Notices
Car Chat General discussion about Lexus, other auto manufacturers and automotive news.
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by: Innova

MM Retro-Write-Up: 1968 Olds Delmont 88

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Apr 4, 2020 | 07:04 PM
  #1  
mmarshall's Avatar
mmarshall
Thread Starter
Lexus Fanatic
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 94,460
Likes: 251
From: Virginia/D.C. suburbs
Default MM Retro-Write-Up: 1968 Olds Delmont 88














Since we are still on a virus semi-lockdown where I live, and I'm only going out for short trips to the grocery store to pick up daily food and supples (when they are actually available...many shelves are bare), not being able to do new-car write-ups for theme being, I'm doing vehicles from my past instead.

Today, instead of one of my own, I want to remember a old friend's ride that some of you might find dull or boring, but that me and my best friend, in high school, liked and had a lot of fun in (he let me test-drive it a couple of times, because he knew I was careful). When we were in high school (mid-late 1960s), like most teens, we liked the prevailing American muscle-cars of the period, but, un-like most teens, he and I also liked the big luxury-cars of the period. He, in particular, was a GM fan, though I liked them all. His father (he only lived about a half-mile from me) had a big, full-size 1968 Oldsmobile Delmont 88...I thought the 67/68 full-sized Oldsmobiles, quality-wise, were the best ones ever done, before the 1969/70 redesign. The Delmont 88 was the entry-level full-size Olds (it was later dropped), as opposed to the more expensive Delta 88, and, of course, the luxury 98, which was the same platform as the Cadillac DeVille. His Delmont was a light tannish/champaigne color on the outside, with solid black interior, and had the base 350 c.i. (5.7L ) V8 and two-barrel carburetor, so it wasn't a speed-demon, but its 250 HP, by the standards of the day, could get out of its own way if it had to. GM, back then, with the famous Body by Fisher, clearly had the best fit/finish and assembly-quality of the Big Three...with Chrysler the worst. GM cars of the period were noted for their great attention to detail...as opposed to the excessive cheapness and poor quality we saw in them a couple of decades later. You could tell a GM car of the period, blindfolded, just from the sound of the door-closings. Their only real Achilles Heel, besides the unreliable Chevy motor-mounts, was the crappy Acrylic-Lacquer paint (also used by American Motors) which would start to fade in just a few months if you didn't keep it waxed. The Fords and Chryslers of the period, though lacking GM's attention to detail, had much more durable Baked-Enamel paint....but that Enamel paint also had a tendency to chip more so than the lacquer. Also, remember that none of the paint jobs, back then, were clearcoat....that didn't come until the 1980s.

Anyhow the Delmont, although having solid-vinyl bench seats, manual window-cranks, and lacking the softer cloth-and-velour interior and feel of the Delta 88 and 98, was plenty-comfortable inside, and made an excellent highway-cruiser. The 3-speed GM Turbo-Hydra-Matic transmission shifted noticeably smoother and more crisply than the 3-speed Ford Cruise-O-Matic in my Dad's Thunderbird and the extremely durable but noisy/unrefined 3-speed Chrysler Torqueflite. It was a nice car to relax in after a day at school, particularly on a Friday or Saturday night when we'd hit a restaurant or movie. I briefly had a girl friend then I was infatuated with, and she'd come along sometime, or with me in my dad's T-Bird, but then she got enticed by a much rougher crowd, and that was that.

In addition to the Delmont, in 1970, his family got another new GM product...a brand-new, light green, automatic Pontiac GTO (I'll save that for a later thread) that the local Pontiac dealer gave away in a raffle-contest, and his family just happened to get the draw. My friend REALLY loved that car....but it also got him a ticket, which I'll also talk about. His family kept the Delmont for a while, then traded it in on a brand-new AMC Hornet as a compact, economical daily-driver for him. The Hornet was a handful to drive...three-speed-manual-on-the-column, ultra-slow steering, non-air-conditioned, similar to the Plymouth Valiant my Dad owned as a second car to the T-Bird. I'll also save that for a later thread.

