I've Got LADA Problems In My Shop! What Did Mrs. Wizard Do Now?

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  • čas přidán 27. 03. 2024
  • Mrs. Wizard surprises me with a 1991 Lada 2107 as a gift for the channel reaching one million subscribers. What did she get me into? 🚗 Check out Aging Wheels video on this car: • I Bought a Lada 2107. ... ➡️ Don't forget to check out @MrsWizardsWays to learn more about the shop and behind the scenes of Omega.
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    #carrepair #carwizard #carmechanic #autorepairshop #automobile #cars #car #lada #russiancars #russiancardriving #russiancardriver #russiancar #lada2107
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Komentáře • 3,6K

  • @MrKanyas
    @MrKanyas Před 2 měsíci +287

    The Car is originally from Hungary
    At 6:10 the green lamp is the control light of trailer indicators and i know it because it was the law only in Hungary and the lamp is also from this land. It flashes only if the blinker works on your trailer properly
    The windshield was made in Hungary too 😂 (SalgóGlas)

    • @kitko33
      @kitko33 Před 2 měsíci +28

      And has Czech-made Barum Polaris winter tires :D

    • @tallika4life
      @tallika4life Před 2 měsíci +28

      The manual gave it away instantly, it is visibly Hungarian

    • @user-is8hq3ce1j
      @user-is8hq3ce1j Před 2 měsíci +44

      The manual is also in Hungarian, not Russian as she said.

    • @frankkeel8410
      @frankkeel8410 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Studebaker lark u have been taken!

    • @user-ik3mk5vi8m
      @user-ik3mk5vi8m Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@kitko33 and old MK 1 VW AIR VENTS

  • @ernie305g9
    @ernie305g9 Před 2 měsíci +208

    This car brings a lot of nostalgia to me. My mother and I left communist Cuba when I was 7 years old , my father remained in the island after I was able to return back to see him I spent a whole summer building ones of these exact 2107s in his front lawn when I was 11 - all you really need is 3 wrenches and 4 to 5 sockets and the whole car can be assembled. All I can say is that this car single handedly made me in a car enthusiast / mess around with my cars. Good Memories in this car with my pops

    • @palmettocarpetmiamiROBERT
      @palmettocarpetmiamiROBERT Před 2 měsíci +4

      Alabao!

    • @steinbauge4591
      @steinbauge4591 Před 2 měsíci +15

      I had 2 here in Norway as a kid. Best possible car to start wrenching on as they are so simple. Reliable, always something to tinker with.

    • @seth556
      @seth556 Před 2 měsíci +9

      I went to Cuba in 2017 and sought out the Lada taxis. There was just something about them that made them so neat, especially with all of the mods they’ve had over the decades.

    • @sultanail84
      @sultanail84 Před měsícem +1

      Many people from Russia driving for this a car. And I am Driving it car but little bit modernizatig. And it car have name - Kalina, Granta.

    • @Jamescomua
      @Jamescomua Před měsícem +1

      This car go nowhere without wrenches and hummer

  • @theredscourge
    @theredscourge Před 2 měsíci +206

    "110 is like 55"
    Famous last words before the speeding ticket

    • @Hrethgir
      @Hrethgir Před 2 měsíci +15

      It's not quite right either. 100 KPH is 62 MPH.

    • @danc.9554
      @danc.9554 Před 2 měsíci +33

      @@Hrethgir Hence the speeding ticket. That's exactly his point.

    • @Hrethgir
      @Hrethgir Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@danc.9554 OK, I see what you were doing now.

    • @Barret_Radtke
      @Barret_Radtke Před 2 měsíci +12

      Was thinking that doesn't seem right. 110KM/H is our fastest highway speed in Canada.

    • @Locost59
      @Locost59 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Barret_Radtkewhen I was there thought 110 was perfect for long empty roads 😂

  • @Sadlor82
    @Sadlor82 Před měsícem +32

    Im from Poland and i had same Lada 2107 1500cc, was my first car, and it was great, simple reliable and comfortable car, it was not so fast, especialy with 4 speed transmission, but there were 5 speed versions. It will never let you stranded on a road :) Take care Wizard, Your wife have great sesnse of humor ;)
    God bless you both.

    • @Claude_CJ_Vercetti
      @Claude_CJ_Vercetti Před měsícem

      You had an export version, export versions were much better than cars for internal Soviet market.

    • @urugvajchernamazyj6240
      @urugvajchernamazyj6240 Před 19 dny

      No, it was absolute turd, but there was no choice back then.

  • @karanishner
    @karanishner Před 2 měsíci +347

    My family has owned several of these. They were common in Canada. They can go 152kph with a 5spd. (100kph = 62mph) . Some came with GM fuel injection, and there was a Canada only, and very rare, option where they installed Chevette automatics. Your hoist lift points are where the jack that comes with the car goes in. They came with wipers for the headlamps sometimes. Regarding the Volvo look, when the local Lada dealer got a Volvo dealership they were funny to see side by side. When looking for parts, you can google "Canada Lada Parts:" to find some,. You would be looking for Lada 1500 (engine size and model number in the same), Lada 2107, or Lada Signet, which is what they were badged here in Canada. The knob next to the clock tilts your headlamps, so you can run your brights on a foggy or snowy day without getting glare back. The stereos were dealer installed. The fog lamp looking switch in the console brightens your rear lamps to increase visibility...a foglight eseeentially. My first car was a Lada Signet Wagon. :-}

    • @docnele
      @docnele Před 2 měsíci +15

      You forgot to warn him to check what way back end swings when brakes lock, as it is individual thing :) I know it is less pronounced on 2105/2107, but can be unpleasant if you do a harsh breaking and don't expect that.

    • @jkirk1626
      @jkirk1626 Před 2 měsíci +12

      Canada has voted in the same political system.

    • @sergecharron5393
      @sergecharron5393 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Those and Skodas but are there any left?

    • @Random-nf7qb
      @Random-nf7qb Před 2 měsíci +2

      The automatic was not a canada only option, far from it

    • @Random-nf7qb
      @Random-nf7qb Před 2 měsíci +5

      Automatic was an option for almost all export markets

  • @MrGellert15
    @MrGellert15 Před 2 měsíci +357

    6:52 it's in hungarian. If it wasn't for me speaking the language, the giveaway is russians don't use the latin alphabet they print cyrillic letters. Anyway Rob says in the first video when he got it that it was imported from Hungary.

    • @obsoleteprofessor2034
      @obsoleteprofessor2034 Před 2 měsíci +15

      My wife's father was from Hungary. He bugged out soon after the Russians arrived(?) in 1956(?). Perhaps it was because they thought he was involved in that year's insurrection. He'd say Ruskie nem yo.

    • @MrGellert15
      @MrGellert15 Před 2 měsíci +10

      @@obsoleteprofessor2034 He very well might've been involved. it was the kinda thing young college students did. Girls making molotov cocktails so guys can chuck them on top of T-34 tanks rolling on the narrow streets of Budapest.

    • @MW-te5fv
      @MW-te5fv Před 2 měsíci

      @@obsoleteprofessor2034 Depends on how old he is, might've been after WW2 or 1956. Also, from what I've heard you wanna bug out before the russkies arrive.

    • @TheEdudo
      @TheEdudo Před 2 měsíci

      @@MrGellert15 lol fighting communists, it never gets old

    • @pandras8312
      @pandras8312 Před 2 měsíci +12

      It reads: Do It yourself for Motorists

  • @xxLOSTxx2155
    @xxLOSTxx2155 Před měsícem +11

    In Russia, such frets are popular with young people who want to drift, weld the rear differential, replace the cylinder heads, put other piston ones, put turbocharging, make a big turn with the front wheels, and your first car is ready to drift! There are craftsmen who install the BMW gearbox with gaskets

  • @yoanmladenov9096
    @yoanmladenov9096 Před 2 měsíci +38

    Wizard, 1 mile is 1.6 km/h, so 110 is like 68-69 miles/h . Greetings from Bulgaria 🇧🇬 ! Love your channel !❤

    • @Ridethebomb777
      @Ridethebomb777 Před měsícem +3

      Move to Bg in 2019 and love to see these old Lada's still doing the work. Unfortunately the wife has told me no ! Also love the Wizards channel !

