Crawling From The Wreckage
Friday, March 13, 2026
1987 Pontiac 6000 - As Good As it Got
Thursday, March 12, 2026
1991 Oldsmobile Toronado - Sleep Well My Friend
Although I never owned one, I felt like I ran into an old friend when I saw this penultimate 1991 Oldsmobile Toronado at the Pull-A-Part in Cleveland, Ohio a couple of weeks ago. I half wanted to buy the whole thing and tow it home. Probably more than half wanted to. I've always been a fan of these 1990-1992 "Toro's".
I was not, however, a fan of the 1986 to 1989 Toronado that preceded my old chum; above is a 1986. Too squat, too stubby and too small, it lacked the charm, character or "presence", whatever that means, any of its predecessors had going back to 1966.
Its predecessors include the O.G., class-of-1966 Toro, above left, that I think homely as hell. I much prefer the cleaner lines of the 1972 green giant on the right, vinyl roof and all. Bonus! Oldsmobile sold the '72's with a complimentary airplane. With regards to the 1986-1989's, though, in fairness, it's not like Oldsmobile designers, engineers and product planners came to the office one day and decided to screw up a staple of their portfolio.
Facing five-dollar-a-gallon gas prices and wanting to remain in the high-end, personal luxury car space, General Motors felt they had no choice but to starve their "E-body" Cadillac Eldorado, Buick Riviera and Olds Toronado to near death. The new shrink-rayed Toronado for instance was a whopping 18.2-inches shorter, over half-an-inch less wide, 6.1-inches narrower wide and 545-pounds less heavy than 1985 models like this one.
Thing is, $5-a-gallon-gas never happened, at least not back then. Even by the time work began on these cars in earnest in 1982, gas prices had dropped and stabilized. Therefore, when these debuted, it was like a pharmaceutical company today debuting a new, state-of-the-art Covid-era mask.
Back to the drawing board, boys. For 1990, Olds designers shoveled more than a foot of bondo on the Toronado and injected a healthy dose of Botox into every body panel to plump up proportions. The 1990 reboot did not include an increase in wheelbase or much of anything underneath. Not a bad thing as the 1986 Toro's were fairly modern; rack-and-pinion steering, four-wheel-disc brakes, independent rear suspension with a transverse mounted fiberglass leaf spring, unibody construction, a V-6 with port fuel-injection and a ton of gimmicks and gizmos.
While I'm not a fan of "plastic surgery" per se, actually, on paper, I abhor the idea, if the ends outweigh the means, I'm all about it. I, for one, was a big fan of the reboot. Sadly, it seemed, few others felt the same way. Shame too since all of these cars were vastly superior transportation conveyances compared to what they replaced.
Back in the day, I couldn't touch one of these when new. These ran about twice what I paid for my 1990 Chevrolet Lumina Euro.
Begs the question though, did the market shift away from personal luxury cars or did the market respond to cars they simply didn't appreciate any longer by not buying them?
Saturday, March 7, 2026
1978 Continental Mark V - All You Can Eat Shrimp