, began building Rabbits in 1978, and the Mk1 generation stayed on sale here through the 1984 model year. Here’s one of those final-year Mk1s, a four-door found in a Phoenix car graveyard.
This one is a gasoline-burner with the base-grade L trim level.
The engine is a 1.7-liter SOHC straight-four with fuel injection, rated at 74 horsepower and 90 pound-feet. A 65-horse carbureted version of this engine was available outside of California, paired with a four-speed manual transmission
The fuel-injected 1984 Rabbit L four-door came with a five-speed manual as standard equipment, and it had an MSRP of $7,075 versus the carbureted four-speed car’s list price of $6,740 (that’s about $21,370 and $20,358 in 2023 dollars). Today’s Junkyard Gem
has the optional three-speed automatic, which tacked on another 200 bucks to the price tag ($604 of today’s bucks).
This car’s odometer showed just 118,634 miles at the end. Remember to use the handbrake!
The driver’s seat was patched with upholstery tape.
There’s a sealed head gasket set sitting on the passenger seat, so we can assume that this car came to this place because the blown head gasket never got replaced. Which is a shame, because it’s not a particularly difficult job for these cars (as such things go). Maybe the block or head was cracked, anyway.
This being an Arizona car, it has air conditioning. That was a $650 option ($1,963 in today’s money).
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