    • @bartsimpson8616
      @bartsimpson8616 Před měsícem +3

      @@Ridethebomb777 Never ever tells to ''wife'' about car which you want to buy , JUST BUY , anyway she just say NO , cos wont see you happy.

  • @improbablehandle
    @improbablehandle Před 2 měsíci +79

    Togliatti's finest. I passed my driving test in a Lada 1500 wagon. That service manual is in Hungarian. In Europe you can find parts everywhere, Lada clubs everywhere, and Ladas like this will outlive most of today's touchscreen wonders. Yes, the steering is heavy!

    • @JohnSmith-yv6eq
      @JohnSmith-yv6eq Před 2 měsíci +5

      Electric power steering conversion would not be impossible..

    • @matthiasmartin1975
      @matthiasmartin1975 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Good point, no touchscreens!

    • @ghoulbuster1
      @ghoulbuster1 Před 2 měsíci

      They are slow af too

    • @johnturner5893
      @johnturner5893 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Had to have some "pipes" for cars with no power steering ,or oversized steering wheel like Mercedes had for decades in case the power steering died It was called "Zsiguli" first, written with cirillic alphabet ." LADA" name came a couple years later ,so most Europeans could read it too..

    • @apyllyon
      @apyllyon Před 2 měsíci

      @@JohnSmith-yv6eq Impossible,no..expenssive though for a car that didn´t have one.

  • @MB-ox3cz
    @MB-ox3cz Před 2 měsíci +268

    As someone who actually grew up with those cars back in the days, I can assure you that you have the top of the line Lada 2107. This was basically the 7 series of Lada, fully loaded. Unfortunately you have one of the few with the 4 speed tranny. Very rare. Most of them had the 5 speed. When I was growing up, my buddy and I used to race our Ladas. His dad had the 2107 and ours was 2108. This video brings some many memories... I am jealous. You really have to get it up in the RPMs and she can do doughnuts all day long. With the 5 speed, those things will run 100mph until they overheat and the oil gets to above and beyond hot... :) It was not unusual tow a trailer with a metric ton of weight with one of those. The harness on the trailer hitch is simply just for the lights. Your turn signal add on is definitely aftermarket. Your middle button between the headlight switch on and off and the rear defroster is the rear fog light.

    • @d.o.5238
      @d.o.5238 Před 2 měsíci +18

      Hey, my first car was 2106, but with the same 1500cc engine like the one Wizard got. And my dad had a station wagon variant of this 2107 with the 5-speed tranny. These could definitely do 90 mph even with the 4-speed, but yeah, they do tend to overheat when going at that speed for a long time

    • @mattharwood4413
      @mattharwood4413 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Great information about the Lada! I Love it!

    • @regmok
      @regmok Před 2 měsíci +11

      The Семёрка!

    • @MB-ox3cz
      @MB-ox3cz Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@regmok 1989 Sputnik 1.3 4 speed... killer

    • @EvgeniBelin
      @EvgeniBelin Před 2 měsíci +10

      Real people drove копейка (2101). Семёрка -- признак богатенькой буржуазии 😝

  • @eroticgrimreaper1086
    @eroticgrimreaper1086 Před 2 měsíci +19

    You could 5 speed swap this really easy if you manage to find a gearbox. Makes driving much more enjoyable. I used to have one and actually supercharged it with an old small screwcharger. It turned out pretty fun little thing

  • @guilima1202
    @guilima1202 Před 2 měsíci +12

    Wow! What a blast from the past! I was living in Brazil in the early 90s when Lada started selling their cars in South America. There was even a compact SUV-type vehicle named Niva that later became very popular among off-roading folks. It would be cool to see you guys get a hold of one of those Nivas! They were perceived as having been built like tanks!

  • @VladimirChernyshov
    @VladimirChernyshov Před 2 měsíci +68

    In USSR they started produce Lada 2107 model in 1982, it was the last model of "classic" rear drive Lada series 2101-2107 based on Italian Fiat 124. Could be different engines from 1.2L to 1.6L, different body panels, but brake system, clutch (hydraulic), rear diff, suspension and so on were exactly the same for all models from 2101 to 2107. I owned Lada 2107 with 5 speed transmission, bought it brand new in 2005 in Ukraine. It was last year they produced carburator 2107.
    Service manual in Hungarian, not Russian. Front brake pads are Russian. Exhaust part in the middle is resonator, not needed catalytic converter for carburator versions. Brake cylinders were leaking often because of bad quality of rubber parts, like other brake or clutch system parts with rubber. Rear diff was always noisy, even on brand new cars. it was not possible to adjust carburator properly. People often bypassed that rear brakes valve...
    Parts shouldn't be a problem, because they're still making them in post soviet countries and this models were mass produced and a lot of them are still on roads. Parts will be much cheaper than shipping, but quality of those parts will be awful...

    • @alanmalan3819
      @alanmalan3819 Před měsícem

      I don't know that Egypt and Turkey are post soviet countries, Lada is producing modern cars ~after 2013 year

    • @etiennebaree6176
      @etiennebaree6176 Před měsícem +1

      my familie did own a lada/volga dealership in Belgium.one of my first cars was a 2101,i did put a 1600cc engine in it .after a year i drove a 1300S for a year.

  • @bulbman2564
    @bulbman2564 Před 2 měsíci +337

    I cannot believe you got the Aging wheels Lada, nice to see this in your hands!

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Před 2 měsíci +11

      I figured it had to be his. Not an awful lot of them in the US.

    • @isaacsorensen8377
      @isaacsorensen8377 Před 2 měsíci +15

      He said car wizard in the last video

    • @runoflife87
      @runoflife87 Před 2 měsíci +4

      ​@@volvo09but those were sold in Canada.

    • @TermlessHGW
      @TermlessHGW Před 2 měsíci +10

      Growing up in 90's Poland that brings back some memories. They were absolutely everywhere alongside Fiat 124 and 125p called 'Maluch', FSO Polonez, FSO Warszawa, Trabant and of course Syrena. My God how it all changed so damn quick.

    • @longnguyen-zu1qe
      @longnguyen-zu1qe Před 2 měsíci +2

      😂😂 Same as Hyundai Pony,these 2 are the worst cars. 😅

  • @rustyfmj2388
    @rustyfmj2388 Před měsícem +6

    My dad used to own one back in the day and the Samara that came after it. He always told me those were the most reliable cars he's ever owned.
    They're very spartan but you can at least depend on them

  • @bannerzone_UK
    @bannerzone_UK Před měsícem +8

    Lada's are brilliant!!! In the UK I've had many in the late 80's.

  • @chrismayer3919
    @chrismayer3919 Před 2 měsíci +155

    Makes sense, Wizard; you have a Viper and she has a ‘Stang. She gives you a Lada so you should turn around and give her a Yugo! 😅

    • @markoz673bajen8
      @markoz673bajen8 Před 2 měsíci +8

      The Italian connection

    • @ayrproductions
      @ayrproductions Před 2 měsíci +15

      Nah, Wizard should buy her an early Reliant Robin.

    • @davidclemens1578
      @davidclemens1578 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Remember she has claims on the Ferrari also.

    • @soco13466
      @soco13466 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yugo flying off the Macinac Bridge, when the wind blows across the Strait. (Really happened)

    • @JamesPhieffer
      @JamesPhieffer Před 2 měsíci +5

      The Yugo was the one car that Lada owners could look down on. Of course, Yugos in Canada were rare as hen's teeth.

