1989 Volvo 360 GLE

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Gooly

Original Poster:

965 posts

148 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Hi guys,

I'm pretty clumsy with the written word, but bear with me if your bored. So anyway, about two weeks ago, I was a pretty content guy, had a part time job as a delivery driver, nice modern reliable MK5 fiesta which I loved, worked fine other than a slight misfire, loved the corners, etc etc. Worked great as a daily driver for the 1700 or so miles I do a month. I had an essay to do for one of my uni modules (Am currently a first year student doing economics) and as usual I was procrastinating for ages and ended up on the driftworks classifieds. I've always had a longing for an old RWD car, but being 18 and having only been driving since march theres not much out there that's insurable. As I was flicking through the s-bodies and E36s that were for sale I saw a link for a Volvo 360.

I clicked on it and saw the beige beauty sitting there, and I knew right then and there that I was going to buy it. It had a welded diff and 12 months MOT and was based a few miles west of Worthing, so not far from my campus in sussex. I kept a note of the number and the next day I called up my insurance to see what sort of quote I'd get on it; lo and behold, the price would barely change for this 100BHP swedish beast. I called up the seller and went to see it the next day; it was pretty clean, with just a bit of rust on the arches, and it had a barely believable 63,000 miles on the clock. The paintwork (I believe the official name of this shade is peadophile brown) was in decent condition, etc etc, and mechanically it seemed fine, fresh fluids, matching tyres with decent tread, and crucially it had a welded differential; for those that don't know, it's an open diff that's been welded to lock it all the time, so basically an LSD that's always locked. I put the deposit down and collected it the next week.

For those who grew up around this car's generation, they probably see it as what was a pretty lowly-regarded car of it's class at the time, but for me, this is a retro old school RWD three-box saloon; in other words, exactly what I've been pining for. To say I was excited didn't cover it.

After counting down the days, I took the train down to Barnham and picked it up. As I pulled out of the lot, I had the biggest smile on my face; it just felt so right; these are quite small (escort class rather than full fat sierra class car) but after a mk5 fiesta it felt like I was at the helm of a proper car, the sound of the carb sucking in air, the big thin steering wheel, the square bonnet reaching out in front of me, it was great. The way home was nerve-racking though as it started cutting out; it had been left standing for a while and the fuel lines/carb were quite clearly a bit clogged up. For the next few miles it ran like a pig, but after a bit of caning it cleared itself up and ran perfectly. The sofa-like velour seats and the softly sprung suspension meant it was a great cruiser and it sat fine at 85.

Fast forward to later in the day, I took it to work. The welded diff made things interesting around the tight streets of brighton, and I was still worried that it would cut out, but it worked fine. It started raining for a bit, and the streets were pretty wet. Finished my shift, and on the way home I took the more scenic route and came across a well sighted 80degreeish corner; I thought well lets try the diff out. Approached the corner, h/t'd into 2nd and turned in with a bit of gas; like clockwork the back end stepped out and I caught it with about a turn of oppo, and threw it back straight. You literally could not get the smile off my face if you tried, I felt like such a hero, like richard hammond with the bowler wildcat. From then on every empty roundabout was taken looking out the side window, and now I'd like to think I'm pretty good at the whole dab of oppo thing(inb4 the "I spun it into a ditch" post). It's been four days now, I've done 370 miles and loved every single one of them.

A few issues though; it's a bh to start during cold, requires the choke about a 1/4 way out and a bit of throttle pumping, usually fires up on the fourth or fifth time, never let me down yet. It's also running very rich, this is my first carbed car and I have no idea how to tune the thing. The left speaker is blown, I want to retain the standard system and wonderfully retro headunit so I wanna figure out a way to fix that. It's pulling to the left a little bit, hoping it's just the tracking and not the wishbones/bushings. Other than that it's great, I love the interior, I love how airy it is, the slide sunroof, the big cushy seats, the sound of the carb when you give it some, how predictable the back end is, how it stands out among the blobby bloated superminis that trundle around brighton, the fact that nobody understands why I bought it, the fact that you can fix everything with a hammer and a spanner, how theres so much feel and feedback from the steering, how you can feel the carb jet opening through your right foot, how nicely it rides, and just the fact that when people see it they assume it's going to be driven by some OAP at 15MPH everywhere. And it most definitely isnt.








My fiesta and the ovlov

Anyway that was alot of writing for very little car, but as you can see I'm just so happy with this loveable pile of crap at the moment. And I don't think I'll be getting bored of that diff anytime soon.

Edited by Gooly on Sunday 9th December 16:34

Vipers

32,891 posts

228 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
Should last for ever.




smile

Ecurie Ecosse

4,812 posts

218 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Great stuff! Sounds like lots of fun.

Geekman

2,863 posts

146 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Looks great! I also own an old and slightly mental volvo, they're great fun.

y2blade

56,112 posts

215 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Absolutely superb old cars these cool
Following with interest.


Great Pretender

26,140 posts

214 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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fabulous clap

When I was at uni, I chopped in my clockwork-like Polo 1.0L for a slightly tired MKII Golf GTI. It died six months later, but I don't regret it for a minute. Having an old, knackered car at uni is what it's all about, and once you've performed a lap of your nearest roundabout in front of your mates on the lockstops, you'll be a local hero.

