Welcome to the Corvette Forums at the Corvette Action Center!

My First Car is a C3

S

Simpson_32

Guest
I just got my first car and am lucky enough for it to be a Corvette. First what does C3 stand for.

I am 15 and an athlete, so my jobs to earn money for the car will be slow go. My dad and I will be doing most work we can. The motor seems tight but needs a tuneup, It has sat for two years. needs tires. paint/body work.

Any suggestions on things I need to do to get started with fixing her up. Cleaning greasing etc...

RJ




RJ's new ride1).jpg
 
when ever I bought a car back then 1st thing to do was.....
1 oil change (all filters)and grease(be sure to look on the half shafts in the rear,there are several back there!)&
2 change plugs,wires and distributor cap.
wash and wax good cleaning inside.
then you have a baseline for the maintenance on it.
 
The C3 discribes the generation that your car is part of. C3's were the cars that went from 68 to 82....the the C4's were intro'd....and so on. C7 was just intoduced this month and there is a lot of info on it and all the gererations here on the CAC....
 
HEY RJ! First of all, welcome to the Corvette Action Center! There are a BOATLOAD of knowledgeable people here that can answer
almost any questions you have. C3 stands for the "third generation" of Corvette body styles. C1 is from 53 to 62, C2 is from 63 to 67,
C3 is from 68 to 82, (no 83's), C4 is from 84 to 96, C5 is from 97 to 2004, C6 is from 05 to 13, and C7 is from 14 to ????
First off, I would spend some money on the official shop manuals for your year. They will show you the correct way to diagnose/
troubleshoot, and repair every system on your Vette. Then it's just a matter of following the procedures, and having the ability
to know when to quit and take it to a professional. I'll do a lot of work on my Vette, but ripping an automatic transmission apart
isn't one of them although the manuals will tell you how to do it. My advice would be to get everything in and under the car
working correctly before you do the body work and paint. That way you won't have to worry about messing up a brand new
paint job to yank the engine out. Work on it with your Dad and enjoy the time you spend together doing it. Like Bill said....change
ANYTHING liquid, and be sure to inspect and or replace rubber items like belts, hoses, wiper blades etc.. There are a lot of vacuum
lines on those cars, and I would recommend checking them all very carefully (one at a time), and replacing any that are bad, or
look bad for that matter. Vacuum leaks are guaranteed to drive you nuts! The same goes for the grounds on these cars. Make SURE
that all grounds are clean and tight. The manuals will show you where they are. Electrical problems are the same as the vacuum
problems.......They're GUARANTEED to drive you nuts! Anyway, enjoy working on, and driving your Vette, and keep posting on the
results of your work!
Andy :w
 
C3 = Corvette third generation. Good reading here:
vemp_1204_001_corvette_book_0_to_60_years__zps8937aefa.jpg


This is also good.
corvette-cover.jpg


Purchase a copy of each.
:thumb
 
Hello everyone I am RJ's dad. I will be helping/learning with him in this new adventure.

"With power there is responsibility" I have used this phrase with every since he hit his growth spurt @ age 13.
 
Hello RJ,
Welcome to CAC and congrats on your new to you C3, it looks sharp! just some FYI MOTORTREND put out a issue of a 60 Years of an American Icon this month and if you have $10 or so it would be good reading material and hip you to the generations along with some of the options these cars come with. It's always good to know where you been to know where your going that's what I always say so have fun and respect all other Vetters as you you would like to be respected as some can have neg opinions for the mid years. And I beleave these were once dream cars in there day! As mine is to me!:thumb
 
"RJ" and "Dad", Welcome to the :CAC

OldMan32, you're a pretty awesome dad to get your son a Corvette for his first car! Wow... :thumb

Shoot me a PM with your mailing address and I'll send you out a copy of the 1980 factory service manual on CD. I have a couple extras laying around.

Generally speaking, without knowing more about the car (mileage, engine, transmission, pre-existing conditions), all the things that you'd check on any used car apply here. In this light, "It's just a car." So check out all the usual things, starting with the safety components: brakes, seat belts, etc. If the car still has the OEM brakes, you'll probably be changing the calipers to the newer style. Then focus on the fluids. Are they all good and flowing as expected? Are the gauges reading correctly?
After that, you can move on to the mechanical stuff. U-joints and bearings seem to be a fairly common replacement on the late C3's.

Troubleshooting 1980's and earlier is pretty simple. You've got fuel delivery, vacuum, and electrical/grounding. That's pretty much the big three that will keep your car from running properly. If you get those three things down, your car should be pretty much 'by the book' for everything else.