  • @74Husky
    @74Husky Před 2 měsíci +102

    They sold these in Canada for a number of years. Test drove a new one in 1979. It drove like a tractor. I remember the seats were upholstered in a fabric that looked like it was taken from Russian military uniforms! They used to advertise - "You Got a Lada Car for Your Money"!
    The Lada convinced me to buy a new 1979 Honda Accord. I still own that car!

    • @terrytheimpaler1204
      @terrytheimpaler1204 Před 2 měsíci +11

      Had a Niva I bought in Canada and I really miss it 😢

    • @dm19609721
      @dm19609721 Před 2 měsíci +6

      My 1980 Lada lasted 6 years.....rusted to nothing.....not a car for people who know nothing about cars....because of Canada's Climate then had to change the points twice a year......carb used to get gummed up as well and rebuilt that a few times.. but it was cheap.

    • @max1349
      @max1349 Před 2 měsíci +6

      last years of Lada in Canada was 1997.

    • @terrytheimpaler1204
      @terrytheimpaler1204 Před 2 měsíci

      ​Bought mine used, drove it back to Michigan. It was a 1983.​@@max1349

    • @terrytheimpaler1204
      @terrytheimpaler1204 Před 2 měsíci +8

      I'd kill for that particular model. I have the service manual in English and Russian (my second language) for that particular one, and honestly, I love the cars for being rugged, simple, fun to drift, and easy to modify. (And with my Niva, the few parts I replaced I machined myself.)

  • @MikeBanks2003
    @MikeBanks2003 Před 2 měsíci +18

    I had FIVE Ladas at one time or another--apart from the engine temperature sensor and the two stage thermostat, nothing ever went wrong with them AS LONG AS ONE CHANGED THE TIMING BELT EVERY FIFTY THOUSAND KILOMETERS. When you buy a used LADA, the FIRST thing you do is replace the timing belt.
    They did legendary mileages--built from the same steel as a 100mm tank cannon--the engines were superb little motors and used in all sorts of machinery besides cars. The one used on farms was the four wheel drive version--not the sedan. Roof racks were not standard, but the fittings for them sometimes were. The VAZ engine for these came in two sides and the body was either two doors for the 1300 version or four doors for the 1500 version. % speed gearbox, and would run flat out all day--and great for long distance driving, and we have some REALLY crap roads in Australia, and the Ladas were supplied with a purchaser's choice of hard or soft suspensions, and in some cases gearbox ratios.
    I think you will find it is a five speed manual. The top two gears are overdrives.
    Your interpretation of its driving is not very fair--these things won rallies until they removed the under-1500 cc engine class to get rid of them. The steering id GREAT on these, and they handle like a sports car, and if your does not, the driver or the alignment is at fault, and besides, your engine RPM tells me you ought to be in a higher gear,.

    • @Valtra103
      @Valtra103 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Lada in the video has timing chain, and not a belt.

    • @CarloStagnaro-wn6st
      @CarloStagnaro-wn6st Před měsícem

      My Lada has timing chain.

    • @hansosl
      @hansosl Před měsícem

      Most ladas have chains but they also built some with belts

  • @bgeorges123
    @bgeorges123 Před 2 měsíci +15

    Congratulations! You're now a proud owner of a Hungarian service manual for this car and 3 other variants! The VAZ factory started production in 1970 and they bought the license for the Fiat 124, one of the best cars of its era. The Lada 2101-2107 cars were variants of the Fiat 124. The word Lada means a small sailing fishing boat used in Russia, it's also what the logo is depicting on the steering wheel. VAZ stands for "Volga Avto Zavod" - Volga car factory because it's located by the river Volga. The 2107 was the top of the range of the Fiat 124 variants, it had the biggest engine and the most HP. You need to pay attention to the gaps on the spark plugs, as this engine is very sensitive to that.
    The blinds in the back were a fashion item in Hungary in the 80's. In Hungary lots of cars are equipped with a towball, even small ones.

    • @REVOLTAR53
      @REVOLTAR53 Před 2 měsíci

      The 2106 had an 1.6l engine and the 2107 had a rotary engine...

    • @bgeorges123
      @bgeorges123 Před 2 měsíci

      @@REVOLTAR53 I was 17 when my parents sold our 2107. It had an inline 4 cylinder 1500 cc engine.

    • @dapprman
      @dapprman Před měsícem +1

      I'm sure you are aware, but Fiat even helped design/build the factory as part of a trade deal where the Italians got access to cheap steel (used in many an Italian car without any additional rust proofing, effectively killing Lancia).

  • @EvzenEmanuel
    @EvzenEmanuel Před 2 měsíci +55

    It's much more interesting to see quirky and sort of unusual cars (in the US) like this one - than another Land Rover or Jag. Keep it up wizard!

    • @Ukiegaming
      @Ukiegaming Před 2 měsíci

      much rather prefer to see British cars then this russian trash

    • @johnturner5893
      @johnturner5893 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Citroen AMI 6 is the one we need So does the Wizard We want fun?? It has to be French made car

  • @cschnauz
    @cschnauz Před 2 měsíci +99

    When I lived in Finland, a friend had an 80’s Lada and I remember it had the optional sliding trap door in the backseat floor so you could go ice fishing in it during winter…

    • @jetjazz05
      @jetjazz05 Před 2 měsíci +12

      That's the coolest feature lol...

    • @1greenMitsi
      @1greenMitsi Před 2 měsíci +6

      was your friend ex-KGB?

    • @cschnauz
      @cschnauz Před 2 měsíci

      @@1greenMitsi nah just your normal run of the mill Finn

    • @dayjeremy
      @dayjeremy Před 2 měsíci +6

      Are you sure that wasn't for snuggling people into West Berlin?

    • @digitiger100
      @digitiger100 Před 2 měsíci +6

      @@1greenMitsi russian 2nd city st Peterburg is 90 miles from Finland border and there were quite a lot of LADAS in Finland, this was way cheaper than VW, BMW, PEUGEOT, VOLVO or MERCEDES
      also LADA was quite SIMPLE to repair and it didnt broke so easily, it has very few parts compared to german cars.

  • @WolfhuntFayed
    @WolfhuntFayed Před 2 měsíci +4

    I had a LADA and still have one. Those are cars that you A) hate, or B) LOVE. They skim the roads the way bricks do not. Simple noble cars are they. Respect the Lada.

  • @victorkulionis4451
    @victorkulionis4451 Před 2 měsíci +9

    In 1989, I drove an older version of Lada from Uzbekistan to Estonia. 3000 miles changed 6 tires, no fun at all, lol 😂

    • @alanmalan3819
      @alanmalan3819 Před měsícem +1

      This is 5000 miles between and there were mountains without roads in Uzbekistan, your tires were old i think

    • @andreytarasevich4515
      @andreytarasevich4515 Před měsícem

      Дело было не в машине. Долбоеб сидел в кабине.😊😊😊

  • @BuHeTy
    @BuHeTy Před 2 měsíci +25

    Mr. Car Wizard, You got the luxury 2107. We had 2105. They were common in USSR and the satellite countries 'till 2000's. Based off FIAT but made more robust for Russian weather and roads.This car lasts about 120k km when the problem with the engine begins and needs rebuild. Here in Bulgaria You still can meet them in the villages with LPG system, beat the hell out of them :)

  • @Rohambili
    @Rohambili Před 2 měsíci +119

    6:52 Lada manual in hungarian

    • @rup1u5
      @rup1u5 Před měsícem

      Bojler aldó!

