I was adopted at the age of 5 in 1968. I remember being driven around by my mother in her 4dr Chevy Corvair. Great times n experiences.Hav a great n safe year to all.
As a European, to me, this car is the epitome and everything American I can imagine in a car. Big family, land yacht, no style or grace, just a big, comfy, land boat for your dogs and loud kids, throwing stuff around while you cruise smoking and arm up on the bench seat, and playing some old 80s tunes from the crappy radio. So old American that it makes ME nostalgic hahah
I imagine you (and most Europeans) get that impression from Hollywood.. it's unfortunate and sad that that's the main window most of the world has into US life
@@nthgth Yeah, random videos and what not online. UA-cam videos. It's a lot more representative than hollywood is, so I don't see how it's worse tbh lol.
@@AAARREUUUGHHHH I see your point, but it's worse because that sampling leans toward the most whiny, immature, angry, misguided, etc. I'm sure it's the same for online content from all countries, and knowing this you and I might take it with a grain of salt, but still.
Mercedes has only started selling more cars in the last couple of decades, so for older European car owners this measurement would not tell that much. VW, FIAT or something like that should be used as reference.
The steering wheel is dainty because this was always for mom to drive. 😊 the F and R on the tape player is for fast forward and reverse for the tape. One final thing- I’m gen x and boomer parents did not like dogs in their cars so that would have been very rare. I can tell you that moms and grandmothers had zero trouble driving these cars - thank you for fun video!
I came here looking for this. not many things named as hidden really are. That adds to the video for me, like little bits of stuff I remember from being in the wagon.
Totally agree F and R is fast forward and reverse for the cassette player, some cars only had FF which was fast forward. I'm a big Old's fan, I owned three, a 65 Vista Cruiser, 76 Cutlass and an 82 Cutlass, great cars.
@Moto Guzzi your wagon is not a land yacht. Small, inline engine powered, full of unnecessary electronics, hard and expensive in maintenance. And also I don't know any european wagon which was built on independent perimeter frame, like this one. P.S.: except Wartburg kombi.
The reason why Euro wagon smaller is because the city roads are too small to drive. My family had light pickup truck ("light" in in US standard) and it feels like driving a tank because of the road size.
Nothing better for a long road trip, no need for "sporty" or "road feel". Just gliding above the road to the tune of a rumbling v8, all problems in the world become a distant memory.
@jdslyman ...it does sound like I'm joking...but it's actually true! They actually thought people would go for that vibe. The tree on wheels image of love and understanding for the environment despite fume laden tail pipe exhausts 80s style.
This car represents a good portion of my childhood. Our family didn't have one but my friend down the block did, as did so many others. I spent many hours riding in that car, and honestly I'd love to have one right now.
we went to drive ins pulled the car in backwards laid down the rear seats with blankers and saw Incredible Mr Limpett on screen while mom and dad messed around in front seat
I rode in the back of an 89 Caprice Estate Wagon with my Grandma (Dad was driving) at least once when I was a 3 or 4 year old. That's a cherished memory. I also ran out of the car one other day, and touched the exhaust pipe. That later experience is "burned" into my memory.
The ONLY acceptable name for the rear facing seats are 'Tail-Gunner Seats'. I used to pretend to 'shoot down enemy planes' while being driven around. My dad even used a windshield marker pen to draw on fake crosshairs/targets.
@@amymandeville8342 Regular cars in the 80's were a bland mash of square boxes that came in various shades of baby diarrhea. I drive a 1985 Audi in metallic poop brown and I think it looks tremendous 😂😂
For those curious, here is the soundtrack for the Oldsmobile Complimentary Tape Cartridge in 1985: Unknown Artist - Oldsmobile Theme - Cyndi Lauper - Time After Time - Mike Reno & Ann Wilson - Almost Paradise - Enrique Iglesias & Willie Nelson - To All The Girls I've Loved Before - Barbra Streisand - The Way He Makes Me Feel - Larry Gatlin & The Gatlin Brothers - Denver - Janie Fricke - Lonely People - Mickey Gilley - Fool For Your Love - Charly McClain - Surround Me With Love - Michael Jackson - Billie Jean - Luther Vandross - Never Too Much - Deniece Williams - Let's Hear It For The Boy - Kent Jordan - Theme From "Terms of Endearment" - The Cleveland Orchestra, George Szell - Overture to "The Marriage of Figaro" K. 492 Composed By - Mozart* The Philadelphia Orchestra, William Smith (4) - Fur Elise Composed By - Beethoven* Philippe Entremont, Piano* - Waltz No. 15 In A-Flat Major, OP. 39 Composed By - Brahms* The Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy - Serenade Composed By - Schubert*
Great post!! I remember my grandparents got a new Cutlass in like '78 and it had a sample cassette too (can't recall the track list). I'd never seen a cassette player in a vehicle before then.
My grandpa was a UAW member and worked in the plant that built these for 20 years. I never got to ride in one, but with him being gone now this video really made me smile. Thanks Doug!
We had the 86 Buick version that I swear the wood decal was peeling all over by the time we sold it. I was impressed too (why would you choose this car to keep in good condition?)
Doug Score for Doug DeMuro styling: 1/10 His sense of style do not exist Acceleration: 5/10 He gets a 5 because of his long legs, but doesn't workout Handling: 7/10 no comment Fun Factor: 7/10 He seems like he's a fun guy Cool Factor: 5/10 He's not the coolest guy but knows a lot about cars Total Weekend Score: 25 Features: 6/10 He gets a lot of quirks and features but wears 2 shirts Comfort: 4/10 no comment Quality: 10/10 produces high quality car review videos Practical: 7/10 He seems very practical and doesn't seem to buy unnecessary things Value : 7/10 do not come with bumper to bumper unlimited warranty Total Daily Score: 34 Total DougScore: 59/100 which puts him right in the middle above Hoovie's garage
One thing that Doug forgot to mention is this car did not have a steel radio antenna poking out anywhere. Even my dad's Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser did not have a steel radio antenna. For this vehicle, the antenna was actually thin wire in like a zig zag pattern across the very top of the windshield, going from the center out to both side mirrors.
The built in the windshield wire was the standard equipment antenna. My 1979 Custom Cruiser has the power antenna on the right front fender. I don't know for sure, but I'm confident the power antenna option was available through 1990. I won't lie, it's a rear chore to work on should the need arise, but it is nice having it go up and down with the radio power.
3 feet is about 90cm - 1m, FYI! For the interest of curiosity, even though I am European, I use both units to measure my height (which is 6ft or 1.83m), so I know!
Yes! I guess if you are the kind of guy that has to explain that 3 across seating involves 1 on either end & 1 in the middle (Twice!), I can see where the confusion on the fast forward & rewind button is possible. The only explanation I can think of is clearly displayed by the time on the clock!
I had the Custom Cruiser's cousin and competitor, the Ford Country Squire Wagon. Ford's third row 'jump seats' were 2 single seats mounted sideways along the sidewalls. The two-way power tailgate was awesome. Those big bumpers sticking so far out from the body were mounted on shock absorbers that compressed, so minor hits never affected the body panels. Best boat I ever had.
Doug, I actually owned a car like this for a while. Boy did you get the A/C wrong. That car had the most powerful AC of any car I ever owned, even my two AC unit Lincoln Navigator couldn't come close. Probably credit the R12 and GM's history of killer AC. The Olds could chill that car on a 100F day from roasting to comfortable in 5 minutes. You might think the vents were small, but they pumped massive quantities of air at 35F out. Didn't need rear AC vents, the rear got plenty. Second saying the dash and car lacked style overlooks that rectangular lines WERE the popular style when that car was designed. Round and flowing was passe (so 60's) Third, the era of the massive thick steering wheel came later, all 60-70's car had 'thin' wheels. You didn't need a big thick wheel when you had power steering. The current affectation of fat wheels hadn't arrived. I do have to agree it was a slug. The car was introduced in 1977 with the choice of a 350 or 403 CID V8. That at least had more torque, though nothing of that era had much power. WHen they dropped to the 307CID it got seriously slow. As to how it drove, it tracked well and was astoundingly quiet for the era, making it a good freeway cruiser (just avoid steep grades). Finally, what you seem not to know is that this is the DOWNSIZED full sized car. The peak of the wagon era was the late 1960's Ford Country Squire. Much larger than this car, faster too.
