Psst, Hey Buddy, Wanna Buy A Sketchy Dodge?: 2004 Neon vs 2010 Avenger

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Some cars just seem destined for the “Thrifties” section. Whether it’s because of cheap prices or easy financing when new, or disregard and neglect from their owners, or some unknown cosmic force, some cars just go from zero to grubby in five years flat, and go downhill from there. Such is the case with our two contenders today.

Yesterday’s Eurotrash brought a lot of comments about engine swaps, which I found humorous because both of them run just fine. But let’s see which one won:

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Now that is interesting. Another of those instances where the Jag seemed to win in the comments, but the Mercedes pulled the votes. But if someone is contemplating that Jag, please leave the V12 in it. If you want to do a swap, look for one that doesn’t run. They’re not hard to find.

Anyway, on to today’s choices. I don’t know why it is, but certain models of cars just have a tendency to find themselves in sketchy situations. They’re not bad cars per se, but when you find one with two bald tires and a cracked taillight and the “Check Engine” light on, overpriced, in the front row of some Buy-Here-Pay-Here used car lot, you aren’t the least bit surprised. 15 year old Chrysler products are such cars, perpetually, and I’ve never really been able to figure out why. So let’s take a look at a pair of such sketchy Mopars now, and see if we can shed a little light on this odd phenomenon.

2004 Dodge Neon SX 2.0 – $2,400

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Engine/drivetrain: 2.0 liter inline 4, 4 speed automatic, FWD

Location: Dallas, TX

Odometer reading: 191,000 kilometers

Runs/drives? Yep

This little Neon kinda ruins my argument, frankly. It looks too nice. Originally this was going to be a beat-up 2006 Charger, but it (somehow) sold before I sat down to write this and the ad was deleted. It happens. So now, we have this little yellow number to consider.

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We’ve talked about Neons before. I’m mighty fond of them, actually; I had one that I really liked until it was rear-ended. This is the second-generation Neon, whch was only available as a four-door sedan. The “SX 2.0” trim level may not sound familiar to Americans; that’s because this was a Canada-only trim level. If you’ll notice, the speedometer reads in KM/H, not MPH, which means the odometer should be in kilometers as well, so that 191,000 kilometers equates to only about 119,000 miles.

How did a Canadian model Neon come to be offered for sale in Dallas, Texas? Pirates. Clearly.

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On paper, this car sounds really good: it runs and drives well, looks good, has nearly-new tires, and everything is said to work properly. I would want to know how it came to be here, and make sure all the paperwork was in proper order; it currently wears no registration, and though the ad says “clean title,” it’s unclear whether it’s a Texas title, or from somewhere up in Canada still.

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However, if everything is in order, this could be a good deal on a neat little car. Yes, it’s an automatic, but at least these are zippy and good-handling little cars, so all is not lost.

 

2010 Dodge Avenger SXT – $1,500

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Engine/drivetrain: 2.4 liter inline 4, 4 speed automatic, FWD

Location: Mountain View, CA

Odometer reading: 180,000 miles

Runs/drives? …I think so?

The Neon’s big sister, the Avenger, often seems to lead a rougher life, and this example is no exception. It is being offered for sale by a towing company, who received the car on a lien after it was impounded. Neither the towing company nor any potential buyer has the faintest idea how this car acquired its 180,000 miles, or how it was cared for in that time.

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Now, as I write this, our rescue dog Ripley is sleeping peacefully next to me on the sofa. She was found in a Las Vegas shelter in terrible health, needing surgery, and was taken in by a rescue shelter, from whom we adopted her. She’s about nine years old, and has had puppies, probably multiple litters. We have nursed her back to health, and most of the time she’s just fine, but every once in a while some bit of bad behavior or lingering health problem pops up, and we have to fumble around and guess at what might be the cause. See where I’m going with this?

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All we have to go on are a few photos and a wall of text with not much description of the car’s condition. You can run a Carfax report, of course, but that won’t tell you if the oil was only changed every 14,000 miles or if it was street-parked and broken into repeatedly. The paint doesn’t look quite right; it has a vaguely spray-can look to it in places, which speaks of badly-repaired damage. The registration being three years out of date isn’t encouraging either.

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Now, the good news is that $1500 is likely very flexible, especially since the tow company has nothing invested in this car except a little fuel for a tow truck and a parking space. You can probably get it for quite a lot less, if you walk in and wave cash in their faces.

