I’ve decided that the theme of this week is going to be platform-mates, and today, I’m featuring a platform you all love to hate: Chrysler’s savior back in the ’80s, the K-car. These cars provided reliable(ish) transportation for millions of people thirty or forty years ago, and today they have a following that seems to be equal parts nostalgia and irony. We’re going to look at two of them that are ten years apart.
Yesterday was all about the BG’s Greatest Hits. I was pleased to see that I started a joke, and a few of you ran with it. Oh, and we looked at a couple of cars, too. The super-clean Mercury Tracer, with its zoomy 1.8 liter BP engine, took home a decisive win over the cool-but-scruffy Mazda MX-3. It sounds like if the MX-3 had been a V6, it would have pushed the vote the other way, but you’re not going to find one of those for $2,500.
I went back and forth on this one before making my decision. The MX-3 is cheaper, and it’s closer to what I’d be looking for in a fun car at this stage. I love a good BP with a manual, but that Tracer is almost too nice for what I’d have in mind, which would almost certainly involve rallycross. I’d feel bad if something happened to it. I’ll take the MX-3, and leave the Tracer to someone who wants to polish it up and show it off.

Common wisdom says that it’s better to buy a car from the last year of an old design than from the first year of a new one. Sure, you might miss out on some whiz-bang new features, but you’re getting a car that has had all its bugs worked out. But what if the previous model was absolute garbage? That was definitely the case with the K platform. Chrysler’s F and M platforms were worthless – and that’s coming from the second-biggest Mopar apologist on this site. The K car had its faults, especially early on, but it was rock-solid compared to what came before. And by the end, the K’s derivatives, especially the AA platform, were actually really good cars. So let’s take a look at one early K car, and one late AA car, and see if I can talk you into one of them.
1983 Chrysler LeBaron convertible – $3,998

Engine/drivetrain: 2.6-liter OHC inline 4, three-speed automatic, FWD
Location: Kirkland, WA
Odometer reading: 57,000 miles
Operational status: I have no idea, actually
You know what puzzles me? Chrysler sold more LeBaron coupes than it did convertibles in every model year from 1982 through 1989, but all you ever see for sale anymore are the convertibles. Where did all those coupes go? I assume it’s that the coupes were seen as just regular cars, so they all got used up, while the convertibles were saved for special occasions and lasted. You know what else puzzles me? How did a clean, low-mileage, forty-three-year-old LeBaron convertible end up at a buy-here-pay-here lot in suburban Seattle? I mean, a ten-year-old Chrysler 200 with a quarter-million miles on it and its Check Engine light taped over, sure, but this?

For the first few years, the K car was available with two different engines: Chrysler’s own 2.2-liter four, or a Mitsubishi-built 2.6-liter. Fancier models, like the LeBaron convertible, usually got the 2.6. It’s carbureted, with that late-malaise-era electronic feedback system that has about a million sensors and a couple miles of vacuum lines. When it’s all working well, it’s fine, but one tiny vacuum leak or wiring short can cause all kinds of drivability problems. I can’t tell you how well this one runs, because the dealership selling it gives absolutely no information about the car’s mechanical condition. I assume it at least runs, or they wouldn’t be asking four grand for it. Anything beyond that is up to you to determine.

You’d expect a fancier interior in this car than in your typical Plymouth Reliant, and you wouldn’t be disappointed. It has leather seats – I don’t know how rich or Corinthian they are; Chrysler was still operating on a shoestring in 1983 – and a fancy trip computer operated by a bank of buttons on the dash. The display for it is right where the Electronic Message Center would normally be, so I have a feeling that the two options were mutually exclusive. This one doesn’t talk, I’m afraid, but it can show you your average fuel economy. It’s in decent shape inside, but the center armrest needs to be recovered.

It has a brand new convertible top, according to the seller, and the paint looks nice and shiny. This car must have spent most of its life in a garage. Kind of a waste, if you ask me, leaving a car sitting around like that, but at least the next owner can put some miles on it.
1993 Dodge Spirit ES – $3,333

Engine/drivetrain: 2.5-liter OHC inline 4, three-speed automatic, FWD
Location: Seattle, WA
Odometer reading: 43,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives fine, but needs a few things
The actual K platform was retired after 1989, but its successor, the AA, was more or less the same thing, with a longer wheelbase. Build the same thing long enough, and you’re bound to get good at it. The Dodge Spirit and its sister model the Plymouth Acclaim weren’t the most exciting things on four wheels, but they got the job done reliably. This Spirit ES was the “sporty” model, kind of like Chevy’s Eurosport – alloy wheels, no chrome trim, and bucket seats instead of a bench.

It also boasts a tachometer for its 2.5-liter throttle-body fuel-injected engine, and a floor-mounted shifter for its Torqueflite automatic transmission. You could actually get a five-speed manual in these, but they’re almost unheard-of. This one has only 43,000 miles on it, 30,000 of which were added in the past few years. It had its head gasket replaced a while back, unnecessarily, and the shop that did it botched some things. It has a small exhaust leak at the manifold, and a broken bolt on the valve cover that will need to be drilled out and re-tapped at some point. This is why it’s important, if you can’t do repairs and maintenance yourself, to find a reputable and trustworthy mechanic. I’ve heard way too many stories like that over the years.

