Junkyard Find: 1990 Dodge Daytona ES Turbo

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

I see many Dodge Daytonas at high-turnover junkyards, even 20-25 years after the last of the crypto-K-body examples rolled off the line. This means that many of these cars lasted much longer than anyone expected. Here’s my latest find, a 1990 Daytona ES Turbo.


The base ’90 Daytona listed at $9,795, but nobody actually paid that. Here we see the magic of rebates in action.

Chrysler said the ES Turbo cost $12,895, but I’m pretty sure that this one sold for considerably less.

These things were actually quite fast, even by today’s standards. The turbocharged 150-horsepower 2.5 liter engine was pretty potent in a 2,600-pound car.

Why don’t hatchbacks have louvers these days? Bring back the louvers!








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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  • Troyohchatter Troyohchatter on Apr 16, 2012

    I know I have stated this out here before, but even as a Honda/Mazda guy, the most reliable car I ever owned was my 1993 Dodge Spirit with the 2.5/3spd auto. Simply bulletproof, had a formal sedan design that resulted in plenty of room, especially headroom in the back seat, and would get 32MPG on the highway all day long. By today's standards it is probably a tractor but it was a BULLETPROOF tractor. Sold at 196K with plenty of life left in it.

  • Vent-L-8 Vent-L-8 on Apr 17, 2012

    the owner was supposed to remove the DOD sticker, just sayin'

    • Occam Occam on Apr 17, 2012

      I don't know that it matters anymore. The old idea was that with a DoD sticker, someone could get waved onto base. Now that it's 100% I.D. check everywhere you go, and they don't even issue DoD stickers (I still see them on occasion, from a different base, fading a peeling on some jalopy in a parking lot), it's a moot point.

  • Grg These days, it is not only EVs that could be more affordable. All cars are becoming less affordable.When you look at the complexity of ICE cars vs EVs, you cannot help. but wonder if affordability will flip to EVs?
  • Varezhka Maybe the volume was not big enough to really matter anyways, but losing a “passenger car” for a mostly “light truck” line-up should help Subaru with their CAFE numbers too.
  • Varezhka For this category my car of choice would be the CX-50. But between the two cars listed I’d select the RAV4 over CR-V. I’ve always preferred NA over small turbos and for hybrids THS’ longer history shows in its refinement.
  • AZFelix I would suggest a variation on the 'fcuk, marry, kill' game using 'track, buy, lease' with three similar automotive selections.
  • Formula m For the gas versions I like the Honda CRV. Haven’t driven the hybrids yet.
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