I was about to make all of these comments when I found yours. Well said. Sometimes, I think he tries way too hard to find things to moan about, belittle or ridicule about a car in an effort to try to make the video work.
Car's used different refrigerants back then and cooled MUCH better. Modern refrigerants do not get nearly as cold so, as a consequence, more vents are placed throughout the vehicles to move more air in an attempt to circulate the less cool air better. If was very common to get very cold VERY easily and have to turn the thing down. The systems just didn't last long without issues or leaks and killed mileage and engine power
I have a 1972 Pontiac Ventura with the 307 and it makes 130 hp. The slowness doesn't bother me, and it's more horsepower than my 1983 Volvo 240 has. Like this Olds in this video, they're not designed to be quick. When you look at them from that perspective then they accelerate plenty fast. They were designed to be comfortable, and that they are. The 307 is reliable, pretty smooth, and offers up all it's torque at the bottom of its rev range. I don't like an engine having to rev high just to accelerate, and my Pontiac accelerates just fine without hardly going above idle. I only notice the lack of power when I put my foot down. It's laughable, but it's not underpowered.
@@mrcloudiesbestfriend You say that like they don't have seat belts or something. My Dad hit a pole in a 1984 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Sedan in 2017. He wore the seat belt (buckled to the middle passenger's holder as I specifically told him that day that the driver one was broken,) so he went home the same day. Sore knees? Sure, his knees went thru the dashboard. NO AIR BAGS, and yet it wasn't that big of a deal. He did need emergency stomach surgery a month later, which was probably partly related, but he had an ulcer there. Mind, these cars are still concerning if someone hits you in the side. But if you're referring to that "1959 vs 2009 Chevrolet" video, you're going by an incomplete hypothesis. The 59 Bel Air shown there was among the worst of the worst, with one of the worst car frames ever, even criticized back in the day when people didn't care about seat belts. 1980s cars are a whole other decade.
I wish cars like this were still being made these days. I'd have one. Huge, comfy, easy to drive, just floats along and so easy to maintain. Fabulous. How times have changed, with modern cars you get; --hard seats, stiff suspension, cramped interiors and DIY maintenance that's almost impossible to perform. Well, that's progress folks!
I completely agree with you. Im only 16 but my dads always has had older American cars which have comfy bouncy leather seats and amazing suspension that makes it so comfortable. Also i prefer the looks of older styled cars and have big v8 in most of them.
while i was listening to doug explain the interior as awkward, and a bit uncomfortable, i could only think about how comfortable my same generation caprice classic is, compared to any new cars i sit in and drive. the thin steering wheel never felt cheap or silly to me.
Yeah this thing gets 14MPG needs a tune up every year, has no power at all, seats fall apart in the sun, hard to start on cold mornings, and if you got 150 out of it that was a lot. new car has 2x the power 2x the milage will go easy 50k without doing anything but changing oil. has cruise, better AC, ABS, traction control, airbags, and is way more survivable in any accident. better lighting, better handling, but yeah,
Case in point, the Volvo 144 & 244s, that had shock absorbers behind the front and rear bumpers. You could have a pretty heavy impact and basically be unharmed.
Yep, that's true. The old plain rubber over-riders on bumpers then were such a good idea - absorbed minor dings, and even they didn't, the whole bumper was super easy to replace. Now it just trashes your car and costs a bloody fortune (looking at my iMiev.... got shunted at
The 5 MPH federal standard was dropped for 1982 or maybe 1983, so a holdover model like that probably had the hydraulic shock absorbers in the front and rear. That's the reason for the extra foot of length beyond the end of the cargo hold. They were great for minor dings, but in anything above 5 mph, there was a lot of expensive hardware to replace. Also, once the chrome sections got dinged or scratched, they usually started to rust out, though a few cars in at the end of that era (eg. Ford Fairmont) had all-aluminum bumpers.
When you’re riding in the third row and you put the tailgate window down, no matter how fast you go the air would never blow in and cool you off. I spent many many hours in the back of that car and I loved it. My sister even got her foot caught in the door jam when shutting the back door. I’ve never heard someone scream so loud!
You could easily sleep in the back without messing with the front seats. Motels didn’t get many guests back in the day from folks who owned this. How many people were conceived in the back of these land yatchs? lol
I laid on the front seat(s) of one of these B Bodies... Only it was an 84 Caprice Sedan. Somewhat cozy, minus the seat belt buckles sticking up unless you have pillows or coats for cushioning.
Station wagons are my spirit animal! The versatility of this Custom Cruiser, the fake wood, the rear facing bench seats… I LOVE IT! And I’m sorry for what I’m about to do: “I FOUND OUT LONG AGOOOO…. ITS A LONG WAY DOWN THE HOLIDAY ROAD!!!”
Doug, I didn’t read all the comments, so maybe someone has already mentioned this: You missed a lot of great quirks. Maybe you didn’t have enough time. The last panel in the “Back Back”(what my kids called it), was not folded flat, thus making a totally flat floor. Pull on that black strap and then it made a lid over that footwell. It had a latch and you could keep large items there and also haul plywood or drywall panels. Also a real quirky thing was the spare tire area. It was to your left as you sat in the “Back Back”. You pull on that plastic panel and move it out of the way to reveal the FULL SIZED spare and jack and tools. Another quirky thing that you missed was the trash can in the passenger side footwell. Cadillac even did this on their cars. They were color matched and carpeted and clipped in and out so as to empty easily. Some of the stereo systems had a CB player in them. Squelch just right and CB transmissions would override your music so that you could be informed of traffic conditions ahead. I had one that was AM/FM/8Track/CB and one that was AM/FM/Cassette/CB. How do I know? I had a wife, 3 kids, their friends, one Pontiac Grand Safari wagon, one Buick Estate wagon, and one Pontiac Parisienne.
John Hampton hahahahaha!! My pop had an ‘83 or ‘84 Cutlass Ciera with a 4 cyl. What a POS! But I remember being driven to summer camp in a Vista Cruiser. That thing was awesome.
I believe the station wagon is the best automobile version available. An 8/9 passenger body style with rear facing 3rd row is awesome for large families plus the small block V8 is a robust engine that can last forever with minor maintenance. Not to mention the 3'+ overhangs allow you to scrape on almost every dip in the road.
*Funny how Doug shows his young age here. Many of us literally grew up in these cars, and made our memories as kids, traveling with the family, etc. They may be odd by today's standards, but they were perfect for what they needed to be at the time.*
Doug is incorrect here, an actual digital clock was available for this car when it was made. According to the 1985 Oldsmobile brochure, you could opt for a Delco ETR stereo with electronic digital clock combo. In that case there would be a "Delta 88" script in the normal place for the clock in the dash. A quartz clock and this quartz digital clock were also available with the standard radio. The F and R on this radio is fast forward and reverse for the cassette player. If you look closely, you can see a lever around the volume knob to adjust the sound on the speakers from front to rear in the car. I won't hold this against Doug since he reviews so many different types of vehicles, but just thought I'd address that
Doug, thanks for making this wonderful video. As a previous Oldsmobile sales consultant for the now defunct brand, I can truly say that every one of these wagons I ever delivered provided 100% satisfaction to its owners and their families, especially to the many kids who got to ride in the rearward facing fold-away back seat. One thing you got wrong though, the F and R button on the stereo was a cassette tape control, not a front to rear fader control. Pushing it into the up position would fast Forward the tape, while pushing it down would Rewind it. The middle position was just a default. BTW, I still have my Oldsmobile demo cassette(s) and they still sound great to this day. Thanks again for your great review. I would love to see you review the last gen version of these great cars, like the review you did for the Buick Roadmaster. A similar car, but different enough to earn it a different 'Doug Score'. Peter J. Martens, Founder: The Oldsmobile Forum'
I’m so glad my dad had one of these, that backseat was so much fun, plus your parents couldn’t reach back and smack you if you were acting up way back there.
