Not very many cars are really all that weird from the factory. I mean, sure, there’s Citroën, and other French marques, and the occasional oddball like the Honda Element, but since automakers are in the business of making money, they tend not to stray too far from the beaten path. Auto customizers, be they professional or amateur, have to abide by no such constraints. This week, we’re celebrating weirdly customized cars, starting with these two.
Last week was all about cheap cars with stickshifts, and we ended the week with a four-way duel between cars that wouldn’t be out of place at RADWood. To the surprise of no one, that ultra-clean Toyota RAV4 took home the top prize, with the Mitsubishi Mighty Max coming in a distant second.
The Mighty Max would be a close second for me, but that Olds Achieva still takes the top spot. I don’t usually actually vote in the polls, but yesterday I did, because when I checked the results the total was 665 votes. I had to bump that number up by one.

The credit – or blame, if you don’t like it – for this week’s theme goes to Opposite Lock contributor Dogisbadob, who posted the ad for the Mercedes seen below, as well as a VW New Beetle ute built from a Smyth kit, and suggested that I use both in a Showdown. Well, the Beetle sold, so it’s out of the running. In my search to find something else to compete against the Mercedes, I found some other weird cars, so I have decided to make a week of it. Let’s check out our first pair.
1979 Chevrolet G10 Van – $19,999

Engine/drivetrain: 350 cubic inch OHV V8, three-speed automatic, RWD
Location: North Hollywood, CA
Odometer reading: 133,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
I was a little kid during the custom van craze of the ’70s, so I only experienced it through toys, models, and magazines. As a result, I probably have a romanticized view of it. But still, even today, I can’t help but think they’re cool. I see a van like this, and the six-year-old in me sits up and pays attention.

This is the Chevrolet G-series van, the predecessor to today’s long-running Express van. It’s a “shorty,” riding on a 110-inch wheelbase, and a G10, with a half-ton payload rating. Power comes from, of course, a 350 V8 with a Turbo-Hydramatic 350 transmission. This 350 has been upgraded with aftermarket fuel injection and a few other hot-rod parts. It breathes through functional side pipes, and the seller says it runs well, though they mention “a little issue starting” that might need sorting out.

The side door, as you may have noticed, has been converted from a slider to a gullwing style. Lift it up, and you find a full custom interior, finished in peanut-butter-colored vinyl and obscenely blue shag carpet. It looks like someone skinned Cookie Monster. The seller says it’s all new, so you shouldn’t have any worries about a contact high or any funny stains. It has a sink and a cooler, but the seller says the sink doesn’t work. The air conditioner, however, is all new, and it works just fine.

In the ’70s, a van like this would have had a deep metalflake paint job, with murals on the side, or at least intricate stripes. This one is a newer creation, and it has gone another way: with clearcoat over surface rust to lock in a patina finish. I kinda like it, but I know it’s not to everyone’s tastes. You can always sand it down and repaint it if you want. It has been back-dated a little with a grille from an earlier Chevy van, and it wears the requisite mag wheels and white-letter tires.
1981 Mercedes-Benz 300SD – $11,500

Engine/drivetrain: Turbocharged 3.0-liter OHC diesel inline 5, four-speed automatic, RWD
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Odometer reading: 275,000 miles
Operational status: Has been sitting for a while, needs waking up
Car-based utes are all the rage in Australia, but here in the US there have only been a few over the years: the Ford Ranchero, the Chevy El Camino, the Dodge Rampage/Plymouth Scamp, and the VW Caddy come to mind, but all are long out of production. In recent years, conversion kits have been available for certain cars to remove the rear seat and add a pickup bed, but more than a few enterprising folks have taken it upon themselves to create their own car-to-truck custom jobs. I have seen Mercedes-Benz sedans converted to trucks before, but never one quite like this.

This is the Mercedes 300SD, a standard-wheelbase S-Class sedan powered by a 3.0-liter five-cylinder turbodiesel engine and a four-speed automatic transmission. These old diesels have a reputation for lasting forever, and this one already has 275,000 miles to its name. How many of those were accumulated before the truck conversion, I have no idea. It has been sitting for some time; the seller revived it a few months ago, but it hasn’t run since then. Old simple diesels like this seem to be able to withstand long slumbers, but of course you’ll want to change all the fluids, and probably a lot of the rubber parts holding them in.

This is the best view of the interior we get, and it raises some questions. What’s that giant lump behind the front seats? Is that part of one of the rear door panels, with a big hole where the door handle used to be? What remains of the interior looks all right, about what you’d expect from an old high-mileage Mercedes. But the truck conversion doesn’t look particularly well thought-out inside.

It’s pretty damn weird outside; it looks like the trunk was elongated as part of the truck conversion, and it looks really tail-heavy and ungainly. The sedan rear window was just moved forward, and I have a sneaking suspicion that the rear quarter windows are just the rear door windows partially covered up. I wonder if the rear window could have been flipped around and installed backwards, to make it a concave curve like an El Camino’s rear window? The bed could have been a little longer that way, and maybe the ass wouldn’t have had to be quite so long.
Both of these are going to be hard sells for most people. It’s going to take exactly the right buyer to appreciate either one of them. But that perfect buyer is going to absolutely love them. I’m assuming that buyer is not among my audience here, but just remember we’re dealing with hypotheticals. So, hypothetically, which one would you rather have?









