I could never be accused of featuring good, sensible, reliable vehicles in this column, but there are times when I try to. Or at least, I mean to; I start searching with every intention of choosing something someone might actually want to buy, and then something ridiculous catches my eye, and that notion goes right out the window. I start searching for something even sillier to go with it. And that’s how today’s choices came about.
Yesterday’s choices were fairly sensible, or at least they would have been a hundred thousand miles ago. When you get to a high enough mileage, you expect a certain roughness to a car’s condition, and the Toyota Sequoia we looked at yesterday delivered. Its rival, a Volvo 850 wagon with a five-speed stick, had even more miles, but looked a whole lot cleaner. No wonder it won easily.


It’s an easy choice for the Volvo for me as well. One of my neighbors has an 850 wagon in silver, and I’ve been admiring it every time it goes by. It’s a design that has aged very well. I’d happily drive yesterday’s winner.
All right, are you all ready for some bad ideas? No? Tough. Here they are.
1985 Dodge Omni GLH – $3,500

Engine/drivetrain: Turbocharged 2.2 liter OHC inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: Mount Clemens, MI
Odometer reading: 94,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well, but suspension needs refreshing
I can’t remember if I’ve told this story here before or not, but here it is anyway: A good buddy of mine had an Omni GLH in high school. He let me drive it a few times. I fell in love with it. He had to sell it after about a year, because the insurance was killing him, and he sold it to That Jackass Who Ruins Everything. You know the type; there’s one in every school. TJWRE proceeded to get drunk and wrap it around a telephone pole, and walked away uninjured, because of course he did. I’ve wanted a GLH of my own ever since, so I could give it the life it deserves.

GLH, of course, stands for “Goes Like Hell,” and while there were certainly faster cars available in 1985, there weren’t many that would make you say “holy crap” and giggle quite the way this one could. It just has no business being as quick as it is, which was kind of the point. And this wasn’t even the fastest version; a year later, Carroll Shelby took the last 500 Omni GLHs and squeezed even more power out of their turbocharged engines, to create the GLHS (“Goes Like Hell, S’More”). This one is “just” a GLH, and thus makes do with a regular 146-horsepower 2.2-liter turbo engine. It runs and drives fine, but it has a little oil leak from the valve cover, and its suspension is tired.

The Omni’s secret weapon was always its front seats; they’re remarkably comfortable for an economy car, and yet hold you in place well enough when the fat sticky tires on the GLH model make their presence known. The driving position is decent, too. The rest of the interior is economy-car-grade plastic, but it works well enough. This one is in decent shape inside, though the seller notes that the fuel gauge doesn’t work, and neither does the sound system.

It has been repainted white, which I don’t remember being a standard GLH color. I only remember black, red, blue, and silver. This one was silver originally, according to the seller. It does have some rust in the lower extremities, but nothing terminal. The hood and front bumper are tweaked a little, which the seller makes no mention of. It looks like it was in a minor accident. It’s not bad, but it’s worth asking about.
2007 Hummer H3 – $3,500

Engine/drivetrain: 3.7 liter DOHC inline 5, four-speed automatic, 4WD
Location: Albuquerque, NM
Odometer reading: unknown; odometer is messed up
Operational status: Runs and drives, but has low compression in one cylinder
Now this is a vehicle I’ve never wanted, though I can understand why some people did. GM’s Hummer line defied all vehicular naming logic by putting larger numbers on successively smaller vehicles. The H1 was a civilian version of the military HMMWV or “Humvee,” the H2 was a full-sized SUV based on the GMT800 truck platform, and this “little” H3 was based on the Chevy Colorado and GMC Canyon, though significantly beefed-up for off-road use.

The seller says this is a four-cylinder, but that’s not correct; the H3 is powered by a five-cylinder engine, which was the optional engine in the Colorado and Canyon. It powers all four wheels through a 4L60-E four-speed automatic. It runs and drives, but it burns a lot of oil; the seller took it to a mechanic who said that one cylinder is low on compression. But it’s obvious from the text of the ad that the seller doesn’t know much about cars, so it’s probably best to do your own diagnostics and find out what’s really going on.

I bet you’re wondering what kind of shape the interior is in. I am, too. The seller declined to include any photos of the inside, but they did include an individual photo of each aftermarket wheel. Check out the ad if you really feel the need to see them.