Thanks, interestingly I had forgotten.. we had a 1959 DODGE 9: PASS/ rear Face rear seat/ push Button/ lots of chrome for our five Kids, etc. ... ADMITTEDLY THE VIsta cruisers of 1970s were kind of attractive, with Glass observation, etc.
@@basshead. - Because that's totally relevant when he's specifically talking to Europeans. Not to mention it's an absolutely idiotic argument because, A) NASA uses metric, and B) the lead architect of the Apollo programme was a German scientist basing his work on German rocket technology.
Doug... I don't know how I missed this, because I bought a brand new one in 1984, and loved it. I lived in Austin, TX and had seven kids as you mentioned...lol! I bought it through my father-in-law who had a fleet of trucks and cars for his wire line service in New Mexico, and had all his vehicles, including this one, modified to get the maximum hp from the stock engine, so I remember it having plenty of power for the job. I also remember it floated like a cloud on the Highway, and the power steering was great! Maybe the one you reviewed had bad shocks...? I got compliments all of the time on "what a beautiful car it was!" The color on mine was much nicer and made a bick difference. The bumpers were standard size for the time, and rather small for a car that size. It was a very solid well-built car and it sure did the job for us...!
I had a '77 Buick Electra in 1987. Two rows of benches, we fit ten people. Looking at the "rumble seat", I'm picturing teens borrowing the car, going cruising, and a couple making out in the back.
Doug do a little more homework that switch on the radio was for the cassette tape, F was fast forward, R was rewind. The speaker adjustment was the round disc on the volume or tuning knob.
Oh Doug. First, you can fold over the cover to the rear footwell. That DOES get you a completely flat surface. Second, perhaps more importantly, on the radio, the F-R is not changing where sound is coming out ... it’s fast-forward and rewind for the cassette. Source: this was my first car and I spent more time in it than I would ever like to admit. Perhaps you will want to have a vehicle’s owner around to explain some of the nuances. ;)
Yeah I noticed that too. Unfamiliar with the setup AND comparing to today's standard, thats why he is confused on why certain things are there thats we don't use today.
Exactly.. plus ashtray is not for only smokers.. its also where you put your trash in (small things) .. plus imagine kids have control over the rear window, how bad that would be . Doug is young and not familiar with cars.
I don't think so - cars did not have auto-reverse decks back then (and if they did, the deck cover would say "Auto Reverse"). This was for fast-forward (F) and rewind (R).
@@James-eg3nf, they definitely offered auto-reverse cassette players back then. Wonderful feature when we just had to hear it all again -- and again -- etc..
In Buick's defense, the 3rd row ash tray is more likely for parents when they're sitting in the back watching their kid's baseball game or whatever. It made a good tailgating vehicle.
I loved this video. I would much rather watch a video about a 1985 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser than any new multi million dollar supercar. Thanks Doug! Addendum: Awesome easter egg with the clock lol
16:10 I actually got out of a ticket one time driving this station wagon because I showed the police officer the way the speedometer was designed and he cut me a break because he could see how it would be hard to tell the exact speed you were going!
My parents had an early model one when I was a kid. We would pile 2 adults and 5 children in this and drive 16 hours to see family several times a year. Edit: I was telling my 82 yo father about this episode. He reminded me that we drove for 3 days in 78 in the snow storm that shut down the Midwest in this car. My father had transferred offices and we had to get from Duluth Minnesota to Grand Rapids Michigan to close on a house. He had a after market CB in the car and hood ask permission from trucks on the road to tuck in tight behind them to stay on the road. We stayed overnight in Milwaukee in a utility closet at a hotel because they were booked solid. Then made it to Gary Indiana and ended up getting the Honey moon suite because that was all they had. I was 8 at the time and the whole trip is like a dream. My mother stoically calming the kids as my dad white knuckled it for 3 days.
@@terminator3000 Some people actually converted these to 'camper wagons’, took out the 2nd and 3rd rows of seats and replaced them with a mattress and cabinets...
We had an 1982 white with the wood, blue leather interior, it was a great wagon, the wife and I loved it. We called ours "Intrepid", it was so long it, it was like driving a landing strip on the highway, a fun wagon, many great trips. Thank you Doug
Yes, automakers were ordered to highlight the 55 MPH on all speedometers, also the top speed listed was mandated to be 85 MPH. I know of at least one automaker where the numbers stopped at 85 MPH but the marks went on to 145 MPH. Also the only cars that had speedometers higher then 85 were law enforcement. I could pin the 85 MPH speedometer in my 1978 Cadillac easy.
I'm not american and that 55 caught my eye instantly. Wondered why it was there, so thanks. :) It might have been common back in the day, but I'm kinda sad that Doug didn't bring up that little feature.
Crashing an older car was different those bumpers destroyed anything you hit and I remember when I was a kid you never saw as many car in a ball wrecks the car just didn’t go as fast
Somebody put a corvette engine in a 1984 98 Regency, sedan version of this car. Tripled the horsepower. His wife didnt understand until she drove it and then she didnt want to give it up. About the steering if you owned the car you could steer it with one finger, effortlessly spinning the steering wheel. I know this be ccause i bought an 84 98 Regency in 1991 and used until donating it 2 years ago. Those bumpers had horizontal shock absorbers that gave the bumpers 5-6 inches of shock absorbtion. There was a metal front structure that the fiberglass front clip bolted onto that gave an additional 6 inches of crush. Loved the car it could eat miles at 80 - 90 miles an hour and you felt like you were sitting in your living room.
@@LordEvan5 The car wrecks didn't appear as bad because the cars didn't have crumple zones. You know what the crumple zone was? The human body taking all the energy of the crash. The bumpers were much better, though, because they were built to a higher regulation standard.
SPCStudios 2017 I totally agree with you. I once drove Chevrolet Caprice Classic wagon from early 80's and that was SO nice experience. Not like today's bubble cars.
I miss the days when I would go down the road in one of my 4 station wagons. I had a 62 Falcon Squire, 71 Plymouth Sport Suburban, 71 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser and a 66 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser. Not only could you load them for anything you could think of from a trip to the ocean or climbing a mountain, but it seemed that they could handle it all with no effort as well. They might not have been the technological wonders that today's cars seem to be, but they were ready to go when I was. Today, I drive one of the expensive so-called luxury German brands that always seems to break down when I want to use it. How I would love to be heading into the sunset just once more in a big heavy station wagon, a time machine from my past.
@@the_retag my school I graduated from was a district alternative school and in 98/99 they finally did away with smoking permission slips. But u could only get them at the 2 alternative schools. It was wild. Oh yea it was only for 16 and up by then too.
@@travishabursky4362 I was gonna suggest something else for that open area... but now that I consider it, a young man back then, with this car, was probably doing more sleeping alone than anything else haha!
My dad had a 1972 Town &country station wagon, and it was a big boat. It floated down the road. It had a 440cubic inch engine. It had all power windows, tail gate window. Dad used it to hall trash to the dumps.
I was going to say that plus he had the the switch on the tape deck wrong it wasn't for the fader it was Forward and Reverse. I don't know what's wrong with the one he drove but the 2 I had rode smooth
These cars can carry a 9'6" kayak (laying on the front seat between the headrests), and tons of camping equipment, and keep everything inside, and out of the rain! 12 foot long 2x8s are no problem either, from the dashboard, with only a few inches past the tailgate, with the rear window lowered.
god i love cars like this so much. i was born in the 2000s and never got to witness the glory of these being popular but i so badly want to own one and want to see vehicles like this brought back
I drove one of these for most of the 90's. I called it my "Poor Man's Suburban". It was our anti-minivan. It was glorious. I knew my wife, two kids and Labrador Retriever were all safe. Doug, thanks for the great memory.
