May 29, 200916 yr those who frequent jalopnik are familiar with the nice price/crack pipe feature. well check it out! for $6900 bucks you could get a used 2000 honda prelude or a 2002 dodge caravan. maybe you would like a 2002 toyota prius. well i think i would better use it by purchasing this fine specimen. If you're only interested in the getting the best that life has to offer, then Nice Price or Crack Pipe has a car for you- the best selling car in America. . . in 1976. Nineteen seventy six. America's bicentennial year. It was in this year that Saul Bellow won the Nobel prize for literature, Rocky served an uppercut to the box office, and a little known peanut farmer from Plains Georgia no longer needed to lust in his heart for the presidency. David Pearson achieved one of the most spectacular Daytona 500 victories ever that year, with a paint-trading spin involving Richard Petty's car coming out of the final turn, before coaxing his smoking wreck of a Mercury across the finish line at 30 miles per hour. Now that was racing! Also that year, despite fuel shortages and cojone-robbing emissions controls, American manufacturers dominated the auto market in the U.S., holding down the top spot against insurgent, and more economical, rivals from Japan. The Oldsmobile Cutlass grabbed the gold ring for the first time ever during this turbulent year, enabling Olds to move into third place in sales, eclipsing both Plymouth and Pontiac. Here's an example of that top-selling '76, in buckskin, offered by an individual who really, really, really likes his Cutlasses. As it hails from the bicentennial year, the 350cid engine under the hood is an Olds Rocket V8, not a corporate parts-bin motor, as it wasn't until '77 that production limitations forced the covert insertion of Chevy engines under the hoods of the Cutlass', causing accusations of deceit from car buyers upon discovery. Olds' advertising tagline of there era was Can We Build One For You?, but apparently, no, they couldn't from '77 onward. There's not much to be said about the car itself- it's rocking the colonnade coupe "A" body, and that 350 motor is backed up by another 350- the TH350 3-speed slusher. The buckskin paint is shinier than a tax-payer's wallet, and the engine mods probably help drivability and put a few more ponies in with the 235 installed at the factory. It's unlikely that you will be able to find another exemplar of the era in this nice of shape at any price. Despite the non-functioning horn, extracted A/C (what, it never gets hot in Detroit?) and worn-out weatherstripping, where could you find still-functional plaid swivel seats? Or a space-saver spare that's bigger than the tires on your current car? And when was the last time your car's bumper weighed more than you do? But sixty nine hundred dollars to step into a time capsule from the disco era? Is that an age that should be revisited, or worse, sustained? At any price? What do you think, does $6,900 put this Cutlass on the top of your sales charts? Or does that price swivel you right out of the driver's seat? http://jalopnik.com/5271060/1976-oldsmobil...lass-s-for-6900 Edited May 29, 200916 yr by cletus8269
May 29, 200916 yr Author i dont care much for the interior choice but come on thats a clean piece classic metal.
May 29, 200916 yr I want the Cutty. Honda needed to give the styling studio a little more Coffee when the designed the Prelude. Prelude isn't a bad car, but the Cutty...hmmm. Chris
May 29, 200916 yr That is good price, I'd say 6,000 and its sold. Clean, cool old car and I love the rally wheels on it. Edited May 29, 200916 yr by gm4life
May 29, 200916 yr The seat cushion material looks like it's cut from the pants of the Bay City Rollers. This car needs to go back to the Seventies, and stay there.
May 29, 200916 yr The seat cushion material looks like it's cut from the pants of the Bay City Rollers. This car needs to go back to the Seventies, and stay there. Based on the seat fabric? Really?
May 29, 200916 yr The seat cushion material looks like it's cut from the [EDIT: shirts] pants of the Bay City Rollers. This car needs to go back to the Seventies, and stay there. [insert character from Family Guy] Hahaha... it's funny because it's true! Edited May 29, 200916 yr by GMTruckGuy74
May 30, 200916 yr See that Cutlass is right up my alley. I love it and would be proud to own it. Now if it was a LeMans or '77 Can Am I would so rock that. I would be proud to own any of it.
May 31, 200916 yr Author Now if it was a LeMans or '77 Can Am I would so rock that. I would be proud to own any of it. theres a guy 45 min from my house with an immaculate, unrestored 77 can am. i saw it in a super chevy mag i think... man those are sweet.
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