“THE LAST MUSCLE CARS”
With
a simple glance at this stunningly beautiful automobile, it is abundantly clear
no finer example could exist. When the original owner of 39 years ordered this
car on May 22, 1975 from Columbiana Buick-Olds in Columbiana, Ohio, his careful
thought was dutifully clear when it came to the option list. His intent was how
to order the best performing mid-size muscle car, knowing the following year
the big block 455 would no longer be available.
His
name was Ron and he could have made the obvious choice and checked the Hurst
Olds W-30 box, but he had a more sophisticated palette, which required not only
maximum performance, but also a sleek and distinguished look unencumbered by
the temporary fad of gold sticker packages.
Ron’s
careful thought not only led to a landmark representation of Oldsmobile’s last
mid-size muscle car, his careful preservation of this near perfect example
allows future generations to view a 40 year old car like this in almost 100%
original condition.
I
drive my Cutlass short distances on regular basis just like Ron did. This car
is no garage queen. It gets the regular exercise it needs to be “well sorted”
and well maintained. When old cars aren’t used they rot and get neglected. Ron
drove this car 50 to 100 miles a year and kept a log the last ten years citing
how much fuel it took and how it was running.
Almost
everyone who sees the car asks if I restored it myself. Of course they’re flabbergasted
when I offer to show them the odometer. They look inside and see the “as new”
Salon bucket seats, perfect dash, no wear steering wheel, un-fettered
headliner, perfect gas and brake pedals and carpeting and then usually stand in
disbelief. They smell the “new car” aroma which still wafts from the interior
and say “I remember that!”
Members
from the OCA have told me they believe less than 91 similarly equipped 1975
Olds Cutlass Salons with a matching numbers 455, Turbo 400 transmission, Super
Stock III wheels, raised white letter tires, performance gauges, power disc
brakes and a 3:08 rear axle with anti-spin differential were produced. The fact
that it was ordered for pure performance without air conditioning makes it even
more of anomaly and extremely rare.
If
this weren’t enough, the fact it has only 4300 original miles makes it beyond
the pale. When I was the Service Manager for Ray Oldsmobile in 1976, part of my
daily duties at the second largest Olds Dealer in the country was to audit the
fleet “demonstrator” mileage. It was my job to pull the sales “demo’s” out of
service when they hit 5000 miles. I then had them serviced and safety checked
for retail sale. The “demos” are then sold off as “NEW” titled cars. By that
standard, this car could still be in demo service if an Olds dealer still
existed! This car is NOT a barn find. It has been lovingly attended to it's entire life. It is a survivor and probably serve as the definition as such….
By 1975 to 1976 the “original” American performance
car was considered extinct, but these "forgotten years" had some
performance left.
•
1973 Pontiac LeMans with the GTO option and the Pontiac
Grand Am — Available with a 400 cid 230 hp (170 kW) V8 which was
available with a 3-speed (LeMans, GTO) or 4-speed manual (LeMans, GTO, Grand Am) transmission or
an automatic (LeMans, GTO, Grand Am), or a 250 hp (190 kW) 455 with
an automatic transmission only. Also announced for the '73 GTO and Grand Am was
the Super Duty 455 V8, which was rated at 310 hp (230 kW). Cars
magazine tested an SD-455-equipped 1973 Pontiac GTO and chose it
as Car Of The Year,
yet that engine never made it to production in a GTO or other Pontiac A-body,
but would be limited to the Firebird Formula and Trans Am.
•
1973 Chevrolet Chevelle SS and 1974-1976 Chevelle
Laguna S-3 — Offered with 350 small block or 454 big block V8 with up to
245 hp (183 kW) with manual or automatic transmissions. The SS was
replaced for 1974 by the Laguna Type S-3 which offered the same
engine/transmission offerings as the '73 SS plus the addition of a 400 small
block V8, along with a urethane front end surrounding the grillework. The
1975-76 Laguna S-3 featured a more aerodynamic slanted front end but engines
were further detuned due to emission requirements and the advent of the
catalytic converter, leaving the big 454 V8 unavailable for California cars in
1975 and discontinued altogether for 1976, when the 180 horsepower
(130 kW) small block 400 V8 was the top engine.
•
1973-1974 Buick Century GS — Still available with the
Stage 1 455 cid V8 rated at 270 net horsepower, mated to either a Turbo 400 or
four-speed manual transmission, the latter transmission reportedly only
installed in seven cars that year. The '74 Stage 1 455 was only available with
the Turbo 400 automatic and detuned to 245 hp (183 kW). This engine
was also offered on other Buicks in 1974 including the Riviera, LeSabre and
Electra.
•
1973-1975 Oldsmobile Cutlass and Hurst/Olds W-30 —
These were built using 455 cid V8 engines in the W-30 trim. This engine
was also available as an option on the Olds 442 of those years along with other
Cutlass models.
•
1976 Buick Century Turbo — These were originally built
as Indianapolis
Pace Car replicas with a turbocharged and carbureted 3.8 L V6,
and were faster than the 455 V8 version of that year. There were only a little
over 1,200 built.
1977 Pontiac Can-Am — This car was basically a LeMans Sport
Coupe with a Grand Prix
interior and a Trans Am
"Shaker" hood, a one-off wing and a 400 cid V8 rated at
200 hp (150 kW) with federal emissions, or an Oldsmobile 403 with
California emissions. Only 1,100 or so of these were made and are getting quite
collectible.
Now you can own one of
the most exquisite “Last Muscle Cars” in existence. The best Hemi Cuda, GS,
W-30, Z28, LS6, ZO6, 409 or GTO may be out reach for the average “car guy”,
this one is not! Similar cars in far less condition have sold and are currently
offered in the modest $14K to $20K range. Clearly still affordable, but Cutlass
futures are on the rise. Every baby boomer has a Cutlass story, because
everyone had one or knew someone who did. Bid with confidence on this fine
example. I LOVE to show the car to
anyone who’s interested in collectible automobiles. Contact me through EBAY
mail if you’re in the Chicago area and want to inspect this car close up. There
are several “completed sale” ’73-75” Cutlass comparables on EBAY and other
auction sites. All I could find were small blocks, but they will give you a
good idea as to the value.
Everyone has his or her own opinions, as how to rate car
conditions this is mine:
Paint: 100% original and nearly flawless. It shows like a brand
new 6-month-old car with 4300 miles.
Body: 100% original. The body panels are perfectly straight as
they were when new. The factory landau roof is flawless. Glass is perfect with
no scratches or cracks.
Interior: 100% original and perfect with the exception of
non-factory (dealer installed) carpeted floor mats.
Mechanical: Numbers matching (see photo) 455 CI engine, and 400
trans, which runs as new. 99% original parts, excluding 2 1/2 ” dual exhaust (no
cats) from the manifold back with Flowmaster style mufflers, new radiator cap,
new radiator hoses, new water pump, new air filter flex hose, new tires
(original spare in trunk) and of course new oil, filters, fluids etcetera.
Documentation: Original bill of sale, original dealer order
form, original dealer invoice, original owners manual, original warranty book
with corresponding factory VIN stamped on the booklet, the original warranty
card, original factory brochure and the original Ziebart receipt.
The car was rust proofed by Ziebart when new.
If
you do not have a minimum of 10 positive feedbacks and/or less than 1 year on
EBAY I will cancel your bid. This is only fair to other bidders, who work hard
on their EBAY feedback and reputations. If your interested, have a friend with
a reputation they want to preserve place bids on your behalf or contact me
through EBAY mail for an in person cash sale. Cash offers must be made in
person, cash in hand. The car may be offered locally and I reserve the right to
cancel the auction.