Outside, it looks–I can’t say “good,” because I think these things are hideous – but clean. The paint on the hood is a little scorched, and the black plastic trim has faded to gray, but it’s presentable. The truck is originally from Colorado, and now resides in New Mexico, so exposure to road salt should have been minimal. I wouldn’t expect to see any rust underneath.
Sure, you could spend $3,500 on a very nice Camry or something. But what fun is that? C’mon, live a little. Take a chance on a scruffy hot hatch from the ’80s, or a mechanically-challenged but flashy SUV. Which one will it be?
The white paint on that GLH is doing its best to cover up some rust and I assume some pretty hack body work, but those seats are worth the price of admission…. I mean, not actually, but they look nice. Anyway, the wounded H3 isn’t worth much. I am happy the Hummer brand exists, and in hindsight the H3 isn’t even that cringey compared to what some other auto brands have done, but today I want that rad red interior.
If it ain’t right, paint it white.
Still picking it over the H3 though.
The fact that the car has already been repainted and the lower door seam, base of the windshield/a-pillar, and lower rear quarters are all showing rust do suggest that it was either a long time ago, or not great bodywork. Either way. For $3500…send it!
The biggest issue probably is what’s hiding under the windshield, honestly. Once you can SEE rust on the cowl, it’s a pretty good bet there’s a lot of hidden horror beneath.
Are you telling me that when you paint a car you still need to fix the rust? Why have I never seen this covered here on the Autopian? I can’t recall DT ever pointing this important fact out. Maybe because on his cars he never fixed rust or painted them?
I mean, what you NEED to do when painting a car is entirely up to you.
One of these Goes Like Hell, one of these looks like Hell. I’ll pass on the Hummer LLH.
Maybe the seller’s description of the engine as a 4-cylinder was his way of describing the compression is in that 1 cylinder….
That’s what I thought!
Not even close!
Omniscient Omni for me. Just follow the torque steer.
GLH! GLH! GLH!
The H3, in hindsight, was a good effort to open the Hummer brand (really, GM? Launching a new brand in THAT economy?) but the *experience* was underwhelming.
Whereas the Omni was a bit of a Q-Ship. Saddled with econobox expectations, which it’d answer curtly via a turbocharged punch in the mouth. (Or at least through the steering wheel when the boost came up. Whee! torque steer!)
It’s way, way more interesting than the H3. Honestly, the only interesting H3 was the H3 Alpha and the contrast between these two couldn’t be more stark.
Do you want image (Hummer) or an experience (GLH)
Also, something something cultural harbinger something something early ’80s light at the end of the stagflation tunnel bringing an infusion of performance back via the spread of turbocharging and the realization that people still wanted fun to go with their tartan pants versus post 9/11 bunker mentality touching off decades of pseudo-military cosplay
Neither in this case. that little rust box has a bunch of red flags that I still see on it even if I am blinded by the heinous red interior.
Yeah, I bet it’s rustier than it looks. Still – entertainment year round for the price of a week’s vacation with a family of four.
I’m about 3 hours away from that GLH.
I do not need another project……
ARGH!!!!!
It would take me 7 or 8 hours but I’m with you. Phone dials! Whorehouse Red interior! $3,500!
If it runs and drives, it it really a project? Godspeed sir, this is ~8 hours away from me
well played Mark, got me to vote on a l-body 🙂 not a fan of the color, I suppose I would repaint in jet black with some jaunty red stripes to match the bordello red interior!
If that Omni has been repainted then it must have been one hell of a job. Doorsills and engine bay all appear to match the exterior paint.
And of course that was my vote. It would be my vote even if the Hummer had no engine problems. Plus those had digital odometers right? What happened that made it so “messed up” that you can’t tell the mileage?
Doors show a lot of rust and What the hell is up with the hood finish and fit?
Looking closer it seems to be the whole front fascia that’s cockeyed. The foglight on the driver’s side protrude but it’s almost inset on the passenger side. Looks to be the same case for the headlights as well. Either the front end has been hit or half the fasteners holding everything on up there are missing. Maybe both.
Even with that and the rust, I’ll still take it over that revolting Hummer.
Was going to vote the H3 I have always like them and this would have been cheap enough to just beat the hell off road but with the compression issue no thanks. Also that omni’s interior is so terribly awesome love the red haha.
I miss my h3 and wouldn’t ming getting another now that I don’t need the passenger room I did when I traded for a Sequoia. But not that one. H3 alpha in that color would be the one. Guess it’s the hot hatch today.
If I hadn’t just replaced my GTI with a (teal!) C4 the GLH would be tempting me right now.
That red interior rules so hard.
I am just imagining the gas station conversations with either of these. The people that would talk to me about the Hummer being interesting are probably not people I want to talk to. The GLH on the other hand is very cool in a, if you know, you know, kind of way. Anyway, GLH for the win it definitely brings the right energy.
That Omni is clean! There are far worse cars to blow $3500 on. That’s close to f-it money for a fun little time capsule.
A friend of mine bought one of these new when we were in our 20s. He asked me to go with him as he signed the papers as an extra set of eyes (and one not starstruck) to keep the dealer honest. It didn’t work. When we got to the part where he could decline the credit insurance – insurance that if he died, the car would be paid off – I told him to decline but he didn’t. He said, “I don’t want to stick my parents with the car payments.” I said, ” You’re in your 20s in perfect health. The only way you are dying is in this car, in which case it will probably be totaled. Let them repossess what’s left!”
To the question at hand – GLH all the way! It was certainly a fun car.
Omni for sure. Others have covered it nicely, but I’ll add it has perhaps the best-looking wheels Chrysler produced during the 80s. They looked particularly handsome on the Dodge Lancer.
agreed, the phone dials are the best!
Yep the wheels and the seats (my Mom’s Turismo had the same comfy seats in blue) made me choose the Omni.
SO easy today. The OMNI all the way.
I can smell the vape smoke and spilled red bull from the Hummer all the way over here. Plus I’d much rather do the work on the Omni than rebuild the I5 in the hummer.
Omni – that interior looks great for a 40 year old economy car
I think I cracked my phone’s screen hitting the button for the GLH!
GLH FTW this morning. Never liked the look of the H3, and if the engine is in bad shape, that’s the kiss of death.
That was an easy pick.
I dont think this will even be close…voted GLH!
I skipped the story to vote GLH. Now I’ll go back and read it.
EDIT: Ew, nothing changed my mind.
Same! Unabashedly inspired by the GTI. And the interior color is perfect!