Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Oooh! Nice Machine.

 


20 comments:

  1. Saw an olive green one that George Barris had made into a split back window version. Nice homage to the '63 vette.

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  2. In 1981 I dated a girl in college that had gotten her mother's boat tail Riviera when she graduated HS the year before. It was a very nice car but it did not last long. I always dated out of my league.

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  3. What powerplant did that have?

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    1. All of them had a minimum of a Buick 455. There was a Stage 1 option with a hotter cam, bigger valves and firmer shifts. However, the rear window was not like that.

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  4. Wildcat 455? I'll look it up. Have some spare change, too.

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    1. Pretty sure it's a 455. I remember some Wildcats had 465s. Steve_in_Ottawa

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    2. It was a Buick 455. The Wildcat ratings were torque, not CID or HP. Buick never made a 465 CID engine in a production car.

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  5. When the average car was roomy and comfortable.

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  6. 455. My uncle gave me his in’74. Me: part timer in lumber yard and college sudent. As you hit the gas you could see the gas gage headed toward empty. Never seen anything like it. Gave it back

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  7. Put a rolled and totaled Riviera engine in a base model Cutlas post sedan, front of a Muncie 4 speed, and a most helpful limited slip from a Hurst Cutlass, pretty sick power, the shop mechanics book said it was deliberately understated 455 ponies, cause of DOT restrictions, the post sedan came stripped to the bone, everything possible ripped out, had to add a front and rear right side buckets, my boss got a hold of factory racing suspension bushings for his tri-power Bonneville, gave me a set, put dirt track shocks in it, definite improvement there, it was a true bastard car, already a rather light weight car as those old GM frame cars could be, thing about it, just wasn't enough road to wring that beast out to the max, but it sure was insane trying, my best friend wrecked it sent it airborn, hit a telephone pole above the Ma Bell cables, car came clean apart in two sections, pole snapped half the way up, impacted at the post, another buddy in the back seat didn't survive. Raced all sorts of vehicles from karts to superbikes, that engine still ranks in my experience with one word, vicious. I never found room or means to stretch that engines power curve totally out, no dyno's back then, no knowing what its actual output was, tried once hard, enough for me though, it made power till the car got so light it would be a hair from lifting free of the pavement, those old cable drive speedos back then where simply unreliable when you pinned the needle. way past 120, and in a big car thats pretty gnarly fast let me tell you. Just crazy, figured it had to be one of those 1 in a million engines come out of the factory show up once in a while. And it ran so nice too, idling, mild mannered till you floor boarded it, sometimes it was near impossible to tell it was running just sitting still. Amazing part of it think about, the kind of quality went into that engine in the first place, it felt bullet proof.

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    1. had a 62 bonne ragtop with a 421 super duty engine and 4 speed auto trans
      had it up past the 120 mph mark and it still wanted to go. drove 95 back and forth to base and home a few times and it was a great road car. all leather seats and whatnot. but when you hit the gas, YEAH. you could watch the gasoline gauge start going toward empty ! but for all of that, it was great for road trips and dates. back seat was better than most couches I ever sat on. 2 guys up front and 3 in the back and there was plenty of room for all inside it. and I sure if you had too, you could fit at least 3 bodies in the trunk. great car, but it did suck gas like mad if you step on it.

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    2. left a bunch of "junk" in my Dad's basement when I went overseas.
      one of which was a tri power setup for a 389. complete with factory air cleaner setup. got it out of a junkyard before I left. anyway, 3 years later I came home and found out that my brother and dad cleaned out all of my junk. in 2003 at a car show in Hershey I was talking with a guy who had a tri power setup on his car. he told me he paid close to a grand just for the air cleaner setup just a few years before. one of many things I wished I had stored somewhere else. also had a old Norton motor bike out back that
      "went away" around that time. thanks Dad !

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    3. Epic comment and memories, @anon 4:28, thank you.

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  8. Beautiful cars. Shop teacher had one, brandy new, we all drooled over it, it was quite the rig, top shelf back then.

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  9. Another age thats for sure. Barely an inkling how lucky we were to get to grow up in that piece of time, some pretty sweet vehicles, this one, say a Montecarlo SS, a Hurst Cutlass, the Chrysler beasts, one last hurrah me thinks, corporate knew in advance what was slithering up on us all, mightabeen engineering and R&D knew too, cause when the junkers appeared everything pretty much was awful bad performance wise.

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  10. Wicked blind spot and no side mirrors, fantastic lines though, eh?

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    1. They never looked that way. It's AI crap. They had the 64-ish style rear window, massive green house.

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