How did these cars get from the Dodge dealerships to these unlikely circumstances? There’s no way of knowing. All we can do is judge them on their current condition and location. One looks like a good deal, as long as the paperwork checks out, and the other is scruffy and forlorn, but you might be able to get it for a song. Which will it be?

 

QuizWiz

(Image credits: Craigslist sellers)

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59 thoughts on “Psst, Hey Buddy, Wanna Buy A Sketchy Dodge?: 2004 Neon vs 2010 Avenger

  1. I hate Yellow Cars, and I think the Neon is usually a non starter with an auto trans, I even am somewhat ok with the 2.4 avenger(thankfully not the 2.7 Timebomb v6). But damn, if I have to take one of these two the Yellow “Hi” machine seems like a much smaller money pit.

  2. I voted Neon because I had to choose. What I really wanted to say was I’ll take my chances with the Jag from yesterday. That is how much confidence I have in Chrysler products. These two are better off headed to the scrap pile.

    1. Well, the SX 2.0 was an interesting one, because in Canada they had started selling it as the Chrysler Neon with the EJD 1.6 AKA Tritec as found in Mini. (You know, the WORST Mini engine short of the N for Notoriously failure-prone.) Because beforehand it was the Plymouth/Dodge Neon and uh, yeah, Plymouth is kinda dead guys. “Shit!” And apparently there was some naming/licensing issues that occurred in parallel, according to the apocrypha.

      So: the single year Dodge SX 2.0, an amalgam of non-trademarkable letters and numbers. Which is a Neon with an A588 SOHC and NVG T350 or 41TE and the R/T package minus the lower lip and rear spoiler, plus the plug-in DRL module. Meaning yes, it got the beefed up R/T suspension too, and 15″ alloys, but not the 150HP ‘Magnum’ tune, and an A/T option (the Magnum can blow up a stock 41TE of that era in warranty period.)

      Which in fact, makes it one of the best Neons. Because you have the best version of the A588, the best suspension short of the ACR, the best and lightest body without going deletion-happy, and the possibility of a damn fine 5 speed. 132HP, 130ft/lbs, row-your own, in a package weighing just over 2700lbs.

  3. If it wasn’t yellow with the Pirate Queen decal, I’d bet money this was a drug mule car. Usually those are dull colors and unadorned, but maybe someone was feeling bold. 190,000 miles is quite a few trips up north and back.

    I’d go with the neon and check the seat cushions for plastic bags before driving it.

    1. Back story: An acquaintance of mine had a Toyota Camry for many years which was stolen from down south. A year later it was found abandoned in Washington after several months with an extra 50,000 miles on it, and the interior beat up and littered with fast food detritus.

      It was not stolen for joy rides.

  4. Neon for me as the seller will actually let me check it out and test drive it so I’ll have a better idea of what I’m getting into.

    Also with the Avenger, I suspect it has been in a collision and poorly repaired based on how badly the driver side door and front fender fit together.

    1. Sid why do you hate your daughter? I mean unless she is a poor driver then what ever tank is cheapest but the Avenger? I am always on the side of not giving daughters cars where sorry I’m late my car broke down. Because a few months later remember when I was late 2 months ago? Well I’m a different kind of late now grandpa.

  5. Give me the Neon mostly because it’s not hideously ugly but also because it seems like the much more solid choice here. The pirate queen sticker is a nice bonus too.

    Even if the unknown history Avenger turns out to be fine, you’ll still be stuck having an Avenger and I wouldn’t wish that on anyone

  6. I’ve said it before, and I’ll keep saying it. I think that the Neon had one of the absolute BEST ad campaigns of my lifetime!

    “HI!”

    It made it seem friendly and just vaguely Japanese (which is a selling point, or was at the time)

    Cheap and Cheerful!

  7. I remember the Avenger as a soul-crushingly adequate rental. At the Enterprise counter, they cheerfully called it the “mini-Charger” as my eyes rolled out of my head and across the floor.

    Neither of these would be great, but at least the Neon has a little character.

  8. I don’t think there’s a better example of a car that gets itself into sketchy situations than the Nissan Altima. In my experience the memes that spread around enthusiast circles about them are 100% true. You can’t get on a highway in my area without encountering 3-4 of them in various states of neglect, doing 25-40 over, fitted with temporary tags from a state hundreds or thousands of miles away, etc. The Altima is a menace to society and I believe that companies who toss out loans to subprime borrowers like candy on Halloween (Nissan is the easiest example but Stellantis and FCA before it love doing this too) are putting society at risk to a degree.

