You remember the old fable of the tortoise and the hare, right? Slow and steady wins the race. Today, we’re looking at two slow and steady cars from the ’70s, but in this case the “hare” might actually be the slower one.
Yesterday we looked at two right-hand-drive imports from Japan. Lots of you liked the idea of the Ford Ka, but it didn’t translate into votes. I think that little Mitsubishi was just too cute to pass up, and that’s before the benefit of 4WD and a much more modern engine design.
I have to agree. I really like the Ford Ka, but it feels like it’s not worth the money, especially when you can get a US-market Aspire that has the same basic vibe to it for a lot less. That Pajero, however, feels special enough to be worth some extra dough.

A rising tide lifts all boats, they say, and that seems to be the case with old car prices. In these days when bona-fide classic cars are fetching five, six, and even seven figures, everything more than forty years old is suddenly triple the price it used to be. It sucks, but that’s the way it is. You can save a little money by picking something that needs a bit of work, and that’s what we’re going to do today.
1978 Toyota Corona – $3,500

Engine/drivetrain: 2.2-liter OHC inline 4, three-speed automatic, RWD
Location: Zebulon, GA
Odometer reading: 200,000 miles
Operational status: “Runs and drives but not well”
Here once again we have our old friend the Corona, Toyota’s family sedan offering before the Camry. This is the car that helped make Toyota’s fortunes in the US, way back in the early 1960s. By the time this Corona was built in 1978, the nameplate was in its fifth generation, though still using the same basic rear-wheel-drive layout. It was a common car in its day, but the vast majority of them were recycled into toasters or snow shovels decades ago, making this a rare sight on the road today.

Toyota’s 20R four-cylinder engine needs no introduction. It’s the engine that powered countless Toyota pickups, not to mention an army of RWD Celicas. It’s a reliable and durable engine, not known for high-revving antics, but just about bomb-proof. This one is backed by a three-speed automatic, which slows forward progress a bit. It has been sitting for a while, the seller says, and while it still starts up and drives, it needs some work. It might be as simple as old gas, or it might need some more extensive cleaning and reconditioning to bring it back up to snuff.

You can tell Toyota was really trying hard to appease US buyers, with a bench seat and a column-mounted shifter like it’s a Malibu or something. The interior is in reasonably good condition, but the carpet could use a cleaning and there’s a crack in the top of the dash.

Most of it is in good condition outside, but there is a pretty good wrinkle by the right headlight, and the plastic headlight surround is broken. The windshield needs replacing too; it’s a spiderweb of cracks. It looks rust-free and complete, though.
1979 Volkswagen Rabbit L Diesel – $3,000

Engine/drivetrain: 1.5-liter OHC diesel inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: Fernley, NV
Odometer reading: 92,000 miles (probably rolled over)
Operational status: Runs and drives well, but needs an alignment
Volkswagen’s great shift from rear-engined air-cooled cars to front-engined and water-cooled began in the early 1970s, with the introduction of the first-generation Passat, which came to the US as the Dasher. A year later, the first-generation Golf arrived here, sold under the name Rabbit. Beginning in 1978, Volkswagen built Rabbits for US consumption in Westmoreland, Pennsylvania instead of Germany – unless you ordered one with a diesel engine. This ’79 Rabbit L diesel is a German-built car, therefore retaining the round headlights, smaller taillights, and nicer interior trim so prized by discerning Volkswagen enthusiasts.

A normal gasoline-powered Rabbit was not exactly a performance car, but the diesel engine slowed things down dramatically. This car’s naturally aspirated 1.5-liter diesel engine makes just 48 horsepower and 59 pound-feet of torque, giving it a 0-60 time longer than most Mark Knopfler guitar solos. It’s enough to climb Pikes Peak, though, as my dad proved in a Dasher diesel back in 1981, and it can flirt with fifty miles per gallon if you’re careful. This one shows just 91,879 miles on its five-digit odometer, but I imagine it has gone around at least once. It runs and drives well, but it just had a bunch of suspension work done and hasn’t yet been aligned. It will probably drive even better after that.

The seller says the seats are “very worn,” but honestly, they look better than I’d expect. The padding seems to have been beaten out of them, but the vinyl is holding up pretty well. It has a dash cover that’s probably hiding a multitude of cracks. I had no idea those dash covers were so common until I started writing this column. It seems like about every fourth car I look at has one.