It’s a little dirty inside, but everything looks like it’s in good shape. It has some really cool seat upholstery, too. The radio only works about half the time, according to the seller, but that’s easy enough to replace. Since it’s an ES, it has all the power toys, but the seller doesn’t elaborate on how much of it still works.

It’s nice and shiny outside, and I wouldn’t expect it to have any rust. It has been de-badged on the back, strangely, making it look like one of those generic cars used in auto parts store advertisements. Come to think of it, I think quite a few of those cars back then were Dodge Spirits. This is a car you wouldn’t have looked twice at thirty years ago. Now, however, there are so few left that it stands out.
I imagine some of you are going to shout “Neither!” and refuse to vote. That’s your prerogative. And I expect a few comments along the lines of “My aunt/grandpa/girlfriend’s mom had one of those, and it was crap.” Maybe I haven’t swayed anyone. And that’s fine; tomorrow I’ll give you a chance to vote for something else. Today, however, is all about the K cars.









Wait… is this the white Chrysler Lebaron that she traded her MG for?
Upvote for the Bring It On reference, downvote for no mention of Jon Voight
On the Spirit, I’m guessing the little dashboard slot above the column that proclaims “FRONT DRIVE” would house the PRNDL indicator on a column-shift model?
Can confirm. Had a column shift ’94.
Neither of these are particularly good looking or fun to drive. So might as well get the convertible and enjoy some sun.
I went for the LeBaron because I want to give off a “not very successful cocaine dealer” vibe.
I’m walking.
I’m going with the Spirit because I feel I’ve been lied to. The White Chrysler LeBaron does not have a cupholder armrest.
If I had a million dollars, I’d buy both!
I generally prefer the Spirit, and I love those seats, but I have zero interest in dealing with somebody else’s mechanical dumbassery in a car that won’t be rewarding to drive. I’ll cruise around in the convertible instead.
Never a k car but if I must the Dodge just because it’s probably less weird and less likely to catch fire from strange ideas. Plus I would rather deal with fuel injection then a weird computer controlled carb.
My grandmother had a LeBaron sedan, and was rear-ended twice in one year: one trucker and one police officer. That’s how deceptively slow this car is. Professional drivers both hit her.
I thought she was just allergic to the accelerator (true, she thought that flooring it would break something), but I drove it a couple of times, and pressing the pedal to the floor brought no extra drama or acceleration. I think the last 30% of the pedal travel was placebo.
The Spirit has been reduced to $2500. My 35 year old son learned to drive on our old ’94 Spirit. If it was closer, his 15 year old daughter would probably follow suit in this one.
Just basics here, if I was going to own a K-derivative, I’d prefer going into it knowing that I’d not have to immediately fiddle with an exhaust manifold and tapping a bolt out of the block. The pre-facelift LeBaron isn’t my thing, but I could probably appreciate it on some kind of ironic level. Interior is a bonus – that combo is genuinely handsome, and I’m kind of pleased that it has the stainless-look dash bezels and stereo.
I actually prefer Plymouth Acclaims, with a bench and a column shifter, but these twins are my all-time favorite boring cars. Quite comfortable and roomy in an easy to manage size. I’m not sure the rear is debadged- the late years of these ditched the badges and just had decal appliques. The 2.5 and the torqueflite won’t win races but its a durable combo.
I looked at these cars and the low mileage, and all I could think was “These were the last cars that Grandpa/Grandma were driving before they passed on.” I’d take the Spirit if I had to choose and teach my son how to drive with it.
As a GenX 80s kid:
You’re joking, right? You’re joking.
Pack up the babies and grab the old ladies, I’ve got the Spirit. For it’s time it was cleanly styled car and it still looks decent.
If you’re showing up to Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show, I think the LeBaron is the right choice
My concern with the LeBaron would be the number of Jon Voight jokes I’d have to endure.
Or people quoting the lyrics to Short Skirt, Long Jacket to you.
I don’t like either one of them, but the LeBaron will have more and longer lasting appeal to possible collectors. Shelve it for 20 years, drag it out and sell it again.
My dad had an ’86 LeBaron convertible and I still have a soft spot for that generation. I think the design has aged pretty well, and this one is super clean for what it is. Easy vote for the Chrysler from me.
Literally 2 Shitboxes today! I was actually going to say I’ll take the Spirit w/ it’s more well rounded newer design…but I changed my mind since those are such boring/hateful cars. The LeBaron is more interesting, a convertible, and now a time capsule. Plus no botched repairs on it…gimme Jon Voight’s car! Is his pencil in the glovebox though? Ha ha
I live in a place made for top down motoring, so if I have to pick one, it’s the convertible. And that leather interior looks to be in good shape. Also if the tape deck works I can dig out my old cassettes and listen to them again.
I don’t think the Spirit has been de-badged, the badges in ’93 were a sticker and there’s not a ton of contrast. It’s basically red-on-slightly-different-red
Indeed, you can make out the rear badges more easily in the ad pic on the beach.
I’m surprised to see a decked out ES with the base NA 2.5 in it. I’d have assumed it had the 3.0 V6 if I saw it on the street.
Me too – we had a base ’94 that we gave our son as his first car. He upgraded it with junkyard ES wheels and bumpers. I dont think I ever saw an 2.5 NA ES
The interior sold it for me, though both of these have shockingly good interiors but I can’t pass up a nice red one so I guess I’m not going topless this time.