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Buick Estate Wagon Overview
The Buick Estate Wagon was really a trim offering on various models throughout Buick's history. It first appeared in the 1940s as a wooden-bodied Buick Super Estate Wagon, back before steel bodies took over.
Post World War II, the baby boom raised the popularity of the roomy station wagon, and the Roadmaster added an Estate trim in the 1950s. Though no longer made of wood, they still utilized the iconic wood side panels as a nod to the wagon's legacy. The 1953 Roadmaster Estate Wagon was the last to use real wood on its exterior body panels.
Over the years, the Estate Wagon was attached to many of the famous Buick names, such as the Invicta, the Electra, the LeSabre, and the Century. Like all these big boat cars, they featured Buick's 455 and 350 V8 engines, and later, after forced detuning, a 307. By the late 1980s, only the Electra Estate Wagon remained. In 1990, its last year, the station wagon simply went by the name Estate Wagon with a wheelbase stretched to nearly 116 inches. It was replaced by the Roadmaster Estate Wagon in 1991, known simply as the Roadmaster.
In its final 1990 incarnation, the Estate Wagon featured a 5.0-liter, 140-hp V8 with a 4-speed automatic. There were few luxuries in this practical family car, which came with air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, and a power rear window. Everything else was optional.
4.7 Overall rating
(6 reviews)It's actually a '96, with an LT1 engine identical to that of the Pontiac Trans Am's. It's got the safety of an SUV and other traffic cars can actually SEE OVER IT to observe oncoming traffic when you need to turn.
Functional Luxury. Can carry 4 x 8 sheet of plasterboard inside the vehicle. Can carry a mattress on top ( with proper tie down, of course). Leather and power everywhere. Can hold nine passengers if back seat has kids or eight full sized adults - comfortably, not crowded.
There are 2 schools with the mechanics I have had work on "the Boat". One will say that it is a fabulous piece of machinery. The other will say that I need to buy alot of life insurance. While currently working on finding a reliable transmission guy, I'm very happy to float down the road to fill up the gastank (frequently!).
My car weighs over two tons and with a 307 under the hood, calling it underpowered would be an understatement. It is actually a 1988, but i cant select that in the drop-box. It was converted into a hearse by a private company in PA that no longer exists and was used in the local funeral home for over 10 yrs. It had 42k miles on it when i bought it for under $2000. Old cars like this are so easy to use. It's such a solid car but it steers with the least effort and floats down the road. The controls are obviously laid out and easy to find. I love big old cars, but they just don't make them anymore.
you could haul just about anything in it
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