  • @abrecos
    @abrecos Před 2 měsíci +12

    OMG, my dad used to own Lada VAZ-2107 as his first car and he bought it in 1983 when we lived in the former Soviet Union that time. This is the first car I used to drive and you bring a lot of good memories for me. I am driving a 2016 Infiniti Q70L AWD sedan with sport and technology packages, but I will never forget my first car my Lada!

    • @BIOSHOCKFOXX
      @BIOSHOCKFOXX Před 2 měsíci +1

      Where are you from? For the record.

    • @abrecos
      @abrecos Před 2 měsíci +1

      Former USSR republic and now is called Uzbekistan .

    • @abrecos
      @abrecos Před 2 měsíci

      Now I am living in Pennsylvania Philadelphia.

  • @belabahn
    @belabahn Před 2 měsíci +30

    The manual in the glovebox is written in Hungarian. And there IS originally a blinker indicator in the dash. It is (should be) the topmost (green) on the light column. Although that didn't show side on which the blinker was engaged. (Source: I grew up in Hungary (the Eastern Bloc of Europe /sphere of influence of the USSR/ and I sat in these cars.)

    • @marcuscoquer5958
      @marcuscoquer5958 Před 2 měsíci

      I thought the indicator indicator would've been in the same place as it was on the Fiats of the time

    • @belabahn
      @belabahn Před 2 měsíci

      @@marcuscoquer5958 I don't know what the insides of a "normal" Fiat of that era looked like. ☹ Behind the Iron Curtain, we only had the versions that were built in Poland. The "nagy Polski" (Big Polski - FSO 125p) and the "kis Polski" (Little Polski - FSM 126p). But I sat a lot in the "kocka Lada" (Cube Lada - this version in the video), and I remember the meaning of those few lights on it's dashboard. 😊

    • @elusive6119
      @elusive6119 Před 2 měsíci

      These are VAZ 2107 or its export names: LADA 2107, Lada Nova, Lada Riva, Lada Signet, Lada 1500, Lada 1600, Lada 1300, Lada 1300SL, Lada 1300S.
      The interior and some parts were probably replaced by a dealer, as the interior of the car was originally more Spartan.
      This model was produced until 2012 and is considered a classic family of rear-wheel drive VAZ cars. The 2108 and 2109, 2110 models already have front-wheel drive.
      Rear-wheel drive models are usually called "classic". This particular model is just a "Seven". Front-wheel drive models with a carburetor - Sputnik, with an injector - Samara and Samara-2, or simply a "Chisel" for the body shape.
      The 2101-2107 models are based on the Fiat 124 chassis, but somewhat modified and retained only the layout from the original one.
      In 2007, the VAZ 2107 cost less than $ 6,000 at the exchange rate and until 2017 was the most popular car in Russia, since it could be borrowed for 2-3 years
      p.s.
      There is no catalyst, there were models with an injector, but these are cars produced in the mid-2000s.
      Any spare parts can probably be ordered through intermediaries in Kazakhstan. The only question is the price of delivery.
      It's a pity they don't release them anymore. Renault wanted to make a modernized model with increased safety, but it would not have paid off economically.

  • @BobbyM89
    @BobbyM89 Před 2 měsíci +30

    Hi there Wizard. I'm from Bulgaria. My grandfather had a 2107 lada like this and i drove it when i got my licence at 18y. These were pretty much the only cars we had around here 20y ago. Please give it some respect :). Btw the clock is original. Our lada had 5 speed. It is 73hp i believe the motor and ours had the blinkers in the dash not on top of the vent. It was 1987y made. Cheers!

    • @6ettinold
      @6ettinold Před 2 měsíci +2

      I knew a married couple who holidayed Bulgaria in 1990 - a real novelty just after the fall of communism. They befriended a family whilst there & the husband/ father came to the UK to work for 8-9 months, staying with my friends.
      He sent money home & also saved enough to fly his brother over here AND buy 2 Lada's. They returned to Bulgaria driving the Lada's.

    • @ronalderkens414
      @ronalderkens414 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The Rusian Fiat 125

    • @johnturner5893
      @johnturner5893 Před 2 měsíci

      Small Lada 1200 was 60 horse 1300 was 68 and the 1500 75 same as the 1500 Polski Fiat at the time .also built under FIAT licence..The FIAT 124 was the Car of the Year in Europe If I'm not misteken in 1967? 3 years earlier the FORD came out with the Mustang

    • @kingcosworth2643
      @kingcosworth2643 Před 2 měsíci

      @@johnturner5893 Fiat 124 giving auto elecs PTSD

  • @jimcolangelo7003
    @jimcolangelo7003 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I have always wanted one of these!! So cool. Way to go Mrs. Wizard!

  • @rogerpritchard
    @rogerpritchard Před 2 měsíci

    Brilliant news, you have both done so much ! well done on reaching 1 million.

  • @andrasgerelyes1576
    @andrasgerelyes1576 Před 2 měsíci +34

    Wow, that book is in Hungarian! I think every household which owned a Lada / Zsiguli has one of those maintanence guidebooks.

  • @d.o.5238
    @d.o.5238 Před 2 měsíci +33

    There's no cat in it, it's just a front muffler (these cars have two mufflers one after the other). The brakes proportioning valve is there to automatically adjust brake bias depending on the rear axle load, so that the car with 3 passengers in the rear seat and luggage in the trunk would have more braking force at the rear compared to a car with just the driver in it. A fun fact is that this device is nicknamed "колдун" in Russian which can be loosely translated to English as "Wizard"

    • @patriciomunoz2830
      @patriciomunoz2830 Před 2 měsíci +2

      It is a catalytic converter, they just retrofitted that in many ladas to meet emission standards the system was a disgrace

    • @Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr.
      @Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr. Před 2 měsíci

      @d.o.5238, You’re wrong, and the exact opposite of how the brake proportioning valve operates. In heavy braking, I.E. like a child running in front of the vehicle, the valve will increase the pressure on the front wheels to keep the rear wheels from locking up and causing the vehicle to spin. It has nothing to do with the weight that’s in the vehicle.
      Think about it for a moment, how would a braking system know and calculate the weight in the vehicle without a computer?

    • @d.o.5238
      @d.o.5238 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr. no, I'm not. The rod, that Wizard thought was a sway bar, is what controls the valve. The lower the rear end is, the more weight load is on the rear axle and the more pressure goes to the rear brakes. Also, when you brake and the weight gets transferred to the front because of that, the rear end lifts and the valve decreases the pressure to the rear brakes and prevents them from locking up. Welcome to old times without any computers and everything being done mechanically

    • @Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr.
      @Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr. Před 2 měsíci

      @@d.o.5238 I’ve been a mechanic for over 50 years and have rebuilt and adjusted proportioning valves on hundreds of cars, my specialty was Corvettes. If the valves performed as you say there would be no reason for them to be on Corvettes from 1968 to 1982, and with the same logic they should be on every truck manufactured. The Corvettes have no space for passengers and very little space for luggage, the trucks would require them because of the changing load throughout their life, but this isn’t what we see, what we do see is the complete opposite.
      The proportioning valve is to prevent the rear wheels from locking up in a panic stop, Google it being you don’t believe me. I don’t want to make a derogatory joke about Russia or the country that made the little car, but I have a hard time believing they’re purposely designing a car to perform a dangerous operation that could take lives. You do not want to lock up the rear wheels in an emergency stop and if you apply more braking power to the rear wheels you’ll do just that. I’m not going to keep going back and forth with you because I know I’m right, I’ve rebuilt, recalibrated, and installed new brake proportioning valves, and I know how and why they work the way they do. So please google it, and have a nice day.

