A compact history of my Malibu.
The car yard I bought my one from, imported it from Victoria. Its old Vic registration was FVV 269. I know this because it was written on the key tag. On the day before I got it I had no intention to buy a car, but I drove by the yard in the evening, saw it, and stopped. I must have spent half an hour at the fence drooling over the car and decided then and there that I must have it. Even though at the time I couldn’t really afford it, it was mine first thing the next morning. I’ve never regretted that decision at all. Because I’d spent all my money, I couldn’t afford to insure it straight away, so I decided to take it home and pull it to bits.
I removed the mudflaps first, straight into the bin. Also removed the boot lip spoiler and welded up the hole. I also spent some time making the bumper side plastic lenses bolt on from behind and making them flush with the bumper. I painted on white stripes, 200mm wide 40mm apart and installed a set of King springs with the standard shocks. Note in the picture below it had body coloured sills, I soon tired of that and repainted them black.
It had 95,000 on the odometer when I got it, 135,000 now. I haven’t really done that much to the car over the time that I’ve had it, swapped some accessories and wheels and upgraded the suspension and stiffening a bit. The motor and exhaust etc are completely stock. A Eunos rear panel was sourced, the license light holes were filled and a new light installed under the back edge of the boot. The original roof started to get tatty so I bought a black hardtop. I wrapped the windscreen posts in black vinyl to match, decided I liked the look and later I painted it properly, removing the windscreen and front guards to do so. It’s now got black electric mirrors which aren’t wired in, but it doesn’t seem to matter for me. Every time someone brushed past the original mirrors they would go out of alignment but the electric ones never do. Inside its nearly all original; only a vintage prototipo and black crackle shift knob. The stock radio is one of my favourite features inside, for me it looks so understated.
This is how the car looks today: