LeBaron GTC Convertible: the car and the price sticker!
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Oct 2, 2024
Dive into this beautiful 1991 Chrysler LeBaron GTC (turbo) as we explore the pricing, brochure, and other literature... and see how much it would cost today!
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Hi, this is Motel's Dave, and I'm here to walk you through Waltz-Sbanke's
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1991 Chrysler-Labarin GTC window sticker. And this was a sporty little car if you got it with the turbo engine, as he did
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as every GTC buyer did, in fact, and it cost $50,000. $595 back in the day, which today would be about $36,000
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and that's just for the LeBaron convertible itself. That's not for the GTC
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The GTC option added the 2.5-liter turbo engine. This was a great little engine because the 2.5 liter, you know, it was a stroked version of the 2.2
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So it generated good low-end torque, but it kind of ran out once you got past about 4,000 RPM
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if you had this standard TBI version. That's a single fuel injector
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With the turbo, it had four fuel injectors, but more importantly, the turbo would start spinning up
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at about the time that the engine's natural torque stopped being as much of a foul
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So what you ended up with was a very smooth package. It came with a five-speed manual transmission
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I think it was from Getrog, but I might be wrong about that. Chrysler also made manual transmissions
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The TTC also had the sport bucket seats as opposed to regular bucket seats
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It had high-performance four-wheel disc brakes. Four-wheel disc brakes were still not universal at that point
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A lot of cars still had rear drums. More performance-oriented suspension. 16-inch cast-aluminum wheels with wide
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tires and a very low profile for the time, a 55 profile. That all cost another 1161, which today would be
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about $2,700, but well worth it, because this car with the 2.5-liter TBI engine would not be nearly
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as much fun, and with the automatic transmission would really not be as much fun. This was, by the way
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one of Chrysler's most popular cars at the time it was made. It was beautifully styled. It is still
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an attractive car, it hasn't aged in its styling. Dodge didn't have the same car, which also helped
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What did you get with it? That's where we go to the standard equipment area. This particular car in
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the vehicle description it talks about the 12 power seat That a GTC feature And you get the recliner lumbar Back wings were basically the parts that stick out on either side of your back to hold you in better and that was handy for a car that had a better handling package
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So these were all front-wheel drive cars. They had a single driver-side airbag, rear-seat shoulder harnesses
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that was, I believe, federally regulated at that point and required, as was a driver-side airbag
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Or, depending if I'm getting the year right, then you could have also had a automatic seat
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belt, which was a bit of a pain. They had 5 mile per hour front and rear
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bumpers. 2.5 liter turbocharged engine. I am pronouncing it that way because
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that's how it's spelled. S.O.HC is single overhead cam. It's an overhead
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cam design. Generally overhead cam designs are seen as being more efficient
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than the old push rods. Usually that's true. Dual cam is generally seen as more efficient
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than a single cam, but more expensive. SMPI, sequential, multiple port injections. So that's
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electronic fuel injection. Sequential means that the fuel injectors don't all fire at once
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Every time one cylinder fires, all the injectors fire. So that's the sequential. They fire when
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they're needed. Multiple port means that there is one injector at each cylinder's port rather than
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the TBI injection, which is throttle body injection, where you basically just take your carburetor
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throw it out, and shove in a fuel injector there. Illuminized steel exhaust system that really worked
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This is one of the first cars where when you drove it around for years and years
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you wouldn't have to replace the tailpipe and muffler every five to six years
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Rear window defroster, that's kind of obvious. In those days, they had already switched to all-electric, just like a car that you buy today
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GTC package came with the power windows and power heated outside mirrors and the power door locks
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They were automatic, so once you pass to certain speed, they would lock
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And you could shut these off by performing some magic in the own that was described in the owner
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manual. They didn't have the digital systems that they have today for setting these preferences
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So it would be something like turn the key twice, turn the power locks up down, up down
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spin around two times, put your right leg up, put your right leg down, put your left leg up
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now you're doing the hokey-pokey. Electronic speed control is cruise control. Tilt wheels