@@Nexalian_Gamer Thing is, these were just used cars then. Imagine thinking similarly about a 16 year old Ford Explorer? People didn't look at Wagons with much fondness then, and there was a "wagons are un-cool and nothing to aspire to" stigma that I still don't understand.
@@simplesimon8255 why he was poor? Just because he drove a cool old car, doesn't mean that he was poor. Maybe he bought the car because: one, he liked its style; two, he bought it because it was practical and maybe, MAYBE, I could be wrong, because he had two kids, a wife and a dog. But like I said, I could be wrong
My dad had an '82 Chevy Impala station wagon with a 267 (4.4 Liter) 2bbl V8 good for 120hp. This video brings back a lot of memories. We kids used to sit in the rear-facing back seat and wave. We'd go on trips with 8 people inside and our luggage strapped on the roof rack. Sometimes, we'd go for cargo runs with the middle & back seats folded flat. Those wire-wheel hubcaps were a pain to clean & polish. Remember the chore of scrubbing the whitewall tires? BTW, the third brake light came out in 1985. On new cars and motorcycles from 1978 to '87, the speedometer only went up to 85mph, with the 55mph speed limit highlighted. That was a government mandate to get people to drive slower & save gas. Also, before 1986, odometers on American cars only had 5 digits. So when people saw the odometer up at 70K or so, they would trade the car in sooner and buy a new one. German & Japanese cars in the 80's had 6-digit odometers. Nowadays, people keep their cars for 150K miles or longer.
Inspired by National Lampoon's Vacation, I bought a 1979 Chevy Caprice Wagon (almost identical to this Olds) and drove it 1,200 on a road trip to California. It was an hilarious good time. The wagon, 25 years old at the time, held up mechanically and we were even squealing the tires at sea level. The fuel cost drained our budget and we barely made it back home -- although we did sleep in it most nights, so we saved on hotels. This car deserves a higher Doug score just because of its cultural significance.
That's the hardest part of planning trips. You almost never have enough money for the return trip home. Cost of eating and gas kills the budget more than anything. Why do we get so hungry away from home?
I remember sitting in the very back seat when when i was 10 my dad purchased the same Oldsmobile new wagon to move to San Diego California from Detroit in the 70s RIP Dad!
When I was a kid, my best friend's parents had a '68 Olds Vista Cruiser wagon with the glass window in the roof over the back seat.Now that is a classic
Born in 89 here my parents had an 84 ( give or take a year or two) custom cruiser and it was olive green with same interior green color. To this day it’s one of my favorite cars ever. Even if one of the back hubcaps was missing after moving one year lol
If gas prices were as low as when this car was released, I’d be mighty tempted to pick up a big ol’ boat like this. There’s an ‘89 Mercury Grand Marquis wagon on CarGurus for $3,300 about 20 miles from me, wood paneling and all. If only…!
I think this is my favorite Doug review. There was nothing like those big Detroit boats. I learned how to drive on the first generation version of this car, ours was a Chevy Caprice Estate. It was longer - long enough the third seat faced forward, with a large cargo area behind that seat. Imagine parallel parking that monster. The ride was insanely soft, and steering so numb you could steer that thin wheel with one finger. The first time I drove a small coupe, I was shocked that the whole car turned a corner at once.
Actually, Olds used this nomenclature in the Vista Cruiser, their smaller wagon. Arguably, Vista Cruisers were the coolest of all wagons with the little rooftop windows over the rear seat.
@@kbasa For Vista Cruisers, the rooftop windows over the rear only lasted from 1964 (the start) to 1972. 1973 - 1977 models are not really "Vista Cruisers" except in name.
One of the quirks he forgot to mention for the '85 Custom Classic is that the shifter had two D's on it, including a D in a circle. The D in the circle is overdrive, the gear you would want to use when you drive on the freeway.
I learned how to drive, AND PARALLEL PARK, in one of these. 1979 Olds Custom Cruiser with the 350 and 4-barrel. Brown over brown with fake wood paneling. 1. The tailgate is officially a "3-way": 1, window up-and-down, 2. swing open, 3. swing down. 2. Those bumpers were meant to BUMP INTO THINGS without needing a trip the the body shop. Thus, BUMPER. A shopping cart will do $3000 damage to a modern "bumper". That's stupid. 3. The utility of those old wagons is not appreciated. How many modern "SUVs" can haul a dozen full 4x8 sheets of drywall INSIDE them? How many can haul ONE? How many can seat 8 passengers? Some minivans can do it. 4. Usually the rear seat was left folded closed. The footwell was for storage of things like jumper cables, gloves, etc. The cover locks too. 5. You completely missed the full-size spare storage on the passenger side in the back. That whole giant passenger-side trim piece comes out and exposes the spare (with a lifting basket), and a bumper jack. (Though by '85 it was a frame jack.) 6. You also completely missed the upside-down air cleaner lid. That's an old hot-rodders trick. Adds a tiny bit more power, and a whole lot of great sound at wot from the four barrel. 7. Those are not wire wheels. Those are fake wire wheel hubcaps on steel wheels. Pull that center emblem and there is a keyed bolt holding the hubcap onto the wheel. Heaven help you if you lost the keyed wrench and got a flat... 8. The A/C vents were plenty good. The old R-12 "Freon" air conditioners were much better than modern R-134A A/C. It's really shocking how much worse A/C has gotten in the last 30 years. The fan also moved a lot of air (until the high-speed relay melted). Between the four dash vents and two (priceless!) crotch vents, nobody in that boat was uncomfortable even on the hottest days in Florida. 9. The clock in the '79 was analog and the escapement had a solenoid-wound mainspring. It was ridiculous. When the spring wound down, it would close an electrical contact for a solenoid that would hit it like a hammer and wind it back up. It did that every couple of minutes. You could hear it when the car was off: tick-tick-tick-tick-BOING-tick-tick-tick-tick. Needless to say, it would only last 3-4 years before it would die. I put a digital VFD clock in the housing with the help of a Dremel in about 1985... 10. Say what you will about those weak-ass Olds engines (and they were weak), they were reliable for the day. My 79 wagon has over 100k on it when I got rid of it, and being a young punk I buried that 85 MPH speedometer on many occasions. With whitewalls... I also had a 1982 Delta 88 with the VIN Y 307 and metric 250 (horrible) transmission. Had to replace the trans at 50k, but the engine lasted until 130k before throwing a rod. I drove it for three weeks after it did. Oil looked like silver paint...
I learned to drive in one of these as well. It was the diesel version! Yeah, the A/C rocked on ours. With 5 people inside on a 90° summer day, you'd be cold in less than a minute - even in the back!
Do you at least know why the fuck they stopped using R12 refrigerant in vehicles for civilian market ? Because it was so destructive for the ozon, way more than R134A
Maxime Fortier of course he knows that, did you read his comment? This dude knows everything. He’s amazed that technology as a whole hasn’t advanced in the consumer market.
Yes, I know why "the fuck" R-12 was stopped. But R-134a was a scam pushed by the chemical companies over cheaper, better alternatives. At the time, R-12 was $0.60/pound a few years before it was banned. R-134a was $15.00/pound ($25 in today's money!). R-134a is typically 30% less efficient at cooling, so takes 30% more gasoline for the same amount of air conditioning. DuPont Chemicals company said "Of course we love the Earth! We love profits more!". They made a killing on the forced changeover. We should have changed over to R-290a. It is MORE efficient than R-12, has 1/1000 the global warming potential of R-134a, and costs less than $1.00/pound TODAY. R-134a is still $7.00/pound. "Ooooh but its flammable!". True, but so is R-134a. When R-134a burns you get hydrogen fluoride gas which is extremely toxic. When R-290a burns you get water and CO2. Think about then when you see a car wreck with a fire.
Lot's of people in Europe still deal in feet, inches and miles. The European dictators (EU) tried to force us all to use metric measurements but most people don't bother.