While I don't discourage posting new questions when you have them, keep these two things in mind.
1) These cars have been around 30+ years. If your car has symptoms/problems, I'm fairly certain you're not the first, and thus it's probably been discussed in these forums. Learn to use the Advanced Search functionality of the site...make it your friend!
2) There are lots of members here and we have people of all ages and walks of life. Some of these people actually worked the line for Corvette production or had a piece in creating the Corvette over the years. The combined knowledge here is unsurpassed, as is our willingness to help. That being said, we don't live here. If you pose a question and don't get a reply within 30 minutes, don't repost it elsewhere on the site nor do a "bump to the top", unless it's been days/weeks with no response. Typically, someone will chime in with a response which will either help you or at minimum keep your post visible to others. In other words, "Be Patient!". Your car is a long term project...you've got time! :thumb


Was the picture of your car taken in your yard or the previous owners? It looks like there's another C3 parts car in the background.
 
"RJ" and "Dad", Welcome to the :CAC

OldMan32, you're a pretty awesome dad to get your son a Corvette for his first car! Wow... :thumb

Shoot me a PM with your mailing address and I'll send you out a copy of the 1980 factory service manual on CD. I have a couple extras laying around.

Generally speaking, without knowing more about the car (mileage, engine, transmission, pre-existing conditions), all the things that you'd check on any used car apply here. In this light, "It's just a car." So check out all the usual things, starting with the safety components: brakes, seat belts, etc. If the car still has the OEM brakes, you'll probably be changing the calipers to the newer style. Then focus on the fluids. Are they all good and flowing as expected? Are the gauges reading correctly?
After that, you can move on to the mechanical stuff. U-joints and bearings seem to be a fairly common replacement on the late C3's.

Troubleshooting 1980's and earlier is pretty simple. You've got fuel delivery, vacuum, and electrical/grounding. That's pretty much the big three that will keep your car from running properly. If you get those three things down, your car should be pretty much 'by the book' for everything else.

While I don't discourage posting new questions when you have them, keep these two things in mind.
1) These cars have been around 30+ years. If your car has symptoms/problems, I'm fairly certain you're not the first, and thus it's probably been discussed in these forums. Learn to use the Advanced Search functionality of the site...make it your friend!
2) There are lots of members here and we have people of all ages and walks of life. Some of these people actually worked the line for Corvette production or had a piece in creating the Corvette over the years. The combined knowledge here is unsurpassed, as is our willingness to help. That being said, we don't live here. If you pose a question and don't get a reply within 30 minutes, don't repost it elsewhere on the site nor do a "bump to the top", unless it's been days/weeks with no response. Typically, someone will chime in with a response which will either help you or at minimum keep your post visible to others. In other words, "Be Patient!". Your car is a long term project...you've got time! :thumb


Was the picture of your car taken in your yard or the previous owners? It looks like there's another C3 parts car in the background.

Well we expected the problems we are having right now. Brakes were reworked by the seller, but now are bottoming out, fuel, electrical and vacuum. The lights will not close. The parking lights will not go off with the switch. I have added fuel stabilizer. It needs tires the list goes on....

It has 67xxx miles and has been sitting for a few years. It has the original

The car was bought from the daughter of a collector a few towns over, he owned about 50 at one time. Wow right. so the picture was from the seller.
This old guy would rotate driving his several cars everyday and park them out front so people could see them. They still have a ton of parts that we can purchase.



We are both really excited to join the Corvette world.

Today is the last day driving for awhile, had no brakes on the way home from work. It has the original 350 and tranny supposedly.
 
The people we bought the car from could be another resource for people on this forum to get parts etc..

I could get contact information from the seller and post it.

Doug
 
Oh Yeah the seller said the engine is modified, but not sure what. He said the it is 300hp and I believe I read that the 1980 C3 was factory 270hp? It seems to have a lope to it, but its the first 350 I have driven.
 
Oh Yeah the seller said the engine is modified, but not sure what. He said the it is 300hp and I believe I read that the 1980 C3 was factory 270hp? It seems to have a lope to it, but its the first 350 I have driven.
Ha! 270HP would've been nice! 270 was the torque spec. 190HP was the standard L48. The L82 was 210hp.

Here's a list of specs for the 1980. CLICK!
Here's a list of RPO and production numbers. CLICK!

The nice thing about the car is that it's not stock and it's not really collectible, so you can make whatever mods & upgrades you want without feeling bad. (Not that you should, but some people (not me) are purists. BLAH!:eyerole) If/When you ever get urge to really make it perform, dropping a crate engine in there will be the most cost effective upgrade you can make. Otherwise, you'll constantly be in the predicament of "How much money should I throw at this old engine and how much upgrading can it really handle?" A crate engine makes it a very easy and cost effective answer! :thumb
Oh, and RJ, don't think you're gonna go tear up the streets and shame some 4-banger Civics. Even Civics a few years old will potentially hand you a smug cup of defeat. Our cars were the best you could get at the time, but that's not saying much now. Until you have potential mods a few years down the road, you'll pretty much have to keep yourself compared to other cars from 1980. Fair is fair, right? :D (I spent over 10 years slowly building mine up.)
 
Congrats...my first car was a C3 too!