    …anyway give me the Neon. I’ve always liked the look of them, particularly the second gens like this. It’s a well proportioned, cheerful little car from a bygone era when not everything had to look angular and menacing. Yellow is also the best color on these in my humble opinion…and the kid in me definitely daydreams about getting an SRT-8 (yellow of course) every now and then because my cousin’s friend had one when I was a young…and there’s something amazing about a totally unrefined FWD econo-rocket. Naturally they’ll never bring you quite the same joy of RWD, but they still have a lot of character and take practice to drive well.

    1. If you open your criteria to include SUVs, the remaining stock of Trailblazers/Bravadas/Envoys/Raniers/9-7X’s (lol) seems to give the Altima a run for its money as far as poorly maintained, poorly driven, and generally unpleasant to be around goes.

          1. Phew, well that’s good. I still get irrationally excited whenever I see a nice Saab. My dad had a black, manual 93 hatchback back in the early 2000s when I was still a kid and it was definitely influential in regards to me going down the enthusiast path.

    2. This was originally going to be Avenger vs Altima, but when I actually went LOOKING for a sketchy Altima, they all vanished like cockroaches when you turn on the light.

        1. Drive past any efficiency inn before 2pm and you’ll see them. Seem to be favored by the ice, meth, and heroin crowd given what I see at the place my buddy manages

    3. When I see an Altima closing rapidly behind me I panic a little bit. I’m always trying to do my best to be aware of my surroundings but when I see a dented bumper Altima near me it jumps into overdrive.

      1. I was out for a spirited drive in the Kona N last weekend on the highest speed roads in the area….there aren’t any shoulders (local cops don’t usually bother trying to pull folks over as a result), traffic consistently moves at 10-15 over, and the left lane is usually pretty vacant, so it’s a good place for me to get a break from traffic and give the car a few rips within reason….not to mention redlining a GDI car periodically is allegedly good for the engine.

        …to my surprise, while I was mid pull and traveling at a speed I’ll decline to comment on, I got honked at. I looked in my mirrors, and it was….you guessed it, an Altima. It had expired temporary tags from several states over, was dented to hell and back, and was making some concerning engine noises.

        Suffice to say, I got the hell out of the way….and I can’t even imagine how hard the guy was thrashing that thing to be keeping up with a 286 horsepower, sub 5 second 0-60 hot hatch that was liberally accelerating. BAE, or Big Altima Energy, for sure.

        1. The absolute most terrifying thing that has ever happened to me in my Porsche besides a Jeep Wrangler that decided my front passenger fender was the merging lane?

          I’m on a back twisty that’s well known among enthusiasts around here. I’m enough of a regular that the cruisers know the quiet black Porsche, make room. The cops know the traffic well and won’t ticket unless we’re being reckless like passing on the double yellows – regardless of speed. (We’re all very careful about the blind hills.)
          So I’m doing probably 80-85 completely clear for at least a half mile in front in my lane and behind. In a double yellow zone. Wave to a Boxster doing probably 80ish (limit is 60, FYI) around a curve and then I hear a wheezing horn. “Teh fuh?”

          And out from behind the Boxster, half in my lane already, is an Altima that I swear to god did not have a single undamaged body panel – much less the same color – or unbroken or unobstructed piece of glass in it. Including the windshield which had a huge very visible spiderweb. And he is not fucking backing down on his already illegal pass. In a curve that is posted 35MPH.
          I get HARD on the brakes and deep into the completely unpaved shoulder, and this absolute lunatic takes it as a license to get ALL the way into my lane instead of using the available space. At the last fucking second getting his shit halfway under control and only managing to not hit the Boxster because he’d gotten the hell over too.

          And I will swear to you, on a stack of K&R’s C, that every single Altima I’ve encountered in the past 10 years has tried for all they are worth to ram their front bumper right up my tailpipe or down my throat at Mach 3. I have been in fucking 500HP Jeeps in heavily populated areas doing 30 in a 25 and had those motherfuckers barrel down on me doing at least 50. I have been on 4 lane main arteries doing 40 and had them turn left across 3 lanes of traffic in front of me. 40 in a 30, here they come waving back and forth over the double yellow and honking at me.
          Every single one I have seen has been exclusively driven in a manner that would warrant immediately pulling them over and applying handcuffs before they even finish with the breathalyzer.

          Then again, I guess if you’re stuck driving any Altima immediately recognizable as such, you really have no reason to go on living.