Wagons are great, transportation for families, holding long items such as surfboards, ladders small kayaks, our Pontiac safari went completely flat in the rear seat area and was great for camping and hauling stuff. I have owned 3 Volvo wagons but these nice long wagons are rare. Beautiful old car.
I guess I'm old. This was the downsized full size car that came out in 1977. I remember it as being noticeably smaller than the 1976 and earlier GM wagons that had the clamshell tailgate. Oh, and you know you can't drive around with the tailgate glass rolled down. If you do, the exhaust sucks into the car.
This Wagon (1977 - 1990 generation:) 4000 Pounds Clamshell Wagons (1971 - 1976 generation:) 5,000 Pounds, give or take a few hundred depending on which G.M. make and model. Not too surprising why the Clam wagons usually got about 10 - 12 MPG, especially since they had 350s or 400s or 455s (depending) and did not have Overdrive transmissions.
My mother owned a 1966 ford wagon I really like that wagon as a young kid. It had a cool square front end the whole body was square. My mother said it used to much gas in the 1970's she traided it for a bigger newer Ford wagon it had a 6 cylinder in it and I remember the back tail gate opening both ways dropping down or side ways. My parent's sold that wagon at the end of the 1970's and bought a brand new empty van. My Pop's and my brother's built the inside of it wall to wall carpeting with custom benches the bottoms flipped up to store stuff in. I always sat in the back of the van by the back window. They owned that all through the 1980's then my mother bought a new mini van drove it for 10 year's and bought another new mini van great on gas good people carrier and groceries or what ever you want to put in it and great on gas for traveling with the mini van.
My dad had a 1980-81(?) charcoal grey one with red pin stripping. He had it all the way into the late 90s. I drove it through the last three years of highschool (87-89). I took it on dates and to the drive in. It was great, especially the powerful engine and space for all your friends!👍🏼
In the 80s, sharp, boxy corners were all the rage until the Ford Taurus changed the game. November update: OMG, the cybertruck is gonna bring boxy corners back.
@@briananthony3645 what the fuck are you trying to convey? If it's anything other than the fact that you are SO stupid and lazy you can't even string a tiny sentence together, you failed.
I care about plastered-on wood paneling, Doug.
Hey, LGR's here!
Lmao! I can totally see LGR driving something with wood paneling on the sides.
Custom Cruiser, LGR edition....
Heh, wood grain
Man you could fit a ton from computer reset in this beast
I was adopted at the age of 5 in 1980 and I remember riding to my new home in that great back seat! That was the life!
I was adopted at the age of 5 in 1968. I remember being driven around by my mother in her 4dr Chevy Corvair. Great times n experiences.Hav a great n safe year to all.
@@1alsaidi319 How the fk would he know? He said he was 5.
happy early/late 45 birthday :)
@@ps5056 by researching what car it was or was told by his/her foster parents.
Hell yeah, no IPhones, no Twitter, no distractions. People had to talk to each other back in those days
Oh my Lord, yes. I understand you have the pay the bills, but I'd rather see reviews like this all day versus reviewing new cars.
Sounds like you need RegularCars.
I like these old skool car reviews, also. Esp clean examples!
YES. He could pay the bills with these old cars thought, the new ones are just for bankety-bank.
Or the rare cars that you don't see often.. one of the first videos i watched of his was that convertible nissan murano thing
@H Collins He's not pretentious. He's a goof and likes to play pretentious.
As a European, to me, this car is the epitome and everything American I can imagine in a car. Big family, land yacht, no style or grace, just a big, comfy, land boat for your dogs and loud kids, throwing stuff around while you cruise smoking and arm up on the bench seat, and playing some old 80s tunes from the crappy radio.
So old American that it makes ME nostalgic hahah
I imagine you (and most Europeans) get that impression from Hollywood.. it's unfortunate and sad that that's the main window most of the world has into US life
@@nthgth That's not really the case at all anymore lol. We get the impression of America from seeing Americans on the internet.
@@nthgth Yeah, random videos and what not online. UA-cam videos. It's a lot more representative than hollywood is, so I don't see how it's worse tbh lol.
@@AAARREUUUGHHHH I see your point, but it's worse because that sampling leans toward the most whiny, immature, angry, misguided, etc.
I'm sure it's the same for online content from all countries, and knowing this you and I might take it with a grain of salt, but still.
@@AAARREUUUGHHHH ...on second thought, yeah, I guess that's not worse than Hollywood, it's about the same lol
2:46 For European friends out there , it's 3 FEET longer than a C class. Very helpful Doug
That's a meter for you Europeans.
Or roughly 90 cm
Mercedes has only started selling more cars in the last couple of decades, so for older European car owners this measurement would not tell that much. VW, FIAT or something like that should be used as reference.
@@petertobin8938 Look at this dude failing at math.
@@Ulexcool it's 91.44 cm
Which is basically a metre
You melt
Doug: here’s a 3.5 million dollar Ferrari.
Me: meh.
Doug: here’s a brown station wagon
Me: go onnn...
I'm the same. Bugatti...pass. Wait, is that a Yugo?
Same here. I'll take something like this over some chode ass Lambo or Ferrari.
I’m the exact same
same not gonna lie
Same
7:22 imagine driving behind some old wagon and see doug demuro staring back at you
A real life horror movie
Ultra CNC lol make sure it’s not a Buick reatta
Ultra CNC lol
giving you a dougscore with his eyes
I'd just catch up to him and toss him the owners manual for my car 🤷♂️
The steering wheel is dainty because this was always for mom to drive. 😊 the F and R on the tape player is for fast forward and reverse for the tape. One final thing- I’m gen x and boomer parents did not like dogs in their cars so that would have been very rare. I can tell you that moms and grandmothers had zero trouble driving these cars - thank you for fun video!
I came here looking for this. not many things named as hidden really are. That adds to the video for me, like little bits of stuff I remember from being in the wagon.
Totally agree F and R is fast forward and reverse for the cassette player, some cars only had FF which was fast forward. I'm a big Old's fan, I owned three, a 65 Vista Cruiser, 76 Cutlass and an 82 Cutlass, great cars.
so beautiful. how could anyone possibly hate on this absolute family land yacht?! i HATE how wagons fell off in popularity SO sharply in the US
@Moto Guzzi your wagon is not a land yacht. Small, inline engine powered, full of unnecessary electronics, hard and expensive in maintenance. And also I don't know any european wagon which was built on independent perimeter frame, like this one.
P.S.: except Wartburg kombi.
The reason why Euro wagon smaller is because the city roads are too small to drive. My family had light pickup truck ("light" in in US standard) and it feels like driving a tank because of the road size.
I felt that on a personal level
Amen man.....AMEN!
I wanna put a hemi in it....lol
Things I miss about the 80's cars:
- Bench seats
- shift stick on the column.
- auwfuly soft suspension (super comfy).
- the ton of memories.
The fleetwood though omg the seats
What about crotch coolers?
Shift stick on the column? My 2012 has it on the column
Nothing better for a long road trip, no need for "sporty" or "road feel". Just gliding above the road to the tune of a rumbling v8, all problems in the world become a distant memory.
@@doctorfeinstone6524 your 2012 has a manual trans on the column?
Wood paneling...
About 20ft long...
Underpowered V8...
RWD...
Chrome everywhere...
It's perfect.
Except for the underpowered. Everything else is perfect.
...and custom 😎
The wood panelling was to make the cars appear environmentally friendly post gas crisis.
@jdslyman ...it does sound like I'm joking...but it's actually true! They actually thought people would go for that vibe. The tree on wheels image of love and understanding for the environment despite fume laden tail pipe exhausts 80s style.
@jdslyman yeah yeah that's just repressive stuff for the driver - and such heavy cars.
This car represents a good portion of my childhood. Our family didn't have one but my friend down the block did, as did so many others. I spent many hours riding in that car, and honestly I'd love to have one right now.
we went to drive ins pulled the car in backwards laid down the rear seats with blankers and saw Incredible Mr Limpett on screen while mom and dad messed around in front seat
When you were a kid, and had the chance to ride in that back seat...my God, you ruled the world.