Outside, it’s rust-free, missing its front bumper, and wearing the rear bumper of a later Cabriolet. The seller says the car comes with “many goodies,” but I don’t know if that includes a front bumper. No matter; my ’79 Scirocco didn’t have a front bumper for about half the time I owned it, either. It’s refreshing to see a Rabbit still at its stock ride height, too. Far too many of them have been lowered.
So from the sounds of it, you could drive either one of these home, and then plan to do some tinkering to whip them into shape. Neither one needs anything major, though, and with a little work, you could have an interesting conversation piece for Cars & Coffee. Who needs a fast car anyway? Just kick back and take it easy in the slow lane for a while, let everyone else jockey for position. Which one of these would you take?









Rabbit wins for the nostalgia – growing up, my boy scout troop leader had a baby-blue VW diesel Rabbit that we would take on canoe trips. He had a roof rack with extra-long crossbars and we’d strap 2 aluminum canoes down side-by-side on top. His son also installed a big subwoofer box in the hatch so we could listen to hair metal to and from the trip.
Tough choice, but I’d have to go with the Corona, since I know I wouldn’t fit in the Rabbit..otherwise, I’d go with the Rabbit, probably.
You might be surprisd at howuch room there is inside a Rabbit.
I tried to get in a Rabbit once, a very long time ago. I simply didn’t fit, leg- or headroom-wise. Same with the G2 Rabbits.
I sold my last Rabbit 4-door (an ’83) over 20 years ago for $300 and it had a GTI 1.8L and suspension, and a ton of new parts. I can’t imagine driving the same car with 1/2 the horsepower so I’m going with the Corona. I’d engine swap that one to glorious burnout antics.
crack in toyota dash looks like a continuation of one of the windshield cracks.
it probably is not…
My friend’s family had a diesel Rabbit. Powerless is an understatement, however that one is going to win for me today for one reason alone – the windshield on the Toyota. I might be wrong, but it seems to me that getting a replacement windshield for that thing would be this side of impossible. I probably would have gone with the Corona otherwise.
I had an 82? two door diesel Jetta right around 9/11 happened. Converted it to vegetable oil and enjoyed it for a few more years before moving back to the New England. Not starting well in the cold is what finally did it in. Sold it to a hippie from Maine for what I paid for it. I bet it is still tooling around…
The Rabbit / Golf would have been my vote, but for the 1.5l engine. Even in such a lightweight car, 48 hp would be dismally slow. I’d get the Crown and spend the rest of my life looking for a replacement screen, front fender and headlamp trim..
My grandmother had a ’79 diesel Rabbit, and it was the first diesel car I’d ever really experienced. So, just for nostalgia, Rabbit it is.
The seats on that rabbit remind me of those peat bog bodies that they find in Ireland every now and again.
Well, this was easy…Rabbit! Not only for the stick, but I really like these. They are a blast to drive…used to have a Rabbit GTI and a Jetta from this era. Would definitely swap for a gas engine though so it can live up to it’s name. The Corona is pretty cool too but don’t want the corona virus, ha ha
Hmm. I owned a ‘79 Rabbit and a couple of Toyotas, one with a 22R engine. The finishing differences between German and Pennsylvania made Rabbits were big. I have a GTI now, but have recently had old Toyota desires. Gotta go GTI and return to 50HP and below club (I had a Beetle, a Renault and an Opel that were all about 50HP.
Rabbit diesel not GTI ????????
My first car was a ’77 Celica with a 20R, so the Corona gets my vote for no other reason than I’m familiar with the hardware.
This would be a both day, but since that isn’t an option, I’ll go with the Corona because I just really like the style and I haven’t already owned one before. That Golf will be slow, but it will run forever.
The VW is less and maybe in a little better shape than the Toyota so it got my vote. We’ve seen Coronas here before, and they were more tempting than this one. Plus, I wonder how difficult it will be to find a windshield for it.
Bad memories of our first Rabbit, a first year specimen, and it was a hunkajunk even brand spanning new, so Corona it is.
Me too. I had a 1984 Rabbit, it was the biggest POS I’ve ever owned!!
Rabbit, because stick and no need to smog it. But now I have the opening bars of “Corona” stuck in my head dammit.