    1. I was prepared to vote for the Avenger before reading the details, but that sticker _makes_ the Neon! Lower mileage helps, and a rustoleum matte-black (over yellow!) paint job with a Jolly Roger on the antenna seals the deal. Arrr! 😀

  9. Good on you, Mark, for taking in a true rescue. I get a little tired of people over-using that word to describe a dog they adopted. Not to take anything away from anyone who takes in an animal in need of a home, but calling them a “rescue” is a bit dramatic in many cases. We have both a “silver spoon” (pure bred) and a real-deal “rescue” (injured, starving, heart-worm positive when we got him) in our house, so I can relate. I love automotive “rescues” as well, but I’m going with the well-sorted Neon, today.

  10. The Neon wins for me for a few reasons.
    1) I’m Canadian. I’d be bringing it back to its home and native land.
    2) I loved my 1st gen Neon. Yeah it was a money pit, but it also had 350000kms on it and was still running when I got rid of it. This one still has life left (as long as you do the timing belt), and should be a comfortable fun driver.
    3) 2010 Chrysler interiors were AWFUL, and the 2.4l is noisy and inefficient and will feel waaay slower than the 2.0 does in the Neon.

    1. My thought process was similar. Never had a neon but drove a few and they were fine. Drove a few avengers when I breifly worked at an auction and wow, Chrysler couldn’t make any sort of half decent interior at that time.

  11. Ugh. Both are hard pass. And I love Neons.

    Importing a Neon SX is laughably easy, or rather, was. There is no difference besides the IPC.
    The problem is: Chrysler to Dumber-Chrysler to Cerberus Shitheads to FCA to FCAtlantis has seen millions of critical historical documents “lost” or destroyed. Archives were gutted. Archival departments were stripped to the bone. Why would they need to keep any documents past the legally required minimum?!
    So the documents they need to send you the form letter that says “all Neons comply to FMVSS”? No longer exist. And without those documents, they cannot send you the letter. They can only send you a letter that says “we have no documents to prove this.” And NHTSA won’t accept “you approved these before and other people got the letter in the past.”
    And as an unregisterable track rat? It’s an A/T. You’d need a new PCM in addition to the transmission swap, at which point, it’s just not worth it. You can find a ratty one that you can plate for that kind of money. Hell, I’ve seen actual documented Neon Challenge cars at that money.

    But the Avenger. Holy shit. These were absolutely awful and a total crapshoot on quality (thanks to Dumber-Chrysler) at their absolute best, and were so aggressively de-contented by 2004 that you could not pay me to take one. Which Cerberus took to the next level in 2008 by just straight up demanding everything be cost-reduced and consequences be damned.
    Which is EXACTLY how it ended up owned by a towing company on a mechanic’s/tower’s lien. Somebody abandoned it because it was done. Look at those shitty, curbed to death wheels. Look at the paint. Look at the interior.

    Sigh. Just so depressing.

  12. I have no interest in an Avenger even before the whole unknown history from a tow company.
    But I’m also wary of the Canadian Neon in TX of all places. Still voted for it cause it’s not an Avenger

  13. The Neon would be the “winner” if it weren’t for the paperwork headache. The Avenger is terrible, yet legal.

    Really I want to run away from each but if you can get the Avenger for under a grand, it could be a Gambler car.

      1. The fact it is called a pirate car that is imported under 25 years old tends to make me nervous. Also it is not a dealership and has no plates raises redflags and alarm bells.

        I would review the paperwork and then do a test run at the DMV to make sure I can register it.

        In this case, the 1k or more less option removes that potential headache. I take the water approach, path of least resistance. I have enough drama in my life, don’t need to add more 🙂

        1. If someone moves from Canada to the US (or vice versa) they can generally bring their car with them fairly easily. Some paperwork but it is treated much more like your other stuff than it is importing a foreign vehicle.

          1. Yes, as long as it complies to CMVSS and is a personal import, it’s trivial. It’s really trivial.

            The problem is: personal use exemption imports like this are non-transferrable. The vehicle must be made compliant prior to sale including IPC conversion, notarized odometer replacement, and full federalization or obtaining same-as for FMVSS certification.

            If you haven’t done every single one of these things, it’s an illegal sale (and hitting 25 years does NOT exempt it – it’s the sale that’s illegal) and NHTSA and EPA both can go after you and the seller at their leisure. And believe me, they absolutely will know.

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