We used to fight over it! Lol! We even had an old LTD wagon that had sideways seating for 4 kids.
"You think i kill two kids and a Woman? fuck that! i dont need that shit in my life"
I rode in the back of an 89 Caprice Estate Wagon with my Grandma (Dad was driving) at least once when I was a 3 or 4 year old. That's a cherished memory. I also ran out of the car one other day, and touched the exhaust pipe. That later experience is "burned" into my memory.
My dad had a banana yellow one in the late 70s (with an 8-track player!). I remember that rear-facing back seat being a recipe for car sickness.
The ONLY acceptable name for the rear facing seats are 'Tail-Gunner Seats'. I used to pretend to 'shoot down enemy planes' while being driven around. My dad even used a windshield marker pen to draw on fake crosshairs/targets.
To me a non american this car looks like every other car in Hollywood Movies that I watched in my childhood
Same
That's because they were essentially the same cars 😆😆😆😆
@@amymandeville8342 Regular cars in the 80's were a bland mash of square boxes that came in various shades of baby diarrhea. I drive a 1985 Audi in metallic poop brown and I think it looks tremendous 😂😂
@@ToastbrotRaver exactly! 😂😂😂
Yes it does.
For those curious, here is the soundtrack for the Oldsmobile Complimentary Tape Cartridge in 1985:
Unknown Artist - Oldsmobile Theme -
Cyndi Lauper - Time After Time -
Mike Reno & Ann Wilson - Almost Paradise -
Enrique Iglesias & Willie Nelson - To All The Girls I've Loved Before -
Barbra Streisand - The Way He Makes Me Feel -
Larry Gatlin & The Gatlin Brothers - Denver -
Janie Fricke - Lonely People -
Mickey Gilley - Fool For Your Love -
Charly McClain - Surround Me With Love -
Michael Jackson - Billie Jean -
Luther Vandross - Never Too Much -
Deniece Williams - Let's Hear It For The Boy -
Kent Jordan - Theme From "Terms of Endearment" -
The Cleveland Orchestra, George Szell - Overture to "The Marriage of Figaro" K. 492 Composed By - Mozart*
The Philadelphia Orchestra, William Smith (4) - Fur Elise Composed By - Beethoven*
Philippe Entremont, Piano* - Waltz No. 15 In A-Flat Major, OP. 39 Composed By - Brahms*
The Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy - Serenade Composed By - Schubert*
Thank you. You are a hero
Great post!! I remember my grandparents got a new Cutlass in like '78 and it had a sample cassette too (can't recall the track list). I'd never seen a cassette player in a vehicle before then.
I don't know if i should be worried that you know that or congratulat you lol
I have this whole tape converted over to CD and MP3
I'm just glad Iglesias was on there LMAO!
My grandpa was a UAW member and worked in the plant that built these for 20 years. I never got to ride in one, but with him being gone now this video really made me smile. Thanks Doug!
I'm impressed someone kept this boat in good condition. I would imagine 99% of these are in scrapyards or crushed cubes.
We had the 86 Buick version that I swear the wood decal was peeling all over by the time we sold it. I was impressed too (why would you choose this car to keep in good condition?)
Why is that hair moving with the content on my screen wtf 😆
@@daviddyer8807 because no one else would, while everyone else is saving mustangs and camaros, this guy saved something a bit more obscure, love it!
Cash for clunkers must have ended them
A lot of em survive because they were family and grammy cars. Drove smarr, not hard
Doug Score for Doug DeMuro
styling: 1/10 His sense of style do not exist
Acceleration: 5/10 He gets a 5 because of his long legs, but doesn't workout
Handling: 7/10
no comment
Fun Factor: 7/10 He seems like he's a fun guy
Cool Factor: 5/10 He's not the coolest guy but knows a lot about cars
Total Weekend Score: 25
Features: 6/10 He gets a lot of quirks and features but wears 2 shirts
Comfort: 4/10
no comment
Quality: 10/10 produces high quality car review videos
Practical: 7/10 He seems very practical and doesn't seem to buy unnecessary things
Value : 7/10
do not come with bumper to bumper unlimited warranty
Total Daily Score: 34
Total DougScore: 59/100 which puts him right in the middle above Hoovie's garage
Lol
What about his wife?
Handling 3/10 you can't really hold on to him very well while fucking him because he isn't that THICCC
@@igorblyat7839 🤔
@@Pear_God idk but she can answer the handling and comfort for Doug Demuro lol
"for europeans friends this is 3 feet longer than a mercedes c class"
"i dont know what feet are"
They are the things at the bottom of your legs!
3 feet is a meter but 4 inches shorter 😉
If you don't know what feet are then apparently you can't run. 🙃
It's 5.4 meters. 3 feet less would be 4.5 meters. (you probably googled it by this point though)
Europeans aren't our friends, so...
One thing that Doug forgot to mention is this car did not have a steel radio antenna poking out anywhere. Even my dad's Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser did not have a steel radio antenna. For this vehicle, the antenna was actually thin wire in like a zig zag pattern across the very top of the windshield, going from the center out to both side mirrors.
The built in the windshield wire was the standard equipment antenna. My 1979 Custom Cruiser has the power antenna on the right front fender. I don't know for sure, but I'm confident the power antenna option was available through 1990. I won't lie, it's a rear chore to work on should the need arise, but it is nice having it go up and down with the radio power.
Was really expecting more comments about the clock being set to 4:20
same
Maybe we're the only pot smokers! Canada ftw! :3
lmao i was thinking the same thing
Nice
would be agreeing ...but by the time I got here, you had it covered
2:45 "for our european friends"
uses feet
Why don't just use Centimeters? It's so damn easy!
SevenGears You’re a fucktard.
3 feet is about 90cm - 1m, FYI! For the interest of curiosity, even though I am European, I use both units to measure my height (which is 6ft or 1.83m), so I know!
3 ft is bout a meter
Our European friends = the rest of the world
Doug, The F/R switch on the radio is used to forward and reverse the cassette. It has nothing to do with speaker control.
the guy is annoyingly stupid and talk a lot dumb shit, and the problem is he don't even search for the actual facts just personal infos bullshit
@@3rdDanPrime Take a breath, Bara.
Yes! I guess if you are the kind of guy that has to explain that 3 across seating involves 1 on either end & 1 in the middle (Twice!), I can see where the confusion on the fast forward & rewind button is possible. The only explanation I can think of is clearly displayed by the time on the clock!
@Bara Escudu Yup, I've noticed his ignorance in a few of his videos now. As long as he gets those views, he don't give a shit ;)
supwitchu100 don’t throw heat on doug. he wasn’t wearing 2 shirts this video therefore his knowledge was a little off
I had the Custom Cruiser's cousin and competitor, the Ford Country Squire Wagon. Ford's third row 'jump seats' were 2 single seats mounted sideways along the sidewalls. The two-way power tailgate was awesome. Those big bumpers sticking so far out from the body were mounted on shock absorbers that compressed, so minor hits never affected the body panels. Best boat I ever had.
Doug, I actually owned a car like this for a while. Boy did you get the A/C wrong. That car had the most powerful AC of any car I ever owned, even my two AC unit Lincoln Navigator couldn't come close. Probably credit the R12 and GM's history of killer AC. The Olds could chill that car on a 100F day from roasting to comfortable in 5 minutes. You might think the vents were small, but they pumped massive quantities of air at 35F out. Didn't need rear AC vents, the rear got plenty.
Second saying the dash and car lacked style overlooks that rectangular lines WERE the popular style when that car was designed. Round and flowing was passe (so 60's)
Third, the era of the massive thick steering wheel came later, all 60-70's car had 'thin' wheels. You didn't need a big thick wheel when you had power steering. The current affectation of fat wheels hadn't arrived.
I do have to agree it was a slug. The car was introduced in 1977 with the choice of a 350 or 403 CID V8. That at least had more torque, though nothing of that era had much power. WHen they dropped to the 307CID it got seriously slow. As to how it drove, it tracked well and was astoundingly quiet for the era, making it a good freeway cruiser (just avoid steep grades).
