Long time lurker/reader, first time I'm making a thread on here. I've come to enjoy the community here more than most other online communities I've been in over the past couple of years. Time to join in on the fun!
I’ll start with a short introduction of me, and I’ll go from there. I’m Reier, I live in the Amsterdam area (in The Netherlands), and I’ve been working in the Saab community since the start of my professional career nearly 8 years ago. I’ve been a petrolhead all my life, had a brief phase where I didn’t really care when I was a teenager, but got sucked back in HARD after I got my driver’s license. I got in touch with the Dutch online Saab community, made a bunch of friends through there over the years and managed to find a job through those connections, develop myself, start my own business, etc.
My personal car ownership career started with an extremely basic Saab 900 GLS, which meant it had a 2.0L 8v carburated engine, four speed gearbox, manual steering, pretty much nothing. Over the course of two years of ownership, I swapped in a five speed, did a bunch of suspension stuff, and mostly went broke on maintenance and gas for it.
It took me to Sweden and back for the Saab Car Museum Festival in 2017, and shortly after I was offered a 900 with a 16v turbo drivetrain at work, a trade-in with a failed clutch master. And not any 16v turbo 900; it was an Edwardian Grey threedoor, with AC parts, an OE sunroof, and the most 80's interior they ever offered for these; RED ALL THE THINGS. It was pretty much my 'affordable dream car'. Of course, I couldn’t say no, and promptly managed to sell my first car to get my hands on the turbo 900. That was my only car for the past five years, and I spent pretty much all the time and money I could spare on that thing trying to make it the best I could. That car really tought me to think about how I use the car and what things work for that purpose, instead of just jumping on the hype train and throwing ‘cool’ parts at it. I ended up going through multiple suspension setups, messing with the head, cams, the APC system (80’s electronic boost control), intercooler, exhaust, brakes, wheels/tires, pretty much nothing remained untouched, and got the car to a point where I was probably 90% ‘done’ with it. All I really wanted to add to it was swap in a more modern management system to get the car running just that much smoother. After that I could really only think of restoration work that I'd probably never get to.
First two pics I ever took of it;
That 90% point was basically this past summer. I’d driven the car about 100.000km over the course of five years, knew EVERY bad thing about it, and was constantly noticing things becoming worse at a rate I just couldn’t financially (and emotionally, lol) keep up with anymore. Around the same time, I was offered an awesome job at a Saab specialist shop about 95km away from home. This meant my average yearly mileage would jump from around 20-25k km to 50-60k km a year. Not something I was ready to do to my poor old 900, and definitely not something I was prepared to do on gasoline (which is very expensive in Europe). I made the decision to, somewhat reluctantly, sell the 900. I’d had my fun with it, I did way too much mental gymnastics trying to figure out a way to keep the car and get something decent to eat the miles, but I quickly realised I just don’t have the funds for that right now. And realistically, with other life goals I have, I might not be in that position for a long time to come. Luckily, I texted a few friends, including my old boss, and managed to sell the car back to him for a deal that made both him and me happy.
How it looked in it's final form;
(man did it look cool with the box on the roof)
It was time for me to get a more reliable, ‘grown up’ form of transportation. But, what does a Saab nerd working at a Saab specialist shop get when it’s time for a more modern, reliable, ‘grown up’ form of transportation?
You guessed it! I bought me another Saab!