Absolutely. It got me through high school and college. This thing has seen some of the best times of my life.
I know exactly what you're talking about because my Celica still has the thing. It's terrible and the alarm always went off for no reason whatsoever.maroon barchetta said:
The keyless entry you mention was probably one of those systems that Gulf Coast Toyota dealers all had installed. Terrible.
The Fife said:I know exactly what you're talking about because my Celica still has the thing. It's terrible and the alarm always went off for no reason whatsoever.maroon barchetta said:
The keyless entry you mention was probably one of those systems that Gulf Coast Toyota dealers all had installed. Terrible.
My first car: 1978 Oldsmobile Delta 88. Bottle green paint, vinyl, and interior. Wrecked bad by my grandpa (both pass side doors + trunk lid replaced, steering wheel was off by 60+ degrees), had a leaky windshield for years, mostly ran on 8 cylinders, sometimes 7 when it broke rocker arm pivots, no A/C of course, and broke down all the time. Yeah, that's a hard pass.
I miss the 944 I had back in my 20s. Best handling car I've owned after replacing anything rubber in the suspension. It was getting close to 200K miles when I sold it so it was time for it to go, but I wouldn't mind having a 951 every now and then.
The Fife said:
If he has any spare keys with buttons I'd be interested, even if the key is cut. The little plastic housing on mine are starting to crap out and that's the only part I really need. Or if he has fobs that go on a keychain I'd be interested in that too.
Gulf Coast Toyota also put in a bunch of rear view mirrors with compass/thermometer but those are a little more benign. And according to the window sticker they did the leather seating too but what I have looks factory so who knows.
The Fife said:
Thanks, I figure if the plastic isn't cracked halfway through and can hold screws in that's better than what I've got. I don't even have all of those any more. This is the little SOB in question
The Fife said:
If you google the VIN, including image searches, you might find an ad someone put up along with a picture or two. I ended up with an address and saw the 944 I had on Google Maps Street View from around 7 years after I sold it and then all traces of it were gone. If I had to guess it went to the boneyard around that time.
maroon barchetta said:The Fife said:
If you google the VIN, including image searches, you might find an ad someone put up along with a picture or two. I ended up with an address and saw the 944 I had on Google Maps Street View from around 7 years after I sold it and then all traces of it were gone. If I had to guess it went to the boneyard around that time.
Young Tom Cruise let it back into a lake.
Jack Cheese said:maroon barchetta said:The Fife said:
If you google the VIN, including image searches, you might find an ad someone put up along with a picture or two. I ended up with an address and saw the 944 I had on Google Maps Street View from around 7 years after I sold it and then all traces of it were gone. If I had to guess it went to the boneyard around that time.
Young Tom Cruise let it back into a lake.
Was a 928
The Fife said:
Thanks, I figure if the plastic isn't cracked halfway through and can hold screws in that's better than what I've got. I don't even have all of those any more. This is the little SOB in question
The Fife said:
Well hot damn, that's exactly it! Definitely usable for parts because the brass key part just screws in to the plastic body. I've already had to play mix and match with the ones that came with the car when I bought it back in 2000.