Finally, what you seem not to know is that this is the DOWNSIZED full sized car. The peak of the wagon era was the late 1960's Ford Country Squire. Much larger than this car, faster too.
I was about to make all of these comments when I found yours. Well said. Sometimes, I think he tries way too hard to find things to moan about, belittle or ridicule about a car in an effort to try to make the video work.
Car's used different refrigerants back then and cooled MUCH better. Modern refrigerants do not get nearly as cold so, as a consequence, more vents are placed throughout the vehicles to move more air in an attempt to circulate the less cool air better. If was very common to get very cold VERY easily and have to turn the thing down. The systems just didn't last long without issues or leaks and killed mileage and engine power
I have a 1972 Pontiac Ventura with the 307 and it makes 130 hp. The slowness doesn't bother me, and it's more horsepower than my 1983 Volvo 240 has. Like this Olds in this video, they're not designed to be quick. When you look at them from that perspective then they accelerate plenty fast. They were designed to be comfortable, and that they are. The 307 is reliable, pretty smooth, and offers up all it's torque at the bottom of its rev range. I don't like an engine having to rev high just to accelerate, and my Pontiac accelerates just fine without hardly going above idle. I only notice the lack of power when I put my foot down. It's laughable, but it's not underpowered.
@@jacobbelcher3512 Yours would be a Chevy 307. The one in this car is an Olds 307. Completely different engines.
@@randybehrmann5454 yep you are absolutely right and I didn't remember that when I wrote that comment. Thanks for reminding me.
The 'wire wheels' were actually just a wire wheel cover over a regular steel wheel. And that 4 speaker Delco sound system was top of the line baby!
If I lived in the US I would buy this car.
Can't get more American than this.
And it’s why we love it here
In the '80s, true
You can get a chevy c10 with straight pipes, can't get more american than that
You can buy used Humvees from the US Marines and drive without doors and no roof..can't get more American than this.
@@mrcloudiesbestfriend You say that like they don't have seat belts or something. My Dad hit a pole in a 1984 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Sedan in 2017. He wore the seat belt (buckled to the middle passenger's holder as I specifically told him that day that the driver one was broken,) so he went home the same day. Sore knees? Sure, his knees went thru the dashboard. NO AIR BAGS, and yet it wasn't that big of a deal. He did need emergency stomach surgery a month later, which was probably partly related, but he had an ulcer there.
Mind, these cars are still concerning if someone hits you in the side. But if you're referring to that "1959 vs 2009 Chevrolet" video, you're going by an incomplete hypothesis. The 59 Bel Air shown there was among the worst of the worst, with one of the worst car frames ever, even criticized back in the day when people didn't care about seat belts. 1980s cars are a whole other decade.
I wish cars like this were still being made these days. I'd have one. Huge, comfy, easy to drive, just floats along and so easy to maintain. Fabulous. How times have changed, with modern cars you get; --hard seats, stiff suspension, cramped interiors and DIY maintenance that's almost impossible to perform. Well, that's progress folks!
I completely agree with you. Im only 16 but my dads always has had older American cars which have comfy bouncy leather seats and amazing suspension that makes it so comfortable. Also i prefer the looks of older styled cars and have big v8 in most of them.
while i was listening to doug explain the interior as awkward, and a bit uncomfortable, i could only think about how comfortable my same generation caprice classic is, compared to any new cars i sit in and drive. the thin steering wheel never felt cheap or silly to me.
Yeah this thing gets 14MPG needs a tune up every year, has no power at all, seats fall apart in the sun, hard to start on cold mornings, and if you got 150 out of it that was a lot. new car has 2x the power 2x the milage will go easy 50k without doing anything but changing oil. has cruise, better AC, ABS, traction control, airbags, and is way more survivable in any accident. better lighting, better handling, but yeah,
@@asbestosfiber Yeah, and excruciatingly boring with no character whatsoever.
@@asbestosfiber Stop, you're hurting his agenda that everything in the past is better than today. Stop using facts and logic.
The reason bumpers didn't "flow into the design" back then, is because they could actually take a bump...
Savagely true.... I bought my car, I parked, and then the next day I discovered that the front bumper was already scratched... thank you....
Case in point, the Volvo 144 & 244s, that had shock absorbers behind the front and rear bumpers. You could have a pretty heavy impact and basically be unharmed.
Yep, that's true. The old plain rubber over-riders on bumpers then were such a good idea - absorbed minor dings, and even they didn't, the whole bumper was super easy to replace. Now it just trashes your car and costs a bloody fortune (looking at my iMiev.... got shunted at
The 5 MPH federal standard was dropped for 1982 or maybe 1983, so a holdover model like that probably had the hydraulic shock absorbers in the front and rear. That's the reason for the extra foot of length beyond the end of the cargo hold. They were great for minor dings, but in anything above 5 mph, there was a lot of expensive hardware to replace. Also, once the chrome sections got dinged or scratched, they usually started to rust out, though a few cars in at the end of that era (eg. Ford Fairmont) had all-aluminum bumpers.
so true things were different back then
*Clock says **4:20* *starts thinking about That 70’s Show with pot and the Vista Cruiser*
I saw that "420" made me wonder if he's "happy"
"You can literally...cruise the vistas!"
Dab
Hello Wisconsin!!
Obviously this is code
This was the first car my dad bought when he moved to America in the early 80s! We drove this car everywhere and it was amazing
When you’re riding in the third row and you put the tailgate window down, no matter how fast you go the air would never blow in and cool you off. I spent many many hours in the back of that car and I loved it. My sister even got her foot caught in the door jam when shutting the back door. I’ve never heard someone scream so loud!
You could easily sleep in the back without messing with the front seats. Motels didn’t get many guests back in the day from folks who owned this. How many people were conceived in the back of these land yatchs? lol
Isaac Kamau k
I laid on the front seat(s) of one of these B Bodies... Only it was an 84 Caprice Sedan. Somewhat cozy, minus the seat belt buckles sticking up unless you have pillows or coats for cushioning.
Took my drivers test in one... Failed the parallel park section. Gee, wonder why?
Jeje yeah
Then I borrowed the neighbors 82 Corolla, passed first time.
You need a CDL to be able to parallel park one of these. I've seen shorter RVs.
@@rocketraccoon1976 it was big, but cruised 85mph like nothing, compared to other 1984 cars...
You'd need the whole block to parallel park it.
This car is a Hoovie special! He would have bought it for 8 grand, spend another 2 grand fixing it and then sell it for 4 grand.
Oh Wizard!
I bought the cheapest Custom Cruiser in USA!
Or buried it in the backyard of his new pad.
He can start by putting the cover on the air filter correctly. I'm pretty sure its upside down.
@@pfort12 does it really matter?
\
Station wagons are my spirit animal! The versatility of this Custom Cruiser, the fake wood, the rear facing bench seats… I LOVE IT!
And I’m sorry for what I’m about to do:
“I FOUND OUT LONG AGOOOO….
ITS A LONG WAY DOWN THE HOLIDAY ROAD!!!”
Doug, I didn’t read all the comments, so maybe someone has already mentioned this: You missed a lot of great quirks. Maybe you didn’t have enough time.
The last panel in the “Back Back”(what my kids called it), was not folded flat, thus making a totally flat floor. Pull on that black strap and then it made a lid over that footwell. It had a latch and you could keep large items there and also haul plywood or drywall panels.
Also a real quirky thing was the spare tire area. It was to your left as you sat in the “Back Back”. You pull on that plastic panel and move it out of the way to reveal the FULL SIZED spare and jack and tools.
Another quirky thing that you missed was the trash can in the passenger side footwell. Cadillac even did this on their cars. They were color matched and carpeted and clipped in and out so as to empty easily.
Some of the stereo systems had a CB player in them. Squelch just right and CB transmissions would override your music so that you could be informed of traffic conditions ahead. I had one that was AM/FM/8Track/CB and one that was AM/FM/Cassette/CB.
