I don’t remember exactly where I read it, but the line that best summarized the collective fun poking towards the PT Cruiser went something like this: “We must all remember the PT Cruiser. So it can never happen again.” And yet it was precisely this much-maligned car, purchased ironically during the COVID shutdown, that managed to endear itself so much to me that it gave birth to the Doodle Wagon brand that continues to be an integral part of my family. Allow me to elaborate.
It Looked Like A Scam
[Ed note: Say hi to Nick. He’s an academic and also a reader who submitted this article, which I thought was worth sharing! -DT]
The first time I laid eyes on “Pete,” as we ended up calling it, was on a Craigslist post out of a central PA town 250 miles away. It was February of 2021, the depths of the pandemic. Like everyone else working from home, I was getting antsy. The ad was inconsistent, with photos from different contexts. It presented the car as RWD in like new condition despite near 120,000 miles, both of which were resolutely impossible. But the asking price was only two grand. “Donna” responded to my inquiry from an AOL account, starting a new thread with every response. She claimed it was a one-owner car, treated to regular oil changes, and hand washing only. She said it belonged to her late husband, and while she was keeping hers, she had to sell his. Someone had almost bought it that day, but had broken their leg in an accident on the way in. I was in luck and invited to go see it.

My Spouse: “As Long As I Have Nothing To Do With It”
At this point I was both convinced this was a scam and inexplicably drawn to the entire situation. Was it the electric blue paint? The manual transmission? I mentioned it to my spouse, and after the laughter subsided, managed to convince her I was not joking. We’d driven exclusively German cars up to that point. She just didn’t know how to handle the astonishing request. I argued it could be a second car for driving our tall bernedoodle around, and before I could actually get a chance to think about it all, she said “as long as I have nothing to do with any of it.” A local friend agreed to drive us in my car, and very suddenly, it got real.
It Was Not A Scam At All, And The Seller Was A PT Cruiser Diehard

After an uneventful drive, we knew we had arrived when we spotted the two PT Cruisers in her driveway. Hers had flames painted over its body, while his looked old, small, and somewhat forlorn, with none of the shine of the photos. The car was dirty, the steel rims had rusted, headlights were cloudy, there was a rust spot on a rear fender, and (three) wheel arches had ugly metal cladding. But the paint looked otherwise clean, the interior was in great condition, and the manual was an aftermarket Hurst shifter topped by a skull whose eyes lit up with a button. Donna was dealing with some health issues of her own, but her own eyes lit up when talking about the car. Despite my initial misgivings, she could not have been more real, and assured me that better looking hubcaps where in the mail. After a quick test-drive, I asked her to return the hubcaps she had ordered, kept the difference as a discount, paid her cash, signed papers, and drove away. Pete had no trouble with 70ish mph speeds in fifth gear. I drove home and went to bed trying not to think too much about what had just transpired.
Creating The Doodle Wagon

The next morning began the transformation that would turn Pete into what I would call the OG Doodle Wagon, a succession of unloved, ugly, or just plain weird automotive icons that came and left my possession carrying those beloved plates (Aztek, HHR, HHR-SS, C-Max). The first was to drop the car off to my buddy Keith, a trusted detailer, rust guru, and small fix genius, who generously held his tongue while scratching his head in the car’s presence. Keith detailed the car in and out, got rid of the metal cladding that “did not belong there,” filled in and resprayed the rust spot, and polished the headlights. I honestly do not remember where I got the idea, but responding to his suggestion to just “clean and spray” the existing rims, I just texted him to pick “canary yellow” paint. Somehow…. he went for it, adding to the long list of small miracles that brought Pete into being. When I went to pick it up, I knew an icon was born.
My First Impressions

I come not to bury the poor PT Cruiser, as so many more have competently done so before me. The take presented here does not settle the perennial debate on whether it was “not that bad” or “truly an unbelievable turd” — two extremes between which we seem to collectively seesaw depending on our state of nostalgia. I come here to tell the story of how Pete turned out to be a remarkable car that spread happiness in my small corner of the world, at least judging by the number of chuckles and thumbs up we received on a daily basis. It never stopped being awkward, slow, and somewhat tippy. It didn’t like snow, and didn’t brake particularly well either; participating in traffic required you to be actually attentive. Yet once you made your peace with it all, including the fact that this was not the turbocharged GT but the regular 150hp 2.4 liter, you could begin noticing the multiple virtues of this surprisingly capable clown.
The first was how remarkably analog it all felt. I had remote locks and power windows, but that was just about it. Climate controls had a wonderful simplicity to it, and feeling the heat envelop you after turning the dials made the car feel cozy. The radio felt accessible, and encouraged me to listen to it often, perhaps the only car in which I’ve ever done that regularly. The gauges were annoyingly dim at night, but a Walmart leather cover made the steering wheel strangely nice to command, and the seats were just so comfy. The aftermarket HURST shifter was a pleasure to operate, not in the sense of comparing it to German or Japanese counterparts, but in the sense of enabling my soft, professional hands to operate mechanical machinery. The clutch action was neither memorable nor forgettable, and once you got yourself beyond the “first to second RPM drop” terror, it was enjoyable to go through the gears. I began catching myself always wanting to go out on a drive in it.
Kids These Days Like The PT Cruiser. It Is No Longer Uncool