Brakes are a really good place to start IMHO. Dad, you said the brakes were reworked by the seller but are now bottoming out. If you haven't done so already, do some searches online and read up on C3 brakes. They work quite differently from the disc brakes that we are more accustomed to in that the calipers are fixed (instead of floating) and the pads ride on the rotor at all times. Rotor 'runout' is critical with this brake design, if there is too much runout it'll pump the brakes full of air. When I got my '72 I bled the brakes, had awesome pedal-feel and after 2 hours of driving the pedal was hitting the floor again.

The best cure is to have the rotors machined on the car, as they were at the factory, but there are workarounds such as shimming the rotor and o-ring calipers which have been known to be successful too.

Like I said, read everything you can find before tearing into them, search is definitely your friend as this subject has been covered many, many times.

Again, congrats and have fun. Sounds like a great father/son project. :beer
 
Congrats...my first car was a C3 too!

Brakes are a really good place to start IMHO. Dad, you said the brakes were reworked by the seller but are now bottoming out. If you haven't done so already, do some searches online and read up on C3 brakes. They work quite differently from the disc brakes that we are more accustomed to in that the calipers are fixed (instead of floating) and the pads ride on the rotor at all times. Rotor 'runout' is critical with this brake design, if there is too much runout it'll pump the brakes full of air. When I got my '72 I bled the brakes, had awesome pedal-feel and after 2 hours of driving the pedal was hitting the floor again.

The best cure is to have the rotors machined on the car, as they were at the factory, but there are workarounds such as shimming the rotor and o-ring calipers which have been known to be successful too.

Like I said, read everything you can find before tearing into them, search is definitely your friend as this subject has been covered many, many times.

Again, congrats and have fun. Sounds like a great father/son project. :beer



Yes I have been trying to find a good thread on the brakes, haven't seem to find the one to enlighten me. :D
It has been parked. Its not hold brake fluid. Right now its to cold to start taking it apart, so we are waiting for a warmer day.
 
Is the engine sound? I bought an '80 around 7 years ago, and started with the engine, then worked my way out. One thing to check -the cam....take off the valve cover and let the engine idle. If a cam lobe is shot you won't see the lifter move. That was my experience - didn't need a tune up but a cam! Fun project! Can't wait until my sons start turning wrenches with me!
 
I just got my first car and am lucky enough for it to be a Corvette. First what does C3 stand for.

I am 15 and an athlete, so my jobs to earn money for the car will be slow go. My dad and I will be doing most work we can. The motor seems tight but needs a tuneup, It has sat for two years. needs tires. paint/body work.

Any suggestions on things I need to do to get started with fixing her up. Cleaning greasing etc...

RJ

attachment.php










View attachment 13164
:cool!:You are one lucky kid! Obviously your dad thinks you have the maturity and responsibility to own something as awesome as a Corvette! Congratulations!!!

Hello everyone I am RJ's dad. I will be helping/learning with him in this new adventure.
Father and son projects are great!! You guys enjoy yours!

"With power there is responsibility" I have used this phrase with every since he hit his growth spurt @ age 13.
A rock solid philosophy. :thumb
 
RJ and oldman32

If you replace anything on the car keep the originals. They can be rebuilt or sold. "With power comes responsibility" and patience. When working on your car be patient and take pictures as you remove assemblies. Cheers, Fred
 
We have started some brake and wheel work. We have disassembled the caliper of one side and cleaned and painted(white), We have taken the rotor and are going to replace and grease the bearing. Today was inspection mainly. The caliper cylinders were a little gummy and I used cleaner and a light sanding, there was no scoring. All seals and o-rings will be replaced. Lightly sanded the rotors to get the glazing off.

RJ really needs the patience, he seems a little frustrated at how much needs to be done, I just tell him "Sometimes you just have to let the Liquid wrench soak in".
 
RJ really needs the patience, he seems a little frustrated at how much needs to be done, I just tell him "Sometimes you just have to let the Liquid wrench soak in".
It's an issue of time & money. If you ain't got the time, you'd better have the money!
RJ, if you want it done sooner, just cough up the bucks and pay someone to do it for you! See how easy that is? :D
You have yourself a long term project. At times it will suck because it seems like you're working on the same problem f-o-r-e-v-e-r, when all you want to do is drive it! But other times when you take it out for the "shake down" test, you'll be happy with the time you put into it.
My car took over 10 years to get where it is today. But I know I can go out there and look at my car, a smile will cross my face and I'll think to myself, "Yeah, I still really like my car." It's been worth it.
And even though it probably doesn't seem like it now, if you keep this car for a long time, you may pass it on to your children and recall how you and their grandfather "spent many days and nights working on that damned thing!" but in the end, it was all worth it.
...at least that's how I hope it turns out for you.
:beer
We have a few members here that are already living that.
 

Corvette Forums

Not a member of the Corvette Action Center?  Join now!  It's free!

Help support the Corvette Action Center!

Supporting Vendors

Dealers:

MacMulkin Chevrolet - The Second Largest Corvette Dealer in the Country!

Advertise with the Corvette Action Center!

Double Your Chances!

Our Partners

Back
Top Bottom