marktwainsonic
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2010
- Messages
- 101
The price of gas has finally motivated me to purchase a cheap mileage maker to be my daily driver rather than driving my tow vehicle everywhere.
One of the cars we're looking at is a 1990 Dodge Omni. It has a number of issues, most of which I understand.
However one thing that worries me that I can't quite pin down is the extreme degradation of the underhood foam rubber and paint.
My tow vehicle is a 1992 Suburban, so it's not like I don't understand that appearance deteriorates over time, but I would say my engine looks pretty good. The foam rubber padding (I'm not talking about the hood pad, but rather the insulation material that covers some of the routing on what I assume to be the AC tubing) and the black paint (again, this would be the paint on the accessories, not the valve covers or engine block itself) is in terrible shape.
The car, overall, is highly weathered, but my concern is that the deterioration was caused by some type of extreme overheating.
But as I thought about it this week, I wondered if perhaps Chrysler just used substandard materials compared to GM.
So...thought I'd go to my most populated forum and see if anyone else had seen the soft parts and accessory paint on their old Chrysler go bad prematurely (if you can call 20 years prematurely!)
Thanks for any attention or replies.
One of the cars we're looking at is a 1990 Dodge Omni. It has a number of issues, most of which I understand.
However one thing that worries me that I can't quite pin down is the extreme degradation of the underhood foam rubber and paint.
My tow vehicle is a 1992 Suburban, so it's not like I don't understand that appearance deteriorates over time, but I would say my engine looks pretty good. The foam rubber padding (I'm not talking about the hood pad, but rather the insulation material that covers some of the routing on what I assume to be the AC tubing) and the black paint (again, this would be the paint on the accessories, not the valve covers or engine block itself) is in terrible shape.
The car, overall, is highly weathered, but my concern is that the deterioration was caused by some type of extreme overheating.
But as I thought about it this week, I wondered if perhaps Chrysler just used substandard materials compared to GM.
So...thought I'd go to my most populated forum and see if anyone else had seen the soft parts and accessory paint on their old Chrysler go bad prematurely (if you can call 20 years prematurely!)
Thanks for any attention or replies.