As weeks went by, Pete ingratiated itself into our local lives with surprising ease. The reasons were both material and aesthetic. It took me no time to recreate the, um, colorful IKEA-style exterior on the inside. An inexpensive portable Bluetooth speaker that matched its electric blue exterior got successfully Velcro-ed on the dashboard, sitting right underneath some oversized fuzzy dice that matched the canary yellow wheels. Charmed by these details and the retro vibe, Pete became a favorite of our teenage niece and her friends. Driving through downtown with the dog looking out the rear window became an arresting sight.

Yet beyond its aesthetic, if we can allow that term, Pete turned out to be really useful for a number of reasons. It had a very low loading floor that would put our current CX-50 to shame. Unlatching a few levers allowed me to fold the bigger rear seat like a suitcase, sending it straight to the basement. Our dog loved the open rear space instantly, having the lay of the land back there, whether for looking out the window or lounging on his blanket when tired.
[Editor’s Note: I once spoke with the Chrysler engineer who designed the PT Cruiser’s rear suspension; he told me Chrysler had used a 32-inch old-school TV as a requirement for rear cargo volume. To fit this big CRT TV, Chrysler had to avoid having big struts poking in from the sides, so they developed a remarkable watts-link twist-beam suspension.

Somewhere on an SD card I have a video of me and that engineer doing a walk-around of the PT Cruiser’s suspension. Until I find that, the above is all I got. Anyway, back to Nick! -DT].
Mulch runs suddenly required no planning, as did picking up the odd piece of furniture. Long pieces of lumber became no problem, given the flat folding front passenger seat. We once even fit the equipment for an entire small gym, when a friend said yes to turning their garage into our COVID CrossFit box. Those were the days.

We had Pete for about seven months and 2,000 miles. It had some relatively inexpensive needs during that time, including a new front caliper, AC recharge, ignition coils, a cam shaft sensor, a lower motor mount, and the notorious shift cable bushings – which actually left me stranded, but luckily in a local parking lot in our town. Our BMW would have commanded a fortune for such needs, but not humble Pete, with cheap parts and modest labor requirements. Before the next winter, I decided to let it go, posting it locally for a price that included its repairs. A repair shop owner from the next town over came to test drive it, and undeterred from the yellow rims, offered asking price on the spot. It was for his daughter Mary, a fierce high school student who paid with her own cash and had to be convinced to accept “her first tank of gas on us.”


To this day, I think about Pete often. I know it has been good to Mary, as I stop by her father’s shop to chat, and catch a sight of it. I try not to regret the Rust-Oleum can that let her coat the rims back to black, as a local kid may not want the notoriety of our silly doodle.

The world continues to shudder from the sins committed by that Bryan Nesbitt-penned abomination. And yet, sometimes I catch sight of Pete parked by the lake, as Mary and friends chat and watch the sunset. Its rims may no longer be yellow, but its secret is safe with me. And there’s absolutely nothing ironic about that, dear readers.