No it looks like that’s where the rest of his Family was lost.
The Mercedes was massacred. The van can be fixed. Both are 5x overpriced.
Blue shag carpeting inside a 70’s van comes standard with various human fluids. Rip that shit out and burn it. In spite of that however I’ll go with the shaggin’ wagon today. The outside is a canvas for all kinds of cool graphics or airbrushing. Replace the shag carpet with anything else and have fun with it.
A home made ute that has understandably been given up on by the seller is worth its weight in scrap metal.
A lot of people on here don’t seem to realize people spend time in all cars.
Not just vans.
Uhhh what if I want them both? Gah, these are both so rad it hurts!
Grabs bucket of popcorn.
Sitting this one out.
Ugh. If the choice is between an STD and a hacked-up SD, I guess I’m going with the SD. Not happy about it though.
I’ve had a couple of SDs over the years. I wouldn’t touch this one. The work looks tight from 20 feet but really sloppy in closer views. The rear is the most alarming angle, the tailgte doesn’t line up and the bumper is sagging. These are unibody cars, and someone has hacked up the entire rear structure. I’d be concerned about hauling anything in the bed, let alone driving it.
Seats are grubby, rear shelf is cracked and who knows what underneath/behind, and the steering wheel/horn cover looks loose. Basic stuff like the door mounted seat adjustment is broken, Passenger door handle is totally broken, the center console wood veneer is badly warped and lifting…man I’d hate to see the state of the vacuum lines in this thing too but I’d bet they’re non-op.
Without the “Ute” treatment, this is about a $2-3k car assuming it runs okay. My $900 beater SD was in better shape than this one.
The rear really IS a mess. I’d be worried about vacuum issues throughout what’s left of the SD as well.
Needs a vacuum before settling the vacuum issues
Vac lines in these are a pain on a good day. No telling whats going on here. I assume they would have capped anything going to the rear doors, trunk and fuel door if the work was half decent….which it probably isn’t. Either way, its a total mess. I’ll actually revise my post-covid 2-3k down to about 1500. If the engine and trans are decent, might be worth to toss into a good shell. I did that with my SD, got a rust free shell and interior for $400. Easy swap.
I can’t fathom a use for a 20k van that’s been turned into a rolling Flooring Store catalog.
But I know the w126 chassis well and could have fun with that ute. Probably as a winter beater.
I also know the w126 really well, had a few and thats exactly why I don’t trust this hack job! 11k gets you a damn near pristine 300SD, or really your choice of w124, w210, w211 diesels too. To be fair both choices are awful buys today.
Van is overpriced, but I really don’t want the El Mercedes.
Not just no, but OH DEAR GOD HELL NO. The Shaggin’ Wagon looks like you would need a full body condom just to enter it (do not go anywhere near it with a black light), and the El Mercedes-no is just too awful to contemplate being seen in. And both are *wildly* overpriced.
I’ll take the Merc all day, every day because it’s diesel mill will easily run another 275,000 miles or more. Not only that, but the van is probably one giant petri dish despite the seller’s claim the carpet is new – that’s not a bet that my immune system would be willing to take.
I could live down by a river eating government issued cheese.
That van certainly does have that “bad life choices” vibe, doesn’t it?
IMHO, both look ready to play “squeeze play” on the Price is Right where you remove a number and the real price is revealed.
Van $19999. Remove a 9 and It’s $1999.
MB $11500. Remove a zero ($1150), a 1 ($1500) or the 5 ($1100)
Without this, the PRICE IS WRONG, Drew!
This is the correct response
I don’t get the warm fuzzys about that ute conversion. The weird bulkhead behind the seats is probably a bed extension into the cab since the rear window takes up so much room. The rear overhang is ridiculous and they don’t even show a pic of the bed! I’m not sure why they absolutely needed a long bed, but they would have been better off shorter. Also another pic from the listing shows cracking bondo. Not for over 11k, thanks.
Probably because they have no skills
I shall revel in re-living my misspent youth with the
shaggin’ wagonvan today. But first I’m replacing those godawful retrofit LED headlights with proper sealed beams. Then we’ll see about getting a proper airbrushed paintjob…Both are way overpriced, but the Van for me
There must a typo in the price for the van. I wanted to vote for it, but man… At least the MB F150 would be useful.
I like project vehicles, and that MB looks like a fun, possibly long term project, so the MBute, or MBuck it is.
I don’t want to join the Diesel Truck brigade, and that van is f u n k y. Think I’m a van man today, and enjoying the vibe.
I want to say Mercedes because that diesel engine is relentless – but that quality is shared in equal measure by the SBC in the van. But where a M-B wagon converted to truckly proportions would be both awesome and useful, this thing just looks unbalanced and strange. Not good strange either, just strange.
The van, on the other hand, hits me right in the teenager and we will absolutely not be inspecting inside this thing with a UV light because I’m pretty sure I’d rather not know while I’m peeling bills off a stack to make this funky block of nostalgia mine.
Whoa, hold up. Twenty grand on the van?
Pass on both.
Shag-N-Wagon for the win today. But I would have to repaint it. My personal dislike of the whole ‘patina’ thing asside, this kind of van absolutly needs a mural or Valkyries gracing it’s flanks.
Also, the MB is just awkward.
Cause like a princess she was laying there
Moonlight dancing off her hair
She woke up and took me by the hand
She’s gonna love me in my Chevy van and that’s all right with me.
Ah, Sammy Johns, we hardly knew you, but you did pump up van sales briefly in the mid 70s.
I was initially taken in by the bright-shiny-objectness of the side view of the Mercedes. What with the chrome, the wheels, and the paint, it looks pretty good. But the interior looks like it would need a lot of work to get it in decent shape. Assuming the bit about the carpeting in the van being new is true, it’s in better shape for a drive to the next jam-band concert. Van it is.
If you are old enough to remember 70s shag carpet in vans, you know NOT to touch it.
MB for the vote.
That was my thought until I read it was new.
It cannot ever be new enough.
They haven’t made shag carpets in 50 years this carpet is clearly only new to the van
This was a tough call today; do I make a free candy joke about the van, or an airbrushed Wizard painting joke about the van?