    • @d.o.5238
      @d.o.5238 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr. I don't see how what you're saying contradicts my words. More weight on the rear - more pressure is allowed to go to the rear brakes. Less load, the rear end goes up (regardless of the reason, being it less cargo or a hard braking) it pulls the rod and closes the valve more) - so you get less pressure. It works for both hard braking and adjusting the initial bias depending on the car load. Nice day to you too

  • @capnemo6576
    @capnemo6576 Před měsícem +6

    Thank you,
    Perfect car ❤

  • @nicostenfors5690
    @nicostenfors5690 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Great car. Easy to repair, cheap parts and warm in the winter. I have the 2107 1700i big block injected model. It topped out at 170km/h (105mph).

  • @miroslavivanov6809
    @miroslavivanov6809 Před 2 měsíci +51

    There is a channel called Garage54. They are the wizards of these machines :D

    • @mystisith3984
      @mystisith3984 Před 2 měsíci +13

      Those Mac Gyver Russians crack me up with their stunts. Fun channel for sure.

    • @jeancadet5862
      @jeancadet5862 Před 2 měsíci

      😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😂​@@mystisith3984

    • @thatguybrody4819
      @thatguybrody4819 Před 2 měsíci +3

      glad to see a fellow garage54 fan

  • @piet-heins.2708
    @piet-heins.2708 Před 2 měsíci +12

    My brother’s father in law had one. Did 50k km per year, never missed a beat. Working in construction, he had to help his Benz-driving co-workers leave the construction site in winter. They couldn’t do it, but he did. Lada-powerrrrr! and: things that aren’t fitted on the car, can’t fail..

  • @jpkatz1435
    @jpkatz1435 Před 2 měsíci

    One of the best visits with the family Wizards. Lots a smiles!

  • @shadowjkl
    @shadowjkl Před 2 měsíci

    My Step-dad had couple of these when I was a kid. Not great, but never really left him in trouble. These were build to be fixed by the owners, and originally came with full kit of tools. The lifting points are for the original jack, which for a kid was quite a unit.

  • @module79l28
    @module79l28 Před 2 měsíci +105

    12:21 - Lol, 90km/h is almost 56mph, Mr. Wizard! 😄
    12:45 - And 110km/h is over 68mph, so you can indeed drive it on the highway without any problems. 👍
    19:10 - The engine is carburated, I doubt very much that's a catalytic converter. I think that's just the middle muffler.

    • @guydov4314
      @guydov4314 Před 2 měsíci +9

      not muffler,but resonator

    • @kallekas8551
      @kallekas8551 Před 2 měsíci +8

      Worst car I have EVER driven…should be considered a crime against humanity!

    • @guydov4314
      @guydov4314 Před 2 měsíci

      what your expectation from car which was designed in 1965 (as FIAT124) @@kallekas8551

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Před 2 měsíci +8

      Some of the exported Eastern Block cars did have a carburettor and a catalytic converter. I guess it worked long enough to get them through type approval.

    • @kaliikleja
      @kaliikleja Před 2 měsíci

      @@kallekas8551 Ilmselt oled sa liiga vähe autosid juhtinud, kui seda kõige hullemaks pead.

  • @cogboy302
    @cogboy302 Před 2 měsíci +325

    Hey, it's RWD, and based on the Fiat 124 platform. Chuck a more modern Alfa Romeo 2.0 twin spark motor into it, weld the diff and go out and hoon it.

    • @youtuber5709
      @youtuber5709 Před 2 měsíci +20

      Yes in Argentina it was sold as a Fiat 124 .

    • @jnorman58
      @jnorman58 Před 2 měsíci +19

      Yeah definitely based on the Fiat 124.

    • @juststeve5542
      @juststeve5542 Před 2 měsíci +28

      I was thinking chuck in a 132's 5 speed box and then the FIAT/Lancia twin cam engine.

    • @module79l28
      @module79l28 Před 2 měsíci +35

      Hey, don't give the Wizard bad ideas or he'll turn his shop into another Garage 54! 😄

    • @HaroldDelaney-kq8sm
      @HaroldDelaney-kq8sm Před 2 měsíci +14

      Sorry to ruin your party but that's definitely Fiat 125 platform, not 124.

  • @Subarude-zr5qf
    @Subarude-zr5qf Před 2 měsíci

    Way to go with the variety, we have a yearly gathering of unique little cars, the Southwest Unique Little Car Show has been going on for 43 years with Fiat's, even Wartburgs, Mini's ,Crosley's. I ve got Nash Metropolitans and Subaru 360's, both a lot of fun in their own ways! Great videos!

  • @attilahavasi6987
    @attilahavasi6987 Před měsícem

    Hy Wizard! It was nice to see someone liked the 07 :D Im a Lada enthusiast from Hungary (also here, racing these cars became tradition wich still goes strong to this day), I have great experience in restoring these cars. There is a lot of junk parts on the market, I can help you to get some nice ones.

  • @recumbrider643
    @recumbrider643 Před 2 měsíci +19

    That extra blinker light is for the trailer blinker. Some EU countries require a check light for the trailer blinkers when a trailer is hooked up. It will blink correctly when a trailer with working blinkers is hooked up. Also be aware that the EU 7 pin plug is NOT compatible with the US trailer plugs. Blinker and brake lights are separate. Right and left taillights are separate. No electric brake signal.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Před 2 měsíci

      he says my economy gauge does not work but he's flooring it🤣🤣

    • @manuheber9011
      @manuheber9011 Před měsícem

      Buy a european trailer extra and import that!

  • @velislavnaydenov5311
    @velislavnaydenov5311 Před 2 měsíci +19

    Those "bars" you used to lift the car are actually the jacking points. The Lada came with it's own jack form the factory and these points are used to insert the jack in them.

    • @dm19609721
      @dm19609721 Před 2 měsíci +3

      it was easy to lift, not like those farmer style jacks

  • @stefanmaassen8871
    @stefanmaassen8871 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I owned an station in the Netherlands years ago. It was originally a 1500cc 5 speed manual and replaced it with an 1300cc but used the carb from the 1500. It's top speed was over the 180 km/h!!😂 Amazing reliable cars!
    They used/use them a lot in the rally sport in eastern Europe.

  • @Jeans-bf1pu
    @Jeans-bf1pu Před 2 měsíci +52

    Hello Wizard. I'm from the Netherlands and this Lada is actually an old model from FIAT. The so-called Fiat 124. In the sixties Fiat sold the outfased Fiat 124 to Russia to build overthere in Togliattigrad. This town in Russia was set up by Fiat to initiatate a Russian car industry.

    • @stealthg35infiniti94
      @stealthg35infiniti94 Před 2 měsíci

      Or perhaps a Seat 124.

    • @Billy-the-Kid
      @Billy-the-Kid Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@stealthg35infiniti94 No, SEAT also made FIAT clones.

    • @KimB10M
      @KimB10M Před 2 měsíci +3

      Togliattigrad?? 😆. Just Togliatti! And named after an Italian communist!

    • @steinbauge4591
      @steinbauge4591 Před 2 měsíci +9

      False. Design based on the Fiat, body shell more or less the same but engine/parts all different. It was a cooperation with Fiat/Italy to modernize car production in the USSR.

    • @nickyburnell
      @nickyburnell Před 2 měsíci +2

      Fiat 125

  • @henningmogensen9144
    @henningmogensen9144 Před 2 měsíci +12

    When my parents shifted their old Morris1000 (I got that one) they baught a brand new Lada (around 1977). It was the cheapest car in Denmark at the time. It always ran and was just as easy to repair as the old Morris 1000. No matter the temperature it could always start and it easily ran 120km/h on the the danish highway).

  • @MikeKayK
    @MikeKayK Před 2 měsíci +3

    I was born in the USSR and grew up in one of these. They were modified versions of the Fiat 124 made by VAZ and called "Zhiguli" but exported under the name "Lada."

  • @christianpullen2165
    @christianpullen2165 Před 2 měsíci

    Looking forward to watching you tackle all the mechanical and oily bits in future videos.