The PT was not my cup of tea, but it was much better than the HHR, which felt like a copycat.
Is meaning of unironically the opposite of the opposite?
Before COVID I had one of these as a rental for longer than I care to remember, but it really wasn’t a bad little car. I thought the performance with the automatic was decent although gas mileage wasn’t great. In addition to the PT Cruiser I also spent some time with a Kia Rondo, which was remarkably similar in performance, gas mileage, and room. Used PT Cruisers are usually good buys. I see a lot of them are “grandma” and “grandpa” cars in the online classifieds. (Their first owners now driving on the long highway in the sky.) A PT Cruiser makes a great beater and is a great first car for a teen.
Hi Nick and thanks for your great story! 🙂
So many things of note here, in no particular order:
You got a great deal, and likely so did Mary who bought it from you afterwards.
Kudos to Mary, a high school gal who wanted and now drives a manual.
Love your prior car collection: HHRx2, Aztek, C-Max, and then this PT Cruiser. All of these cars have impressed me with their practicality (I’ve never test driven an Aztek) and relative simplicity.
The PTC looks quite spiffy in that blue, and I’m a fan of steelies, even in yellow. Plus, I’m generally pro-Ikea and pro-Sweden and Ukraine, so the whole blue/yellow thing is sort of awesome.
Wish I had a Keith who’d take care of a bunch of things at once at (presumably) a fair price. I’ve had my last three mechanics (over 30 years in LA) all retire. I’m currently mechanicless, so my cars each have a to-do list. 🙁
Just curious: after going to the effort of finding/buying/fixing the Doodle Wagon (I always choose my daily driver with dog transport needs in mind also) why sell it? I mean, it’s nice to pass it on for Mary to enjoy (probably treasure) but don’t you still need a dog/mulch/lumber vehicle? Have you replaced it with something else? Just wondering. 🙂
Thanks Scott (and everyone)! Those other cars actually followed in Pete’s footsteps. WIll write each up and submit here, so stay tuned.
Keith is not only technically amazing, but a neat guy. One of the strongest themes you will see in this whole series, something I consciously tried to capture in this first installment, is how pursuing these cars put me in conversation with people from all walks of life. It’s refreshing to get outside my typical set of friends. What I appreciate about Keith is not just his technical talent, but wordly wisdom. A bumper respray can be bumper out or done in place; he’s the kind of guy that “gets” which car and situation require the former, and which the latter. I have at least three other mechanics though, depending on what I need done. I simply can’t or won’t drive German without access to them, period. More on these wonderful characters later.
Another commenter raised the issue of why flip Pete quickly. There is no simple answer, but I will ponder the question in the second installment. I need to sit and write the next one, the inimitable SS!
Great read! My first car was another car typically (and maybe rightfully) hated on. But I treated it well and it generally treated me well, or as well as I deserved at that age. Sometimes the machine transcends public bias and does what it’s here to do. Pete sounds like one of those cars.
A manual PT Cruiser with the factory flame decals was the second car I ever bought. Traded my beloved Dakota for it because I just couldn’t deal with how it changed after being t-boned.
I loved it to death. A Hurst shifter and a strut tower brace literally transformed that car into a truly enjoyable machine.
I’ve always thought the PT Cruiser was probably a decent, practical car ruined by the boomer pseudo hot-rod aesthetic. Way back when it was first introduced, my mum, then shopping for a new car, sent me a picture of one saying hopefully it might be like a Renault 4 – our beloved old family car. Nope, it was no Renault 4, but I’ve always wanted to see someone redo it as such.
I do have to wonder, looking at these photos, what anyone would need 6 or 7 foot long Trus-Joists for?
Hahaha – my best buddy is a contractor, and I was helping him on a summer project. That was a single long i-joist not needed once we put them up on the ceiling. I cut it into three pieces, cut and attached 4×4 legs on it, and built a three-tier fire wood shed. I put outdoor paint on it, and it has lasted five years outside in our upstate NY winters…. pretty great. You have a good eye!
My neighbors had one of these for a long time and seemed to like it. The big oil slick on the pavement under it made me nostalgic for the 65 Dodge Dart wagon I drove in high school. Probably not the kind of nostalgia Chrysler had in mind.
Your description of Pete reminds me of Whatis, a ’03 Toyota Matrix XRS, who hauled ass and also stuff. I miss that girl, both for the time I unwisely ran down a Evo MR over 14 miles, and for the time I hauled 43 computers and screens in her.
The fold flat rear was the source of many shennanigans from camping and softroading to the time with the fire extinguishers.
My first 6 speed.
Indeed, this entry brings up love for two cars, not just one.
In 2006, I rented a Pete-blue PT Cruiser in Billings, Montana, for a two week trip that included a week at the oldest fully operating dude ranch in the US, plus a trip to Yellowstone, with my wife and 13 year old. Other than the boy for whom existence was a chore, as anyone of that age exudes, the trip and car were true wonders – though it did have a slush box. The PT, by its unique features, sold me on the idea of a small wagon-hatch.
Jump to 2010: We moved to the mountains, and my Miata was no longer practical in the colder months. I’d now be commuting two hours to the city each week, back on the weekends.