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still not a universal option The old joke is that somebody asked Mercedes why they didn have tilt wheel when cheaper cars did and the Mercedes person said because we have the steering wheel in the right position already
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It's the AMFM stereo, electronic radio, and clock, high-performance wipers. I think that that meant that they had little airfoils on them so that when you're going at high speed
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they would press harder onto the glass. Air conditioning, tinted glass, then still off an optional
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I'm pretty sure that's a GTC thing, too. Here is the power enthusiast driver's seat
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We covered that. 60-40 split-fold-down rear seat was nice because you could still have two people in the back seat with their own seat belts
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while having a pass-through for skis or whatever else. Premium sound insulation because it's Chrysler
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There's the big tires for the era. They were quite big for the era, especially consider it this is a four-cylinder car again
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The light bar message center and chime warning system. Well, the chimes are obvious, but the light bar was they had a little picture
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the car and lights would come up where there was some sort of trouble, like a door that was a jar
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Illumidated entry so that when you open up the door, the dome light goes on
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Full og instrumentation means that you have a real gas gauge, real temperature gauge
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and so forth. And finally, your little mirrors on the sun visors on the right and the left
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When you look down on this, you can see the port of entry was Fenton, Missouri
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That's because it was made in the St. Louis plant, which was in Fenton, Missouri
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Now let's go to options. You have your overhead console. That told you the temperature outside and the direction that you were heading
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That was $611, probably worth it because we didn't have cell phones with navigation back then
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Automatic transmission, about $900. That's about the price that it is on pretty much any car from that era
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But, oh God, why would you do that on a beautiful Turbo Chrysler
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I mean, really, why would you do that? Because Chrysler was lousy at tuning their three-speed automobraming
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to match the turbo engines. And even if they hadn't been, it's such a smooth engine
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why restrict herself with that three speed? It'll kill your gas mileage. And here we see that the gas mileage was 19 city 24 highway
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which wasn't terrible, and it was probably much better than a V6 version would have been
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which you can find out by going to look at one of their V6 cars. But still the automatic it sapped the gas mileage It sapped your power and it made it much no noisy at highway speed because it had no overdrive The trip computer that is your gas mileage calculation mostly
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$215, and your Infinity Sound System for $1,300 in modern money, that gave you a cassette player, six speakers, retracting antenna
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and a little amplifier on every speaker so that you could really get the base
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That was one of Chrysler's very first high-fidelity sound systems, and it was quite good at what it did
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So the total for this car is $18,000 or so, which day would be about $42,000 before destination and $100 that they give back to you for getting the GTC package
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Don't ask me why they did it like that. So the destination charge would have been about $1,200 today when Chrysler charges about $1,900 destination
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So that's a bargain. And the absolute total price before negotiations with the dealer would have been about $42,600 in terms
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today's money. And you can say, you know, it was a lot cheaper than people must have had better times
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back then, but you have to also consider that people were being paid less than half as much as they
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are now. So these things are all relative, but it was still a very enjoyable car. It was a beautiful
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car to look at. It was a comfortable car. What's missing from a car of today? Mostly safety
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No anti-lock brakes, you'll notice. No traction control. The safety standards were generally much
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slower, especially for side impact and roll over. But if you're concerned about safety
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these would have been one or two-star cars by today's standards. The gas mileage isn't great
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compared to one of today's cars, and that's because it has that three-speed automatic. This
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car would have had a lot less sound insulation than a typical modern car because they didn't
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use acoustic glass yet. And you can lock in a child's seat much more easily, but that I could do a whole
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video on, so I'm going to cut this short. It was a really enjoyable car. It was an expensive car. For the time
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it was a premium car, but then it was a Chrysler. So thank you, Walt, for sending this to me
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sent it many years ago, and thank you, Walt, for sending me the pictures of the car that you owned
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which is on this price sticker. This is Dave, signing out
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