  • @crunchtime6244
    @crunchtime6244 Před 2 měsíci +249

    The Lada uses the old Fiat 124 platform and panels (66 to 74).

    • @bartsimpson8616
      @bartsimpson8616 Před 2 měsíci +19

      its better then fiat 124

    • @ETr4d3
      @ETr4d3 Před 2 měsíci +9

      SEAT also made them, 124 DLS, I believe from 68 to 80

    • @axeavier
      @axeavier Před 2 měsíci +21

      it is a fiat. Soviets got a license from Fiat to make the car

    • @MW-te5fv
      @MW-te5fv Před 2 měsíci +5

      And Poland got the 125. Poland > Russia

    • @giorgitadumadze8490
      @giorgitadumadze8490 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yes russian stole fiat looks becuse they are killers just making tank's

  • @Cogglesz
    @Cogglesz Před 2 měsíci +10

    I'm honestly impressed to see a Lada with all it's rear badging in place and a fully put together dash. This is pretty awesome and a cheerful drivable milestone, makes for a great video! Nice little history lesson too. It sounds way too aggressive for the speed lol

  • @PaulPhillips-gm6tg
    @PaulPhillips-gm6tg Před 2 měsíci

    Hi that green light on the dash is linked to the towbar ,when the lights are plugged in and the indicators are on that green light will flash all the time ,then when a trailor bulb blows it will stop working ,so it lets you know when a trailor bulb is blown .Great show

  • @erictrein4326
    @erictrein4326 Před 2 měsíci +1

    So nice to see this car. I had a 2107 with a 1600 engine also in that red color. Can you go on the highway, yes you can it is not great but i clocked mine at 145km/h on the german highway. Drove it from The Netherlands for vacation to southern Spain no problem. It even visited Gibraltar 😅. If you drive it a 100 Km/h it is fine. It is not very fuel efficient. You can store quite a bit in trunk.

  • @Elias_Giannakakis-GTI1985
    @Elias_Giannakakis-GTI1985 Před 2 měsíci +26

    My first car was a Lada 2101 1200cc (model year 1969). I have great memories from it! I was only 18 when my dad gave it to me. It was not fast or something like that, but it was very cheap to maintain and repair. Most services or repairs were so easy that I could do on my own. Driving it was ...let's say ... like driving a battle tank! Slow and heavy to steer. But I loved it! Top speed....120km/h at its best days...😂 ...

    • @EvgeniBelin
      @EvgeniBelin Před 2 měsíci +1

      That's what my dad had - 2101 '73 vintage. Oh, nostalgia is real...

    • @khche
      @khche Před 2 měsíci

      First ever Lada was 1970

    • @EvgeniBelin
      @EvgeniBelin Před 2 měsíci

      @@khche Lada was export name. Soviets known this as Zhigoolee (Жигули)

    • @khche
      @khche Před 2 měsíci

      @@EvgeniBelin что ещё расскажете? Ну про ВАЗ напишите ещё.

    • @MEHTbl_MHE_HE_KEHTbl
      @MEHTbl_MHE_HE_KEHTbl Před 2 měsíci +1

      The car of my childhood. My grandfather had one like this (LADA-2106). She seemed huge to me at the time. We traveled together around Ukraine, Crimea and Kuban. The engine ran on 76 grade gasoline.

  • @superstevoz
    @superstevoz Před 2 měsíci +13

    Congratulations for 1 million subscribers! You got the whole enchiLada!

  • @georgewacaser4559
    @georgewacaser4559 Před 2 měsíci

    Well played Mrs Wizard ! For sure, shout out to Robert at Aging Wheels. Fun guy to watch.

  • @V96Bence
    @V96Bence Před 2 měsíci

    with previous experiences with a lada samara 1500 you need bigger jets in the carb and to adjust for more pre-ignition with modern fuels it moves a lot better after that

  • @ScreamingReelsTV
    @ScreamingReelsTV Před 2 měsíci +67

    Lada... the Other Russian Rocket! And trust me fellas, you ain't lived until you've driven along the Havana Malecon in the back of a clapped out Lada Taxi doing 140kmh!!

    • @martinsuter3531
      @martinsuter3531 Před 2 měsíci +6

      @ScreamingReelsTV - Ha! Yes! Me too! But not in a clapped out Lada taxi, but driving a nice, almost new Lada rental car and many times on the Malecon (but never at 140 clicks!) and twice driving all the way from Havana to Santiago and back! And both times with more than half of the 900-plus km trip after dark! I don't recommend this! When I visit the island now I avoid driving anywhere in Cuba at night at all costs!

    • @kingcosworth2643
      @kingcosworth2643 Před 2 měsíci

      On weeeeeed

  • @the1andonly
    @the1andonly Před 2 měsíci +22

    110 is easily 65 mph, so no worries about highway speeds. In the 990's I worked with a guy in Montreal who bought those for cheap and fixed them up for driving through the winter. He did some weird fixes , like fixing keyways in the transmission with cut off nails and who knows what else. But he always made it to work on time 😆

    • @wyrazowfkp
      @wyrazowfkp Před 2 měsíci +3

      112 is 70 mph , 96 is 60 mph, if it's a 1500 it will go almost 100 mph, and 90 4 sure

    • @mybigfatpolishlife
      @mybigfatpolishlife Před 2 měsíci

      100 km/h is 60 mph roughly

    • @wyrazowfkp
      @wyrazowfkp Před 2 měsíci

      @@mybigfatpolishlife I know, I have a US made car in Europe and going 60 is too fast for most speed cameras or corners that can easy take 60 kmh :D

    • @patrickcannell2258
      @patrickcannell2258 Před 27 dny

      Conversation 1.6 km is 1 mile.

  • @vladk8637
    @vladk8637 Před měsícem +1

    You can easily find parts to be shipped to the US from East Europe (Estonia/Latvia/Lithuania, Poland, Bulgaria, Romania...)
    You may find in Canada as well, as those Ladas used to be imported there, but it will be much harder.
    Still, you can find tech documentation in English from the UK, Canada or Australia.

  • @chrislarsen6802
    @chrislarsen6802 Před 2 měsíci +1

    My brother had a 1989 Lada Samara (in Canada BTW). It always made me think that it's the car that a farmer built in his shed out of spare tractor parts. It was so simple to work on, but the parts were a nightmare to source. He finally got rid of it after it needed a new clutch that was going to cost $900.

  • @trevorbartram5473
    @trevorbartram5473 Před 2 měsíci +11

    Congratulations. Mrs Wizard has bought you the perfect car for Kansas winters. My father had a fully loaded early 80s Lada & it had the best heater of any car available! He was sad to see it go when the insurance company totaled it after an accident (not his fault). Enjoy!!

    • @Onimalap
      @Onimalap Před 2 měsíci +1

      I read an article once it heated interior quicker than modern cars. I think Volvo 240 did well too byt nowhere near.

    • @Fay7666
      @Fay7666 Před 2 měsíci +1

      You can definitely see their priorities.

  • @udtrev
    @udtrev Před 2 měsíci +27

    The heated rear screen is to keep your hands warm when you push it :-)

  • @ltlk937
    @ltlk937 Před 2 měsíci

    Its so cool that i get to see an Aging wheels car on The car Wizard. So glad you guys could give it a good home.

  • @jynxclover2996
    @jynxclover2996 Před 16 dny

    That is sweet! Something like this you just can't pick up anywhere. I like it

  • @itsnotjustyounz2813
    @itsnotjustyounz2813 Před 2 měsíci +10

    The "weird little bars" are for a jack to slide into, they use a similar jack to what came with Cortinas. The webber 32/34 is also a good way to get a little more go from it

    • @JohnSmith-yv6eq
      @JohnSmith-yv6eq Před 2 měsíci +1

      DGAV 32/36 off a Ford Cortina is even better!

