I’m always surprised at how effective a little suspension tuning and some extra horsepower can be. Stiffen up the springs, add a turbo or a bigger engine, slap a tach in the dash, and you’ve got something just a little more special than the ordinary edition. Today’s cars have some really stodgy relatives, but thanks to more power, they’re lively enough to keep things interesting.
Yesterday’s choices were both low-mileage coupes that your grandma might have driven thirty years ago. You all claimed to hate them, but they sure got you talking, and voting. When the dust settled, the Chevy Cavalier took a narrow win, due mostly to its cockroach-like durability and lack of motorized seat belts.
I think that’s the way to go. General Motors cars get a lot of grief, much of it deserved, but I think they nailed it with the J platform. It provided reliable basic transportation for millions of people, and created a lot of fond memories along the way – not necessarily memories of the car per se, but fond memories nonetheless. You can’t ask more from a cheap little car than that.

Now then, let’s look at some coupes with manual transmissions and some extra horsepower, and see what you make of them.
1984 Renault Fuego Turbo – $4,000

Engine/drivetrain: Turbocharged 1.6-liter OHV inline 4, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: Lebanon, IN
Odometer reading: 203,000 miles
Operational status: Has been sitting for years
Some European cars, for one reason or another, just don’t translate well to the US market. And unfortunately, that includes almost everything built by Renault in the 1970s and ’80s. The Fuego coupe sold like hotcakes in Europe, and it stayed in production in South America well into the ’90s, but it landed with a thud in the US. Secondhand Fuegos gained a reputation for unreliability here, but that seems to have had more to do with poor parts support and kludgy repairs than the car itself. Renault didn’t sell many Fuegos here to begin with, and there are almost none left. The few that remain are often squirrelled away somewhere, like this one.

The Fuego was available with a couple of different engines; this one has a turbocharged version of Renault’s trusty old pushrod four-cylinder. It sits longitudinally in the engine bay, in front of the front axle like an old Audi, and drives the front wheels through a five-speed gearbox. This one last ran several years ago, when it was limped into the warehouse where it now sits. The seller believes a clogged catalytic converter was robbing it of power back then, so it will have to be removed or replaced before you start reviving the engine.

This car has over 200,000 miles on it, so someone got some use out of it. It doesn’t look too bad inside, but the driver’s seat has been replaced, probably because it was worn out. It’s not like these cars are a dime a dozen in junkyards, so a mismatched seat was probably the best they could do.

The Fuego’s styling is kind of a love-it-or-hate-it proposition; I’m personally a fan, but I know some folks just can’t stand it. It is very French, that’s for sure. The seller describes it as “nearly rust-free,” which is about as good as it gets for an ’80s Renault. There is a little rust along the bottom of the doors. It includes three sets of wheels, including the stock wheels, which are probably pretty hard to come by these days.
1992 Ford Tempo GLS – $3,500

Engine/drivetrain: 3.0-liter OHV V6, five-speed manual, FWD
Location: Carrollton, OH
Odometer reading: 116,000 miles
Operational status: Ad doesn’t say, but I’ll presume it runs and drives well enough
To make a muscle car, you take the engine from your big car, jam it under the hood of your small car, add some stripes and flashy wheels, and give it a cool name. That’s it. There’s nothing mystical or magical about it. A GTO was just a LeMans with a Bonneville engine in it. It’s not brain surgery. And the formula didn’t die with the malaise era. Plymouth revived the Duster name for a Sundance with a minivan engine in it, and Chevy’s Cavalier Z24 stole its engine from the mid-sized Celebrity. At the risk of infuriating entire legions of Chevelle SS and Charger R/T fans, I submit that this Tempo GLS, with a V6 engine taken from the Ford Taurus, is more or less a muscle car.

In addition to the big V6, the GLS ups the fun factor with a five-speed manual instead of the sorry excuse for a three-speed automatic found in most Tempos. It also, by the way, has a speedometer that reads to 120 MPH instead of 85 like lesser models. This one has 116,000 miles on it, but that’s all I can tell you; the ad invites you to message for more information. By the way, as of this writing, this car is listed as “Pending,” so if it vanishes before you all get a chance to check it out, I apologize.

I still really like red interiors, but this car highlights one of the problems with them. A few years in the sun turns them pink in places. I had a Ford Probe that did the same thing. It wouldn’t be so bad if everything faded evenly, but the various materials used in a car interior seem to shed pigment at different rates. And yes, this one has the automatic seat belts, and no, I don’t know why the driver’s side is all the way back with the door open. It shouldn’t be.

Outside, it has a rear spoiler you can blame Ford for, and some stripes and a bra that were someone else’s fault. Because it has the spoiler, it doesn’t have the luggage rack on the trunk lid that most two-door Tempos have. It looks like it’s in good condition except for a couple minor dents, but you’d do well to look underneath and make sure it isn’t rusty.
These aren’t the same two-door coupes you see for sale everywhere else; in fact, they’re both pretty damn rare. Is that a good thing? Well, if you like to draw attention at car gatherings, it is. When you’re looking for parts to keep it on the road, not so much. Either way, you have to like the car enough to put in the work. If you had to choose between these two – and you do – which one would you pick?









