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Marque: Buick - Company History & Models - Cars By Brand

Buick

Buick

The Buick marque is one of the oldest motor manufacturing companies in the USA and indeed the world. Its founder David Dunbar Buick (1854-1929) was born in Arbroath, Scotland, but at the age of two he emigrated to the USA with his parents and they went to live in Detroit. When he was 15 David went to work for the Alexander Manufacturing Company of Detroit, which produced plumbing products and later…

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Buick Skylark

Buick Skylark

PRICE: £5000-£10,000

The Skylark was launched in 1953 as a two-door convertible to mark the 50th Anniversary of Buick and at around $5000 wasn’t cheap! The third generation Skylark 1964 – 1972 included a striking twodoor fastback Gran Sport Coupe for 1968. The model featured the distinctive side sculptured ‘Sweepspear’ design, a reminder of the styling infl uences from the 1950s. Skylarks sold in record numbers in 1968, effectively as Specials were trimmed to just three Deluxe models. The following year Buick built 665,000 cars. The Skylark engine options ranged from a 250ci straight-six rated at 155bhp though to a 455cii V8 at 225bhp. The Skylark was Buick’s musclecar model of the era, a response to Pontiac’s best selling GTO. It was available as a two-door hardtop coupe, a four-door saloon and the Custom also came as a convertible. Well built, solid, fast with fi ne looks, the Skylark represented the last of Flint’s muscular middleweights, dropped in 1972.

Buick Regal

Buick Regal

PRICE: £8000-£10,000 (much for a GNX model)

The first generation Regals were launched in 1973, but it’s the second generation 1978 – 1982 of these sporting two-door compact coupes that were the most reverred. 1978 was the first year that the Regal was available with a 3.8 litre V6 turbocharged engine. In 1982 the Grand National package was created to celebrate the Buick’s success on the NASCAR circuit in the Grand National Winston Cup Series and it took the title in 1981 and 1982. The Grand National was available with special charcoal grey and silver grey paintwork, stripes and other body accents. The 4.1-litre V6 engine was rated at 125bhp, hardly mind blowing, but greater things were to come! The Grand National available between 1985-1987 was Flint’s final factory Hot Rod. The limited edition GNX of 1987, a joint Buick-McLaren development featured a fuel-injected turbocharged V6 engine that pushed out 276bhp, and only 547 were built. Nowadays the greatest problem is finding an example that hasn’t been thrashed to within an inch of its life!

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