a pretty cool little car, and it appears to be in great shape. I guess people sell cars for all kinds of reasons. Oh well, her loss is someone else’s gain, even if it is a little pricey.

The AE92 Corolla GT-S is the sportiest version of the E90 era Corolla. It’s front-wheel-drive, unlike its famous predecessor, though it does have Toyota’s excellent 4A-GE twin-cam engine. This one has a five-speed manual, which is definitely a plus in my book. This car with an automatic is just another Corolla. It runs and drives “excellent,” the seller says, despite its advanced mileage. It also has four brand-new tires, so it should be ready to go.

Inside, the heavily-bolstered bucket seats and red stitching on the steering wheel and shift boot set it further apart from lesser Corollas. The round white shift knob isn’t stock, but it is cool. Everything looks to be in good condition, though I don’t know whether that dash cover is preventing sun damage or hiding it. The air conditioning works fine, which is a nice bonus on a car this old.

It’s pretty racy-looking outside for a Corolla, with its factory body kit and white decals. This is also the only way to get pop-up headlights on a Corolla this age, and pop-up headlights are still cool. It’s in good condition, but it looks like there’s a little red overspray around the headlights that might indicate some previous repairs. It’s worth asking about.
2003 Pontiac Vibe GT – $3,995

Engine/drivetrain: 1.8-liter DOHC inline 4, six-speed manual, FWD
Location: San Diego, CA
Odometer reading: 215,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc. – NUMMI for short – was a former GM plant operated as a joint venture between General Motors and Toyota from 1984 to 2010. The site is now a Tesla factory, cranking out Model 3s and Ys in the same buildings that once churned out GTOs and Chevelles. In between, as NUMMI, the factory produced Toyota Corollas of several generations, and a bunch of GM-badged cars that were more or less Corollas, including the Chevy Nova, Geo Prizm, and this car, the Pontiac Vibe.

This is the sporty version of the Vibe, the GT model, which is powered by a Toyota 2ZZ-GE engine making 180 horsepower and sending it to the front wheels through a six-speed manual transmission. The seller says it runs and drives great, and has all new brakes. It has a lot of miles on it, but that’s not uncommon for these cars – though I’ve never seen one with 300,000 miles on it. (Nor has anyone; the odometers of these famously stop at 299,999.)

The Vibe’s interior is pretty much identical to the Toyota Matrix, only with Pontiac logos on it. It’s in good condition, especially for the mileage, and the seller says the air conditioning compressor was just replaced, so it stays nice and cool in there. Everything else works just fine, too.

The Vibe has just enough differences from the Matrix outside to make it its own thing. It’s unmistakable for anything but a Pontiac, and personally, I’ve always liked the Vibe’s styling better than the Matrix’s. This one is in decent shape, with just a little faded paint to show its age. Black isn’t the best color for these, but it does wear it well.
Admittedly, the prices on both of these are a little steep for cars with more than 200,000 miles on them. But we all know used car prices aren’t what they once were, and the ‘Toyota Tax” is definitely a thing. On the plus side, these are both cars that thread that difficult needle of being reliable but also fun to drive. The choice is yours: Do you prefer the flashy two-door coupe, or the handy hatchback?










Whoa, that’s awesome we had a tie!
It just makes it fun when the voting gets close. I’m glad you chose the Charger, Mark. I do like vans (down by the river!) but more on the side of the regular conversions; but yeah this one just doesn’t work. Today was difficult since I like both but had to go w/ the Corolla… usually I base a lot of voting mainly on body style and that’s what I’m doing…I like the sporty look of the Corolla, plus pop up lights! Although I really do miss Pontiac a lot! These are both great cars
It’s good the lil red coupe isn’t closer. I was getting nervous thinking how I was going to talk my wife into thinking buying it would be a reasonable decision.
But really a “BOTH!” day if I ever saw one!
Easiest choice for me this week. I know there is a lot of Autopian love for the Vibe, but it just do much for me. A Radwood-eligible coupe with pop-ups in red with white accents? Hell yeah, sign me up!
The Vibe is probably the better deal today. And if it were a Matrix, I’d be tempted (I actually prefer their styling over the Vibe). But I would buy that 2 door Corolla if it were white and closer. I like those cars, and the flip-up headlights are too charming.
Both are great vehicles, and well-loved, according to the odometers.
One of each, please.
Feeling the Vibe today.
I was all set to go Vibe, but that GT-S is just too interesting and would be a hit at Radwood.
My practical brain still screams Vibe, but the heart wants what it wants, so GT-S it is.
Those Vibes are absolutely unkillable.
Not really a contest in my mind here. the GT-S is the more interesting car even if it were in the same state as the less restored Vibe. Both are good cars of course, but the GT-S is spit shined and almost suspiciously low priced. If it is legit, There is not a day when I would choose the black wagon over the sporty GT-S.
Two engines with stratospheric redlines and manuals? Plus Yamaha heads on the Vibe? Both FTW
Generally, Toyotas don’t stir my drink. But there are a few I can get excited about, and the AE92 Corolla GT-S is one of them.
The 50/50 tie yesterday is a testament to your match up selection process, Mark. Kudos on designing a fair fight!
I love that Corolla, but I love that Vibe even more. You can’t really go wrong with either of them.
Both! But I went with Corolla because I already have a Vibe.
My best friend had that precise Corolla – nicknamed “Little Red Rocket” after a great girl band he saw once, whose merch sticker he applied to the driver’s side quarter window. It lived up to the name – he loved setting the cruise control at 110 on I-40 through Oklahoma on one of its many cross-country trips. Helluva little red rocket it was. He got it into a minor scrape that he had grief getting repaired – with some red overspray showing, itight have even been his!
But as per both my username and my profile pic, I had to feel the Vibe – I’m a Pontiac man, and it will haul more music stuff than the Corolla. Besides, it’s a manual (sorta) wagon – can’t beat that.
I just don’t feel the Vibe today.Corolla all the way.
That Vibe is a great little utility car, and it probably has at least another 84,999 miles left on it.
This is a solid two-car garage for under 10k. Gun to my head? the Corolla. I’ve always kinda wanted one.
I had an AE92 Corolla, same body style as this, but with the base 4AF carb motor. It was a great vehicle, but it made me swear off two door cars forever. Long doors and tight parking spots don’t mix very well.
Went with the Vibe for fun and utility.
This is a both kinda day. Toyota reliability, manuals, good shape. I chose the Corolla only because of it’s presence.
I’d take the Corolla with the MR2 engine.
I agree, both are priced a bit high, but that aside, I already own a hatchback, so gimme the cool pop-up headlights and shifter knob of the Corolla.
Joining the chorus of Both. Neither one of these would be a bad decision, unlike most Showdowns. Vibe will go on forever and is in good shape. Corolla is awesome 80’s and the popup headlights and stripes just make the package even better.
Since both wasn’t an option I went Corolla for fun. If I was buying one of these because I had to get to work it would be the Vibe. Seriously, both today.
If it was my only car? The Vibe, owned a Celica GT-S with a 2zz and the early cable throttle and higher redline, and they’re mightily underrated. If it was a second/hobby car? The AE92 for Radwood vibes alone.
The Vibe is more useful and also has a timing chain 😀
I voted for the Vibe GT on Pontiac Pthursday LOL
Also, the only US-market 4-door Corolla with the 4A-GE is the Prizm GSi. So if I was looking at old Corollas, it would be a Prizm GSi hatch.
Today might be a good day to have a both option too.