This one is a no brainer, and those voting for the Fuego seem to lack one.
The Fuego was barely functional when new, and with 40 years and 203k on it, there can’t possibly be anything left to save. An emissions-choked, vacuum hose ridden, wheezy-turbocharged fever-dream on wheels, right there.
Truly the masochist’s choice today, it seems 22% of you currently enjoy pain. The $4k ask is too much by about 95%, too; and literally only the price of admission to the nightmare.
However – after the beautiful Topaz yesterday and the Tempo coupe today – it’s obvious someone is lusting after a mid 80s econobox Ford.
The Tempo is a vastly better car all around. Go figure.
I’ll set the Tempo and drop a SHO motor in the Ford.
Tempo. 100%
I still remember the C/D article when they put the V6 in. It was something like “13 Months Before Retirement, Gramps Gets a Heart Transplant”.
That Fuego is priced as “I know what I have” money. The owner’s wife probably has a million dollar insurance policy on their Beanie Babies collection.
I suspect the wife or a kid is the owner now, as that garage looks like nobody has been in it for a long time. If I’m correct then RIP to the kind of car guy many of us hope to be.
I’ll take the Fuego, I always liked the way they looked when I was a kid, and if I manage to get it running I wouldn’t be driving a Tempo.
Build would focus on getting it running again, and putting the stock wheels back on it. I can sell the other two sets to help offset the cost for resuscitation. That steering wheel cover has to go, and since it’s pre-airbag I can put a nice Nardi wheel in. I’ve always wanted a Nardi wheel.
If I can get it moving again under it’s own power, it would just be a slow slog of replacing all the old stuff to keep it alive, I imagine this will be a long slog of finding something wrong, parking it for months until parts arrive from France, then a flurry of work to get it fixed, and then finding something else wrong to start the cycle over again. Sounds like a fun time to me!
Plus I can replace the Fuego badges with their English equivalent, of Fire!
Reluctant vote for the Tempo because that Fuego is a dish that is at best…cold. The
Generally speaking I am a Tempo Hater. However. The 5-speed and the Vulcan fix both of the largest things I hate about them. I bet this one’s kind of fun.
I’ll take the Fuego, for no other reason than it’s different.
The best ’80s Renaults had the engine behind the driver, and from what I’ve read these were particularly bad compared to even the LeCar.
I’ll take the more-fun-than-yesterday Ford, which has less of, but not a nonzero, chance of catching fire.
You have never cursed an engineer the way you will when trying to change the rear 3 spark plugs on a V6 Tempo, but I’ll easily pick it over a Dumpster Fuego.
Now that you mention it, new plugs are probably the first thing I’d do to this one, then hope that the rest of the car fell apart around them before I had to replace them again.
I *want* to like/pick the Fuego but that was is too fargone. The Tempo could be modestly fun.
The Fuego was none too fast, even with a turbo, and wasn’t all that fun to drive. Looked swell, though. It was comfortable, and the (original) seats were wonderful.
However, if the parts situation was awful when it was brand-new (and, as a former Renault owner I can attest to that), it has to be damn near impossible today.
The Tempo, OTOH, was abysmally dull. Maybe the dullest four-wheel conveyance in history. Even with the V6 and manual, driving one is sleepy-time for anyone with a pulse. And it has Mouse Belts, the most diabolical invention of the Early Safety Era.
So my first inclination is to say “neither.” But if we’re spending Internet Money, I’d opt for the Renault and make friends with someone in France who could chase parts for me.
the anomalous high-mileage fuego is the perfect spot for me to listen to my Jeanne Mas tapes.
I’ll go Tempo.
I have a proposal. One week, every day, instead of the winner going on to face a new challenger the next day, the loser moves on. Every day is just something worse to try and beat it, and then Friday is just a hate fest vote.
Whaddaya think?
How do you decide which is “worst”? Some days, it’s a dead-heat race to the bottom.
I love that idea. You’d have to pick your early cars carefully, because there’s no suspense if Monday features a rusty Lumina with stains in the worst area of the driver’s seat. Make that a Wednesday or Thursday car and we’d get a few days of Mark trying to one up a horror show of a car.
I like it! But this week is already planned out. Soon, though.
Oooooh boy. That’s gonna be an interesting week!
K-Cars all the way, right?
I would not pay $4 for a mid 80s Renault with a turbo, 200+K miles, and years of sitting. Double extra Hell No!
“this one has the automatic seat belts, and no, I don’t know why the driver’s side is all the way back with the door open.”
Because it’s waiting to attack you when you least expect it like it’s Cato and you’re Inspector Clouseau.
NOT NOW CATO!
Is this week’s theme “Watch me get you to vote for a Tempo”? It worked yesterday.
But I’m not voting for Tempos (Topaz) two days in a row. I’ll take the Fuego, and sit inside of it in my driveway, and make vroom vroom noises with my mouth if I have to.
As long as the vroom-vroom noises are done in an over-the-top French accent.
Since we’re talking play money right? I’ll take a chance on the Frenchie and annoy my friend that owns his own garage…
The Tempo with the stripe and bra from JC Whitney doesn’t do anything for me.
WTF with all the Tempo/Topaz cruelty? Are you TRYING to trigger me??
Just wait until Tempaz Thursday.
Maybe we’ll get another one tomorrow and Thursday and then Friday we get to choose on of the four as an early April Fools joke.
I salute anyone with the courage to take on that Fuego. I do not have that courage, and will take the car that will be much easier to keep running.
That voluptuous red velour, that manual transmission, those six cylinders, those racy stripes, that modest bra on the nose — ok, Tempo time!
For some reason, I read this in my mind in the voice of Ricardo Montolban.
Fuego locked in a warehouse for a bunch of years? Yeah, I can almost smell the mouse pee in that interior. The tempo should provide some kind of enjoyment, plus parts will be far easier to come by. The purple stripe and bra have to go though…
The Fuego did have a propensity to self-immolate, as I recall. I’ll take the Tempo.
Mais qui a tué Pamela Rose…
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