With the memory of the PT in mind, I found a 3 year old Pontiac Vibe with 125k on the odometer, similar to your Matrix, built at NUMMI in Fremont, CA. Turns out, it was a fleet car for Labcorp, a medical lab company. I’m okay with fleet cars, so I bought it. You could still see the ghostly Labcorp image on the doors from the removed logos. I started calling it the Piss Boy, due to its provenance. Looking at its Carfax, I noted the car had crossed the US no less than three times!
Over time, I came to love that car. It wasn’t great in snow, especially when trying to climb snowy hills (I did have an opportunity to buy an AWD Vibe at the same lot and unfortunately passed). It served me well, hauling possessions, lumber, luggage, etc. it has many smart little cubbies that helped, too.
When it finally came time to buy something driven by all four wheels, I posted a note in his window asking for a new home for Poncho Vibe (his updated name, pronounced Poncho Vee-bay), detailing his history and my admiration. It took about two days being parked in the local grocery lot to find its new owner, the daughter of a local business owner who was heading off to college, and who insisted on using her own savings to take ownership.
My 2020 Hyundai Kona, though capable in its own right and a bit fun, still doesn’t quite match up. I’ve named it the Grocery Cart, for now.
It’s time to stop crapping on the PT Cruiser. When it debuted, journalists and owners sang its praises. The PT was built on the cheap n’ cheerful platform of the Neon. With the stick shift, they were fun-ish to drive even in stripper spec.
No one can argue with its bigger-on-the-inside practicality. And YMMV, but I think it was one of the more successful retro styling exercises of the era.
Sure, quality was so-so, but not outrageously bad for the era. And as long as you fixed the bits that broke, the PT was surprisingly durable. These things just kept rolling – think about how many you still see on the road even today.
The best thing about the PT though was its affordable entry point for noob car enthusiasts. Want a vintage ride? Slap some woodgrain on the sides. Think hot rods are cool? Flame on! Want a big girl Barbie car? Pink rims and fuzzy dice, dahling. Ghetto cruiser? Pimp your ride with gold bling. Sleeper? Bolt in the turbo and the fast bits developed for racing Neons.
Or make a Doodle wagon, a rolling paradise for your favorite canine. Nick gets it.
The very thing the PT is often mocked for, is why we should celebrate it. This car is entry-level Autopian goodness.
I think it’s being reevaluated in the way that Creed-style radio rock is currently being reevaluated. It has now lost its saturation and can now be evaluated on its merits and not its ubiquity. At the same time, it’s entry-level enthusiast status meant you’d see three a day in woodgrain or whtever and regard them as a blight.
Thank you! So well said. Being cheap turned it into an experimental canvas, new or used. I do agree that we should celebrate it.
It helps that it’s gone from “A Neon, but thousands of dollars more expensive” to “A Neon, but cheaper and probably better-maintained”
So much, this. 100%
I’m reminding of the episode of Top Gear where our trio buys cars in So Florida and road trip to New Orleans. Somewhere in the Panhandle of Florida, Jeremey, sweating his ass off in the Camaro, comments that it wants to keep going, and that he’d rather be in it than an Enzo Ferrari…and I honestly believe him.
Unloved, mistreated and forlorn cars only ask to be appreciated for what they are and they become remarkable machines.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again… a PT Cruiser is a great car as long as you’re not getting one with the base engine with the slushbox.
I liked the one I had and only got rid of it because someone smashed into it and it got written off.
If it’s the base engine with the manual like what I had, it’s quite peppy and gets much better real world fuel econony compared to the automatic than the EPA numbers would suggest.
And if you must have the slushbox, then get the turbo. But understand then your fuel economy will be more like a V6 car.
Also at the 6-7 year mark, you have to be prepared to replace the thermostat housing, coolant hoses and the radiator as those bits age out and usually start to leak. Don’t let coolant leaks slide because that’s how you get an overheating situation and a blown headgasket.
And that firm rear suspension and easy to remove rear seats made it better at hauling heavier things than most other small cars.
But I have to say that the twist beam rear suspension did NOT eliminate hops and skips on turns when unloaded… but it was fine.
Where are the pics of the doodle that this wagon belongs to?
David, put them back in!!!
I come not to bury PT Cruiser, but to praise it!
I went to the DC Auto show specifically to check out the PT and the Aztec (dodged a bullet there!) I immediately ordered one ASAP, Mine was even pictured in a US News and World Report article on retro inspired new vehicles. Fabulous car I drove for about 12 years. The convertible was almost as good and sportier with the turbo and 5 speed. Rust began to take it and weird things happened, like the sunroof getting stuck partially open. Another car I will always miss!
My wife had a first year PT Cruiser. For sure, it was slow but that was the only complaint. Packaging efficiency was excellent! We bought the first one in our state and it was so cool to be a celebrity for $17,000. Love your article and what you did. I must say though, the yellow wheels were certainly a choice.
I regret NOTHING! Would I do it again though? That’s the question. For a while, I looked for a 500L manual, but was never able to find the right one. Some come with the white roof and mirrors. If I ever get one, I’ll powdercoat the wheels white. But that’s not the same effect as Pete. I still don’t know how that happened, but glad it did 🙂
I have a 500L manual and its been a great car! For 4 passengers its genuinely roomy and has fantastic vision. But a PT Cruiser would have it badly beat for carrying any kind of cargo.