Calexico’s Mariachi cover rocks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtvXgwbnm9g
I rode a few times from Connecticut into New York City in a diesel Rabbit. My buddy knows how to drive well, and he shifted a lot, but we were able to keep up on 684. Car was bulletproof, cold, snow, heat – didn’t matter, it would start up and rattle away. If it turned over twice before I’d still buy it – long as it wasn’t rusted. That’s what got my friend’s car.
At the time the Toyota was new, their automatics gave trouble, making the choice even easier.
With proper maintenance, those old mechanical-injection VW diesels would run forever, too. You might not get anywhere fast, but you’d get there over and over and over again.
I’m gonna go with the Rabbit. If I’m gonna get a slow car, it might as well be the one with the manual. It’s also cheaper and “runs well” while the Corona apparently doesn’t run well.
Rabbit, align it and convert it to run on Fry grease, and then just drive by all the eco terrorists Rolling Fries!
The Rabbit has less torque and horsepower than my air-cooled Beetle! And it gets my vote, I’ve always loved those old Rabbits and it would go nicely with my more modern Sportwagen TDI. Not to mention the impressive aftermarket parts availability for VWs. I dunno what it’s like for older Toyotas, but I suspect it will be easier to find parts for the VW.
Corona, all day long. A couple of cheap upgrades will get that 20R purring.
I do share another poster’s concern about replacing that windshield, though. Otherwise I’ll stand by my Corona vote. I always liked these back when they weren’t that uncommon to see.
I think there are probably enough of them around that you could probably score a used windshield from somewhere.
https://windshieldstogo.com/
They appear to have them – I didn’t add my email or CC info to get the official quote though. Looks to be under $200.
Well I’ll be dog-gonned. Nice catch.
Aside from a few things that would need to be cleaned up or refurbished inside, that’s a good car.
And the 20R is dead simple to work on. I had an RA29 Celica (1976 Liftback 5 spd), and with a decent carburetor (Weber), electronic ignition (MSD), and a Midas exhaust setup, it was just fun enough.
One pill makes you larger
And one pill makes you small
And the ones that mother gives you
Don’t do anything at all
Go ask Alice
When she’s ten feet tall
And if you go chasing rabbits
And you know you’re going to fall
Tell ’em a hookah-smoking caterpillar
Has given you the call
He called Alice
When she was just small
When the men on the chessboard
Get up and tell you where to go
And you’ve just had some kind of mushroom
And your mind is moving low
Go ask Alice
I think she’ll know
When logic and proportion
Have fallen sloppy dead
And the White Knight is talking backwards
And the Red Queen’s off with her head
Remember what the dormouse said
Feed your head
Feed your head
And if it leaks on the driveway , you could name the oil slick Grace
At these prices this is a “both” day. For voting purposes I went with the VW because it is diesel. Yeah, old diesels are slow, smell terrible, and take 15 minutes to start if it is less than 50 degrees outside. I don’t care – I just think diesel engines are neat. I also like the VW Rabbit – my parents owned two of these when I was a kid (theirs were gas, though). The Rabbit is the first car I remember riding in.
I really like the Toyota, though. I’m sure these things rusted terribly and aren’t comfortable, but I would describe the styling of this car as dignified or stately. Plus, I like the color and the interior materials/styling. This car strikes me as the Japanese interpretation of an ’80s BMW. Maybe I have been wrong this whole time – are ’80s BMWs just the German interpretation of ’70s Toyotas??? Huh. Mind blown.
No one ever got fired for buying a Toyota. Give me the Corona. Also, it’s RWD, so we’re gonna have to weld the diff.
I’ll bet there were a few UAW members back in the ’70s that could have been fired for something like showing up to work at a F*rd, Chrysler, or GM plant in a Toyota, But that’s a different article.
You almost felt bad for those union members having to drive the garbage that the big 3 accountants tried to convince us were cars.
I had both of these cars in West Palm Beach in the late 80’s. Memories of dropping the Rabbit into second to get over 45th Street bridge (twice the bonnet flew up coming down the other side). Strapping the boards on the soft racks, waiting for the glow plugs, good times.