  • @kipparimies
    @kipparimies Před 2 měsíci +7

    These were incredibly popular here in Finland, but started to get rare in the beginning of 2000s. Russians bought them back in masses because, well, they were extremely popular there also. My dad had one just like this, but I think the model was 2105, and before that he had round lamp 1200L model. Both those were also bought back by russians I think. Finnish models had dealer fitted options also, like heated seats. The heater was extremely powerful and they started good in winter so they were good winter cars. Nowdays the model 1200L with round headlights are really rare and very desirable, not a lot of them left anymore.

  • @MonoBrawI
    @MonoBrawI Před 2 měsíci

    Grew up with an identical red 2107, apart from ours having no radio and those ridiculous window blinds. The blinker thing is non-standard, it does have (a single) light on the dash. The dash always cracks in the same spot. The clock is always broken on these. Ours had cream plush seats and door cards which aged much better than the faux leather. Steering is really vague thanks to the complicated column, but it had a very slick gearshift

  • @geraldguenard4095
    @geraldguenard4095 Před 2 měsíci

    Good day. I was repairing those LADA in the 60 to 70, these cars are built like tanks, easy to repair and the parts where accessible at a reasonnable price. they where slow but steady, they where giving you a tool kit whit every car.to bad we dont have them anymore.

  • @andrewg2322
    @andrewg2322 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Piroská Lada 🥇 my uncle raced these in the Mecek mountains near kaopsvar along with citroens audis and pugeots in the 80s and 90s in Hungary. Cool to see one in such nice shape and from HU as well

  • @TheNismo777
    @TheNismo777 Před 2 měsíci +38

    A Lada?!?! WHAAAAT! Got all the help u need. Its very common here in Finland VTS parts can make this super cool ^^ That blank spot next to the clock is mostlikely for AC or seat heaters. If you need a 5 speed gearbox, got u covered!

    • @TheNismo777
      @TheNismo777 Před 2 měsíci +6

      These are build simple to be able to survive siberian brutal winters

    • @mikakoivunen3456
      @mikakoivunen3456 Před 2 měsíci

      Not so common anymore, most of them disappeared almost overnight after soviet union collapsed...

    • @TheNismo777
      @TheNismo777 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@mikakoivunen3456 truuuust me, there is more than enough of em still around lol

    • @mikakoivunen3456
      @mikakoivunen3456 Před 2 měsíci

      @@TheNismo777 Here we see occasionally ladas, but the older ones with round headlights are very rare sight, much like saab 9000 and older ones

    • @TheNismo777
      @TheNismo777 Před 2 měsíci

      @@mikakoivunen3456 I see both models every day, very common in this city. Samara has totally vanished as a model in the last 15 years

  • @deltasteve1
    @deltasteve1 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Love the Lada!

  • @maximvf
    @maximvf Před měsícem

    Last one rolled out in 2012. It's 30 years of production. In Russia and former SU, parts are everywhere. For extra fun try in Canada or Alaska at -30 °C where it.. just works!

  • @sleepyhollow783
    @sleepyhollow783 Před 2 měsíci +64

    This proves she loves her Wizard a whole Lada. As unique as one can get here in the USA.
    Hoped to have heard the old Soviet national anthem half way through the video.

    • @BlooMule
      @BlooMule Před 2 měsíci +2

      Whole Lada love (WAAAAAY down insiiide)

  • @jimmychristensen498
    @jimmychristensen498 Před 2 měsíci +9

    OMG I love this! When AW told that he sold the Lada, he didn't tell who bought it. This is great.

    • @jimmychristensen498
      @jimmychristensen498 Před 2 měsíci +4

      BTW, in Europe we don't really use pick up trucks privately much, so we pull trailers A LOT...

    • @johnturner5893
      @johnturner5893 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@jimmychristensen498 Even with a 40 horse VW Bug..

  • @Mopar-Pioneer
    @Mopar-Pioneer Před 2 měsíci

    Hey there Mr. and Mrs. Wizard. Here in Australia, back in the day, We learned quickly that Lada translated to english was Russian built Fiat !!! The Lada Niva was one of the most underated 4 X 4s made !

  • @user-kh3kw5li4u
    @user-kh3kw5li4u Před měsícem +1

    I am from Russia (CCCP) , nice to see THAT car in yours channel. Its like car in my 21 age )

  • @Tomservoca
    @Tomservoca Před 2 měsíci +12

    I had a Fiat 124 Twin Cam and it was a blast!!!! I drove that thing from Victoria to Edmonton and back many times, on the freeway, no problem. I rallied it, I slalomed it (yes the body lean was some what scary) and only when it went -10C did it start to complain. Damp wasn't it's friend either.

  • @markamd1
    @markamd1 Před 2 měsíci +10

    Car Wizard, you have my attention now . This is brilliant.

  • @paulfomin6292
    @paulfomin6292 Před měsícem

    The last thing I expected to see on this channel is Mr. Wizard driving a Lada 2107! I'm from Russia, I'm crazy about older cars, and got a lot of pleasure seeing this contrast as the Wizard drives this car, outside the window is America, but the noise from the lack of aerodynamics, the crackle in the cabin and the hum of the transmission and engine is exclusively Soviet).
    In the former USSR this car is called Zhiguli, Lada, Riva - export names for European and American markets.
    Keep us informed about its fate, it is so nice to see a piece of something so native, in the middle of the rest of the beauty of cars❤

  • @MerthynDavies
    @MerthynDavies Před 2 měsíci

    I had a lada 1200 in mustard, had no problem doing 80mph on motorway. Also had a tow bar and small trailer. It was easy to tune and work on.

  • @user-yx5lb1mo3b
    @user-yx5lb1mo3b Před 2 měsíci +16

    We had loads the of these in the UK in the 70s and 80s. Based on a 60s Fiat 124. They stopped selling them here when they couldn't meet emissions stsndards. When they couldn't pass the annual test, most got shipped back to Russia for repair or parts. Last time I saw one was in Croatia 15 years ago.

    • @HA05GER
      @HA05GER Před 2 měsíci +2

      There is one in a town near me in the UK parked up next to an old ldv van. It runs and is used as well.

    • @foxstrangler
      @foxstrangler Před 2 měsíci +4

      After the Wall fell, and we started getting ships from Poland and Russia loaded with lumber, the ship's crews would buy up all the Ladas they could find and take them back as deck cargo. The waiting list for new cars in Russia was years, so they made a nice earner from bringing export models back home. The underframe was upgraded to cope with Russian roads, so much stronger than the origin Fiat shells. There is still one driven locally, a Wagon or Estate in English, in good order. There should be a full too kit comes with it. Enough to fix it on a Siberian roadside in winter.

    • @johnsimon8457
      @johnsimon8457 Před 2 měsíci

      I remember top gear making fun of these

    • @JohnSmith-yv6eq
      @JohnSmith-yv6eq Před 2 měsíci

      They made less fun of it after Lotus completely upgraded it and it was gifted to a viewer.....
      @@johnsimon8457

    • @NotNowCato1254
      @NotNowCato1254 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@foxstrangler Yes! Here in Weymouth, England in the late 80s and early 90s Soviet/Russian fish processing ships would drop anchor in the bay for a few weeks. The crew members on days off would come ashore and spend their time collecting these cars and parts from scrap yards to take home to make a few roubles.

  • @jornhietbrink870
    @jornhietbrink870 Před 2 měsíci +17

    Those 2107 with the chrome grill and headlight washers. In my early teens my parents had the exact same model and color. This brings back some memories. This is a Beauty

  • @supervitz7178
    @supervitz7178 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I've got one here in the UK for the lols. The clocks barely worked fresh out of the factory on these. The turn signal thing is aftermarket and most likely linked to the trailer wiring. You should be fine on the highway, I cruise at 55 - 60mph in mine.