DouggyMc

769 posts

163 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Nice! My Grandad had one of these and I will always remember me sitting on his lap as he does donuts on the grass. I love old low powered RWD cars as they are so fun to get sideways!

RikZR

677 posts

149 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Excellent read! Enjoy OP! I have a few mates round where I live who have a love for these volvos, around my age (21) too! Excellent way to get into RWD action as they're proving!

CarlosV8

765 posts

172 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
Good choice for a young driver learning about RWD! At a similar age I got a 340, followed by a couple of 360 GLTs and they were all great fun. I did a couple of road rallies in the first GLT, which were amusing:



wink

vrooom

3,763 posts

267 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
I had a volvo 340 with 1.4 engine, but it was epic fun on corner, it handled well too, 50/50 weight distrubtion with gearbox in rear. best snow car EVER smile

Synchromesh

2,428 posts

166 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Nice write up Mr Queef wink

I'm sure you'll have lots of fun with that welded diff!

iaincb1

1,350 posts

149 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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My earliest memories as a child are of my parents old, white 340. I can even remember the reg plate!

I don't recall my dad drifting it around a roundabout though

samdale

2,860 posts

184 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
Had a 360 GLT as my first car, great car and surprising amount of kit. Heated seats, leccy mirrors etc and was actually a very fun and comfy car to drive.

If driven hard the brakes WILL catch fire, don't worry, just let them cool thumbup

Spare parts can be awkward at times but there's some very friendly people HERE. Not quite as busy as this forum but some very helpful responses if you need them.



ETA:

Gooly said:
I love the interior, I love how airy it is, the slide sunroof, the big cushy seats, the sound of the carb when you give it some, how predictable the back end is, how it stands out among the blobby bloated superminis that trundle around brighton, the fact that nobody understands why I bought it, the fact that you can fix everything with a hammer and a spanner, how theres so much feel and feedback from the steering, how you can feel the carb jet opening through your right foot, how nicely it rides, and just the fact that when people see it they assume it's going to be driven by some OAP at 15MPH everywhere. And it most definitely isnt.
Don't forget that it's more powerful than most 18 year olds cars, it's got the correct amount of doors for the number of seats (another common problem for young drivers cars) and best of all old people let you out at junctions thumbup

Edited by samdale on Sunday 9th December 18:33

0a

23,901 posts

194 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Never ever get one with the 1.7 litre engine, my dad had one and it never ran correctly. I think the engine/carb combo is Renault?

Great Pretender

26,140 posts

214 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
Am I right in thinking that the lump from the Renault 19 16v literally drops straight in?

samdale

2,860 posts

184 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
0a said:
Never ever get one with the 1.7 litre engine, my dad had one and it never ran correctly. I think the engine/carb combo is Renault?
But there is one good reason to buy one.

Great Pretender said:
Am I right in thinking that the lump from the Renault 19 16v literally drops straight in?
As does the F7R from the Clio williams thumbup

Gooly

Original Poster:

965 posts

148 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
Thanks for all the replies guys! The 340 has renault derived engines (1.4 and 1.7, latter of which has problems where some port in the carb melts/deforms and borks things) which means you get various renault 16v swaps, which is great but you also need a garage full of propshafts at the ready if you do that; 340s have notoriously weak props, even 1.7s driven hard with welders can pop propshafts.

The 360 has a volvo "redblock" engine with a different transmission and a much stronger torque tube encased prop; renault swaps are not options but the 2.3 DOHC and DOHC Turbo redblocks are straight swaps, the latter of which being particularly potent; there are people in sweden running them with 300bhp redblock turbos on stock gearboxes.

Im going to keep mine stock for now, i wanna get used to the power I have. Would like some mesh wheels though and maybe lower it two inches or so.


Great Pretender

26,140 posts

214 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
quotequote all
Gooly said:
The 360 has a volvo "redblock" engine with a different transmission and a much stronger torque tube encased prop; renault swaps are not options but the 2.3 DOHC and DOHC Turbo redblocks are straight swaps, the latter of which being particularly potent; there are people in sweden running them with 300bhp redblock turbos on stock gearboxes.
biggrin

Mister3man

280 posts

147 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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My dad has one of these when I was little. One of the only cars I really missed when he sold it on frown

I think these are getting quite hard to source parts for now.

stevep360

25 posts

149 months

Sunday 9th December 2012
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Great choice wink Although I would say that... I've had 3x 360 GLT's (infact I bought the black one above from Carl biggrin), 1 x 360 GLS and a 1.4 343 DL (in yellow!). I still have a 360 GLT which I bought last year as a second car/plaything/project which turned out to be a minter, so it's living a pampered life.

Enjoy it, the engine in your car can be pretty frugal on long runs when setup correctly. I always felt the saloon drove better than the hatches too. Perhaps a more rigid shell?! Funny how you mention about it being an involving drive - I'd totally agree. You don't even need to go that fast to have fun either biggrin By the way, you'd be surprised if you parked up next to a Sierra sized car - they are pretty damn close!