We have two teenage boys who will be of driving age in the next 18 months, so I’ve been re-assessing the fleet. I’ve been on FB Marketplace and CL on a regular basis casually looking at options (I never really stop), when BoxheadTim posted up this thread. Also have been following along on Angry Corvair’s thread on the one for his daughter.
We were on vacation back in August, so I created a “Saab” search on CL. We had owned an ’00 9-3 and liked it, but had to sell it when our boys were both in rear-facing car seats, so I had experience with one. I liked the torque of the smaller turbo, and the automatic in our old 9-3 was a good pairing with the turbo motor, especially with the transmission in Sport mode.
One popped up that interested me, the ad said it was an ’04 Linear that ran but needed work. 1 owner, garaged, no accidents, 136k. I sent off a reply asking if they could detail out what “work” it needed. The said it needed front struts, a rear caliper was frozen, and the radio didn’t work.
These were the pictures in the ad:
I checked it out in person with my younger son one day on the way home from visiting my parents, and ended up buying it. It was in good shape, no rust, and looked like it had been garaged. The original owner was a woman in her 60s who ended up buying a Tesla S as a replacement for the Saab. I liked her and her husband, and believe in the saying that you buy the owner as much as the car, so I went for it. When I was filling out the title, I got to the color and the former owner without hesitation said "Hazelnut", so I guess Hazel is as good a name as any.
I drove it home without incident, and parked it in the garage overnight. I was starting to form a plan to get it registered, check it out, and start working on a punch list.
You know what they say about the best laid plans. I went to check it out the following morning, and noticed this underneath:
No, that isn’t water from the A/C and yes, it’s oil. Lots of it. I had noticed some drips on the engine when I was looking at it, but this was a pretty big puddle. I cleaned it up a little, and could see the majority was coming from the oil level sensor on the front of the oil pan, that leak was very steady.
Unfortunately, fixing it requires R&Ring the oil pan, which involves fun things like motor mounts and A/C compressor bolts attaching to the oil pan itself.