Does it make sense to make a car slower?
Usually not. But this time there is - I hope - reason to do just that. Maybe not a 100% sound and valid reason, but nonetheless, a reason.
Well actually maybe two reasons. The first is that this might be the single most important car project I have ever gotten into. It might prove to be the most important one I'll ever be involved in. Why? It's my daughters car, and my chance to invite her into the fantastic world that the auto hobby is.
Some background, unless that bores you...she's born in 2004 so when I write this, she has quite recently turned 14. But she has always joined me on different car events, from before she could walk. She's been helping out at shows, handing people entrance passes, you know the stuff. A very strong memory is from when she was about 3 years old, and had been the entire day at a car show with me. Later the same night we were running a "run what ya' brung" dragrace, but my wife picked Kajsa (yes, that's her name) up earlier to get to bed in time. When she realized she was missing the race, she was devastated. Of course, my wife turned the car around so they both got to watch the race.
In Sweden the legal driving age is 18, so that's a long wait for someone young, that wants to get into cars. But there is a loop hole, you are allowed to take a moped license at 15 and that license also gives you the right to drive a tractor.
After the 2nd world war, there was a shortage of farm tractors, and there were rules developed to allow farmers to convert old cars into tractors. It is explained here:
In the 1970's or so, the A-tractor was adopted by youngsters, as a means of transportation. The rules have evolved a bit but the same basics apply. It has a maximum speed of 30 km/h, it has to have a really low range first gear and it can not have a rear seat.
That is what me and Kajsa are building.
Now, the usefulness of a transport that crawls at 20 mph or so can be debated. But in the cold winter it is a nice alternative. And it's a great chance to learn how to work on cars.
We have been planning this build for quite some time now, with a number of options. Kajsa, being my daughter, has been very single-minded in demanding that is has to be based on a Ford. The easiest build is based on a pickup truck. Sweden is not a big pickup-country, with small Japanese trucks being the most popular ones. The Ford Ranger is a rebadged Mazda, not that much fun.
The downside with basing the build on a "car car" is that generally it's quite involved. Most people use dual gearboxes to get the low range, and convert the car to something similar to a truck (there are rules stipulating a small truck bed to give enough weight on the driven wheels). Cutting the car up like that means quite a lot of body work. While I need to practice doing that, I would not want to end up with a stranded project like many others.
Next thing, the base car should be reasonably cheap, and not too rare to modify. We had a lead on a 4 cylinder Fox body Mustang - but the rules say the car needs to have a rated towing capacity of at least 1000 kgs. A late Thunderbird felt like the best bet for a long time but Kajsa, for some reason, has always had a soft spot for the Sierra. Probably because of the XR4x4 I had when she was little.
She really wanted to build on something like that. With the XR4x4 long gone (yes, another one of those "I should have kept it"), and the prices of decent Sierras moving up we did not have great hope.
But still I decided to ask around a bit. And an old friend got back to me, saying he had a car, that he could let go of. He warned us that it was quite ratty, not a nice car at all, but available.
So we went out in the woods, hunting for a Sierra, and was greeted by...
...a 1992 (second-to last model year) GT (GT meaning nicer seats and marketing mumbo jumbo). Some dings and dents (the bonnet seems to be attacked by someone with a ball peen hammer), some rust, and obvious signs of someone tracing a fault somewhere, since the interior and ECUs were halfway out. But hey, I had seen worse.
As we asked about the price, it was a no-brainer. 500 SEK or around USD50, not much to loose there. So the deal was struck!
Gustaf