  • @crisholmurb007
    @crisholmurb007 Před 2 měsíci +1

    It is a license built Fiat 124 from Togliatti in the USSSSSSSSSR. It was called "The Ziguli" and were very common across Eastern Europe. In some countries a car for the "nomenklatura", i.e. powerful party members.

  • @Charkatak
    @Charkatak Před 2 měsíci +5

    This one has a look of #5 and #7 Zhiguli/Lada model. I believe #6 was a bit more reliable but had a rounded headlights. Many neighbors were fixing these cars at their drive way. Not many people could afford to buy a car, so each driver was using "their only car" for decades. Even underpowered as these were, they got the job done. Remember people were loading these with a lot of heavy weight items which made the car squat.

  • @joshpinchuk7061
    @joshpinchuk7061 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Great shout out to Robert Dunn at aging wheels. He is very clever and has lots of great content..

  • @alainmarquez2290
    @alainmarquez2290 Před 2 dny

    😂 First I want to say this is an amazing channel. I like the content much. It is wonderful how far the Wizards love for cars go. So this very video brings nostalgic to me since I’m Cuban. I think you guys may know by now that there is a lot of these cars there I think all of the all models we have there. That specific model you guys have were used in Cuba as police cars for many many years 😂 so if you think that car is slow and under-power imagine other cars 😅. I used to drive around 2007 to 2014 a VAZ-1300 Zhiguli from 1971. Imagine how fun-weird could be. FYI there are parts for those or are least companies that could have some in stock at the city of Hialeah, FL. A lot of cuban entusiastas have those car for week-end drive around town. Thanks to bring this videos, people could learn that much people around the world are driving crazy machines! 😅.

  • @kirstenspencer3630
    @kirstenspencer3630 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Loving the Lada, you are lucky ! Now fot the Skoda !

  • @levimarr
    @levimarr Před 2 měsíci +5

    Lada is and was the national car of Cuba. I owned one from 1978, and it still running. It was a joint venture between Fiat and Lada. Also check out the Vodga. Loved those CCCP cars, simple and to the point and winter survivors too.

  • @TVR-jc5uf
    @TVR-jc5uf Před 2 měsíci +4

    Car Wizard..you are the bomb!!! Great practical and honest advice! I love your channel. You are a dying breed...god bless the knowledgeable, independent, mechanic that can still service both 'modern' and older vehicles. Modern is in quotes as post mid 2000's EVERYTHING sux and is built to the same 10 year life expectancy as any of other appliances that most have come to expect. Please consider moving to Asheville NC. Nice Mountain town that needs your services...the views are so much better than flatland KS.

  • @DetroitYugo
    @DetroitYugo Před 2 měsíci

    18:58 those bars are for a scissor-jack type of thing that came in vehicles of this era. My Yugo has similar mounts for the jack to slide into and then extend.

  • @robd1365
    @robd1365 Před 2 měsíci +1

    It looks at the back like it’s happy to see you Mrs Wizard, spat my beer out laughing!

  • @thesaltnation5570
    @thesaltnation5570 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Omg i need one!! ❤ i love Eastern Europe and i wanted to bring one back to the usa lada is great

  • @0Alwina0
    @0Alwina0 Před 2 měsíci +17

    I have driven in the car. My grandparents in Russia still drive it. I have a picture as a toddler with the car in the background. This car will never die it seems. I was born in 91 and in all my life that is the only car I have ever seen them have😂

    • @jetjazz05
      @jetjazz05 Před 2 měsíci +11

      I made a comment about this, these vehicles were meant to be simple and simple to fix/mantain. Making them easy to work on means that as long as they don't rust they could theoretically last forever, by making them for so long and not changing the design it was possible to (to this day) still make parts. You couldn't dream of finding parts for a Chevrolet in the USA from the 80s, not all the parts anyways, owning anything in the USA it is mostly a throwaway product. I find that funny because we are so concerned about being "green", if you owned one car for 50 years and only replaced the broken parts I believe that would make it more "green" than buying a new car every 5 years.

    • @whatamisupposedtoputhere
      @whatamisupposedtoputhere Před 2 měsíci

      These are a lot like Toyotas from this time period, the only thing that’ll really kill them is rust.

    • @mhm8154
      @mhm8154 Před 2 měsíci

      😁

    • @steinbauge4591
      @steinbauge4591 Před 2 měsíci +1

      keep the rust away and anybody can fix just about anything on it. It was designed to be repaired by the owner, with a huge toolkit.

    • @beibotanov
      @beibotanov Před 2 měsíci

      @@jetjazz05 in USSR, a body change was also a thing - when the body has rusted away, no reason to throw everything else away

  • @martonmisik886
    @martonmisik886 Před 2 měsíci +27

    Here in eastern Europe back in the 70s owning a Lada 1500 was a HUGE deal. It was pretty much the equivalent of owning an S-Class in the west at that time. Compared to Trabants and other basic communist cars, the Lada was on a different level. They are also really durable.

    • @MB-ox3cz
      @MB-ox3cz Před 2 měsíci +5

      Yep, I agree with you... and if you have 2106 with the 1.6... you felt like you owned an airplane.

    • @user-sy1ed9ex5m
      @user-sy1ed9ex5m Před 2 měsíci +3

      "equivalent of owning an S-Class" - no, it wasn't. More like the equivalent of a Jetta / Audi 80 for people, who didn't have party connections or a lot of money. You might say they were dependable (easy to fix), but they were never reliable. The engines were ready for rebuild at under 150k km.

    • @MB-ox3cz
      @MB-ox3cz Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@user-sy1ed9ex5m engine rebuild at 150k kilometers is actually incredibly reliable for the record. That distance back in the days took decades to travel. You are talking about a car which was build with thing but cheapness in mind. Lets be real, many modern day cars can't make it to 90-100k mile mark anyhow. The jettas or 80s of the are were more comparable to the Zastavas and Wartburg 353... the 2107 was definitely a much higher class.

    • @user-sy1ed9ex5m
      @user-sy1ed9ex5m Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@MB-ox3czYeah, 150k was a lot, since these amazing POS cars rusted out before that. Quite thick steel, with almost non existent protection. A lot of 80s cars were easily pushing 250k km of life without major issues. No, Jetta/ Golf were far better build than any of the soviet cars, and most of them still run fine, especially the diesel ones. I've grown around soviet cars, my father had Moskvich, my grandfather Polski Fiat and then Skoda 120 (the best car of the bunch), and besides the early Volga 24, none of them were nice to be in. Wartburg, Zastava - they were just a step above the Trabant / Zaporojets, just means to move from point A to B.

    • @orlyatko17
      @orlyatko17 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@user-sy1ed9ex5mcloser to 80-90thousand km

  • @nitindavid5691
    @nitindavid5691 Před 2 měsíci +1

    We had the Premier 118NE in India. It was the same car with some aesthetic changes. We could do about 120 kph (~75 mph) on the highway. Great cars and very easy to work on. Ours rusted away and was scrapped.
    What you have here is a 10 second car, that Mrs. Wizard can pull across the finish line 😜
    Jokes aside, have fun and keep uploading 👍

    • @nitindavid5691
      @nitindavid5691 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Forgot to mention that it had a huge analog clock instead of a rev counter!

  • @simonroyle2806
    @simonroyle2806 Před 2 měsíci +1

    A mate had one in the 80s as a company car. I do recall it had an extensive tool kit, and must be the last car sold with a starting handle!

  • @ZebraAfrica
    @ZebraAfrica Před 2 měsíci +5

    I'm familiar with the Fiat 124 when I was a kid, first time I saw a Lada derived version was in a Vancouver auto show.
    Imagine in the days of the CCCP, it was 10 plus years waiting list.
    Now you can look for a East German Trabant, or a Wartburg. Or a luxury Soviet six cylinder Volga.