Junkyard Find: 1980 Plymouth Arrow

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

Chrysler imported and rebadged quite an assortment of Mitsubishis during the gloomy years of the Malaise Era, and we have seen a good sampling of those cars in this series so far. There was the Mitsubishi Colt Galant aka Dodge Colt, the Mitsubishi Galant Lambda aka Plymouth Sapporo/Dodge Challenger, and the Mitsubishi Mirage aka Plymouth Champ, among others.

The Mitsubishi Lancer Celeste aka Plymouth Arrow was never a big seller, but this one managed to outlive nearly all of its brethren, only washing up at this Northern California self-service yard after 36 years.

Japanese imports had acquired a reputation for reliability by this time, so Chrysler didn’t try to hide the Arrow’s Japanese birthplace.

The 1,597cc G32B Saturn engine came with the “MCA-Jet” three-valves-per-cylinder system. 77 horsepower made this 2,100-pound car something of a poky little puppy.

However, this car does have a vivid Whorehouse Red interior. 1980 was the last year for the Arrow, which was probably just as well.

And one of those early car alarms that could be set off by excess neutrinos, harsh language, and powdered sugar.

There was much optimism among Plymouth dealers when the Arrow first hit these shores.

The Arrow’s slick body shape made it successful in drag racing. The Snake endorsed it!






Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Davew833 Davew833 on May 03, 2016

    There's more than a few of these that have been turned into dragsters. Just Google "Plymouth Arrow drag car."

  • OzCop OzCop on May 03, 2016

    One of my favorite cars I ever owned. Divorced in 1975, I bought a base Chevy PU truck to haul a couple of kids dirt bikes...Yamaha Y50s. That was one thing that kept me and my 3 sons occupied during visitation. But alas, in 78 injury caused me to sell the pickup and dirt bikes, much to the chagrin of my sons. My replacement was a new 78 Plymouth Arrow GT, silver with light interior, 2.0 with 4, or was it 5 speeds...can't remember. Loved that car, drove it all over the country, even in the huge snow storms that blanketed the midwest/northeast that winter. I drove the car two years and sold it to my sister with only 45K on the odo. She drove it another 4 years and finally, the rust got to it and she sold it for near nothing with 98K miles on odo. During that period of time, the only major cost was tires and battery replacement. It had never had an engine or drive line failure during that time, but rust reared it's ugly head when it was about 4 years old. Great car, and always wanted a Fire Arrow. Tried to find one in 85 when I began autocrossing, to no avail. I'd still buy one if the right deal came along...

  • ToolGuy "There's a heavy shake/vibration at speeds between 60-75mph or so, before that range, it doesn't shake, and after that speed range, it also doesn't shake. But when it does shake, it can be pretty violent. The van runs beautifully at 80-90+mph but that just so happens to be when the engine light starts flashing, giving the random misfire code."• When you rich genuises in your brand new cars decide to drive 'aggressively' and believe nothing can go wrong, remember that you are sharing the road with this guy.
  • Master Baiter Paint job looks like a Smurf puked on it.
  • ToolGuy The old 'pricing jump on the balance sheet' trick... 😉
  • Slavuta Most unproductive comment... nevertheless. Most interesting part in Formula 1 that I watched was 2 second tire change. I really don't know, otherwise what fun is to watch these things burning circles. And in the context of gas stoves being banned, why do we allow this waste of material to happen? Figure skating is more interesting, but that is me
  • 28-Cars-Later Toyota: We created Gazoo Racing nearly fifteen years ago, and now it's time to sell out.
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