Even though the GTO was more entertaining (and, with one or two rare exceptions, my friend drove it safely and sensibly), I really liked that Delmont, although, of course, the small, simple Hornet was a much more practical car than the Great Gas-Crunch of 1973/74 hit a few years later, and completely changed the industry as we had known it.

And, as Always, Happy Car-Memories.

MM

Last edited by mmarshall; Apr 4, 2020 at 07:26 PM.
Reply
Old Apr 4, 2020 | 08:46 PM
  #2  
flowrider's Avatar
flowrider
Lexus Champion
Veteran: Air Force
Liked
Loved
Top Answer: 1
iTrader: (9)
 
Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 11,266
Likes: 2,395
From: Arizona
Default

Good Stuff Since we're walking' down memory lane. Back in the sixties, my dad had a '62 Oldsmobile Dynamic 88 Coupe. It was tan. The only picture I could find includes my '54 Mercury Monterey. Later I would have a couple of GTOs the first being a lime green '67, 4 on the floor of course.







BTW, Those Chevy SS wheel covers on the GTO were later stolen on campus while I was in Night School.


Lou
Reply
Old Apr 4, 2020 | 09:13 PM
  #3  
mmarshall's Avatar
mmarshall
Thread Starter
Lexus Fanatic
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 94,460
Likes: 251
From: Virginia/D.C. suburbs
Default

Originally Posted by flowrider
Good Stuff Since we're walking' down memory lane. Back in the sixties, my dad had a '62 Oldsmobile Dynamic 88 Coupe. It was tan. The only picture I could find includes my '54 Mercury Monterey. Later I would have a couple of GTOs the first being a lime green '67, 4 on the floor of course.
Lou
Nice pictures. Right around the time that '67 Goat (the GTO's nickname) was being built, Ralph Nader was getting those spinner-type wheel covers you mentioned outlawed.

I see your '54 Merc had a normal roofline......lowered/chopped roofs on late-40s/early-50s Mercs were quite common, especially with customizers.

Did your '62 Olds have the 4-speed Hydra-Matic? That was used in larger, early-60s Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles, and Cadillacs...most Chevys used the 2-speed Powerglide, and Buicks used either the Dynaflow or the Super-Turbine 300/400 automatics, both of which were smoother than the 4-speed Hydras. The Hydra-Matic was more efficient than the Chevy and Buick transmissions, but tended to have bumpy shifts in the lower gears. In those days. GM used all kinds of different engines and transmissions on its various vehicles, and real standardization did not start until 1967. Even then, your '67 Goat had an Pontiac engine that was different from any other GM division....and some Pontiacs used a unique OHC straight-6 that was similiar to some far more expensive European cars.
Reply
Old Apr 5, 2020 | 03:58 AM
  #4  
Johnhav430's Avatar
Johnhav430
Lexus Test Driver
5 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 8,576
Likes: 391
From: PA
Default

My friend gave me a 1970 Pontiac LeMans Sport (smaller car) when it was about 22 years old, for free. I remember I got my plates maybe on W 31st St, and the clerk would not loan me a pen--pointed at a machine where you put quarters in (this was the early 90's lol). 5A*-***. I wasn't able to drive it more than a year due to NYS inspection, it couldn't come close to passing. But man I had fun trips to Boston and NYC in it, and girls loved it. At the time I closed my eyes and pretended it was a GTO. But it had a 250 I-6 with a 2 speed auto and drum brakes all corners. Smooth as silk, even at 22. And did I mention girls loved it, and the bench was plenty big?

edit imagine actually having that activity in a car in the 90's very strange when I look back. I tell my buddy, man, do you think Gen Z'ers like our kids can even make up their own adventures the way we did? It didn't take money back then, just imaginataion

Last edited by Johnhav430; Apr 5, 2020 at 04:03 AM.
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
mmarshall
Car Chat
25
Mar 31, 2020 12:16 PM
Toys4RJill
Car Chat
12
Jul 8, 2019 05:35 PM
mmarshall
Car Chat
34
May 12, 2019 06:28 PM
mmarshall
Car Chat
32
Sep 19, 2018 06:07 AM
mmarshall
Car Chat
45
Aug 8, 2014 09:12 AM




All times are GMT -7. The time now is 11:20 AM.