How do I know? I had a wife, 3 kids, their friends, one Pontiac Grand Safari wagon, one Buick Estate wagon, and one Pontiac Parisienne.
Thank you for pointing out that he didn't finish laying out the cargo area! I yelled at my TV when he said that
Also folding down the seats made a cargo floor bigger than a full size pickup bed, and more covered cargo then anything short of a 1 ton cargo van
The "F" and "R" buttons were for Auto Reverse on the tape deck. The fader was likely controlled by a ring on the outside of one of the main knobs.
I know this because I’m old 😂
I was going to say same thing, because I'm old also and I had a 84 Cutlass Supreme in highschool so I know for sure. LOL
John Hampton hahahahaha!! My pop had an ‘83 or ‘84 Cutlass Ciera with a 4 cyl. What a POS! But I remember being driven to summer camp in a Vista Cruiser. That thing was awesome.
My parents had a 1983 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan with an almost identical interior. I called it the USS Oldsmobile. Same stereo controls.
83 cutlass supreme brougham was my first car in 1991 when I got my license . Had the same radio....Which was quickly chucked for an Alpine "Benzi box"
I have zero interest in the $100k+ cars usually reviewed. These are the ones that are fun to watch!
same
Damn straight. Where are the BuHoggs
Exactly the exotic are just over done. You've seen it before.
Hell yea dude your right about that
Totally true dude
I believe the station wagon is the best automobile version available. An 8/9 passenger body style with rear facing 3rd row is awesome for large families plus the small block V8 is a robust engine that can last forever with minor maintenance.
Not to mention the 3'+ overhangs allow you to scrape on almost every dip in the road.
ummm Duh-g, 15:25 "F" and "R" is NOT 'front and rear', it's "fast forward" and "rewind", FOR THE CASSETTE PLAYER.
Funny how You said duh-g lmfao
you think he would have figured that out. I bet you it only has 2 speakers like my grandmas brougham.
Good catch
This is how we know what era Doug didn’t grow up in.
@Chris Bramblett true
*Funny how Doug shows his young age here. Many of us literally grew up in these cars, and made our memories as kids, traveling with the family, etc. They may be odd by today's standards, but they were perfect for what they needed to be at the time.*
Sitting in the back cargo area making funny faces at the car behind us.
Doug is incorrect here, an actual digital clock was available for this car when it was made. According to the 1985 Oldsmobile brochure, you could opt for a Delco ETR stereo with electronic digital clock combo. In that case there would be a "Delta 88" script in the normal place for the clock in the dash. A quartz clock and this quartz digital clock were also available with the standard radio. The F and R on this radio is fast forward and reverse for the cassette player. If you look closely, you can see a lever around the volume knob to adjust the sound on the speakers from front to rear in the car. I won't hold this against Doug since he reviews so many different types of vehicles, but just thought I'd address that
@@jkeelsnc imagine pooping in a hole
Imagine having to reverse a tape cassette.
He does this a lot. You should see how he constantly calls the 1988 Volga a 1970s car.
@@visionop8 1988 Volga was basically the same as 1971 one so he had a point.
Because it is..
Doug, thanks for making this wonderful video. As a previous Oldsmobile sales consultant for the now defunct brand, I can truly say that every one of these wagons I ever delivered provided 100% satisfaction to its owners and their families, especially to the many kids who got to ride in the rearward facing fold-away back seat. One thing you got wrong though, the F and R button on the stereo was a cassette tape control, not a front to rear fader control. Pushing it into the up position would fast Forward the tape, while pushing it down would Rewind it. The middle position was just a default. BTW, I still have my Oldsmobile demo cassette(s) and they still sound great to this day. Thanks again for your great review. I would love to see you review the last gen version of these great cars, like the review you did for the Buick Roadmaster. A similar car, but different enough to earn it a different 'Doug Score'. Peter J. Martens, Founder: The Oldsmobile Forum'
I’m so glad my dad had one of these, that backseat was so much fun, plus your parents couldn’t reach back and smack you if you were acting up way back there.
I remember folding all the seats down and riding around like that until “no seatbelts” became unthinkable
@Stormy D. kids "bounced back" from stuff a lot easier then, everyone seems so...."fragile" now it seems
As big of a car as it was, they couldn't reach you in the normal back seat either lol
@@aaronstepien2363 no, they just don't want to get tickets now because we can't afford that shit
Thanks, interestingly I had forgotten.. we had a 1959 DODGE 9: PASS/ rear Face rear seat/ push Button/ lots of chrome for our five Kids, etc. ... ADMITTEDLY THE VIsta cruisers of 1970s were kind of attractive, with Glass observation, etc.
"... for our european friends ..."
"... 3 feet longer ..."
I'm still trying to work that our in metres, so it's not actually Euro friendly at all! ;-)
@@lundimardi1975 It's roughly a meter longer. A meter is about 39 inches, a foot is roughly 30 cm
I am actually amazed that this mammoth, old car is ONLY 3 feet longer than a C Class...... The hood itself looks 3 feet longer.
Euro tip: put all your 3 feet in front of each other and measure it with your 5 hands
3 feet are 1 yard, dummy!
“”For our European friends” ... then uses the Imperial System rather than Metric! lol
Smiles in UK.
And 3 ft is just about 1 meter, so it would have been much simpler in metric.
No country that uses the Metric System has put a man on the Moon.
@@basshead. - Because that's totally relevant when he's specifically talking to Europeans. Not to mention it's an absolutely idiotic argument because, A) NASA uses metric, and B) the lead architect of the Apollo programme was a German scientist basing his work on German rocket technology.
@@basshead. nasa use metric my dude
Doug... I don't know how I missed this, because I bought a brand new one in 1984, and loved it. I lived in Austin, TX and had seven kids as you mentioned...lol! I bought it through my father-in-law who had a fleet of trucks and cars for his wire line service in New Mexico, and had all his vehicles, including this one, modified to get the maximum hp from the stock engine, so I remember it having plenty of power for the job. I also remember it floated like a cloud on the Highway, and the power steering was great! Maybe the one you reviewed had bad shocks...? I got compliments all of the time on "what a beautiful car it was!" The color on mine was much nicer and made a bick difference. The bumpers were standard size for the time, and rather small for a car that size. It was a very solid well-built car and it sure did the job for us...!
9:24
Kids smoking while riding down the street
That is how That 70's show was born! 💛
i love how at 13:10 the clock is also showing 420 :D
I had a '77 Buick Electra in 1987. Two rows of benches, we fit ten people.
Looking at the "rumble seat", I'm picturing teens borrowing the car, going cruising, and a couple making out in the back.
Doug do a little more homework that switch on the radio was for the cassette tape, F was fast forward, R was rewind. The speaker adjustment was the round disc on the volume or tuning knob.
Doug never does homework on the older cars.
I’ve got a 1979 Pontiac and I know exactly what you’re talking about! Lol!
The name is Griswold. Clark Griswold.
How he can not know that... he was frozen through 80's or what
Not to mention how do you get 30 songs on one cassette
Oh Doug. First, you can fold over the cover to the rear footwell. That DOES get you a completely flat surface. Second, perhaps more importantly, on the radio, the F-R is not changing where sound is coming out ... it’s fast-forward and rewind for the cassette. Source: this was my first car and I spent more time in it than I would ever like to admit. Perhaps you will want to have a vehicle’s owner around to explain some of the nuances. ;)
Yeah I noticed that too. Unfamiliar with the setup AND comparing to today's standard, thats why he is confused on why certain things are there thats we don't use today.
Smoking was HUGE back then, of course every car back then had 2 things, 1- cigarette tray and 2- a factory lighter
Exactly.. plus ashtray is not for only smokers.. its also where you put your trash in (small things) .. plus imagine kids have control over the rear window, how bad that would be . Doug is young and not familiar with cars.
My father bought one new in 1987, he always had station wagons. RIP dad love you.
The F/R control was for the auto-reverse cassette player, and it meant Forward/Reverse. It wasn't a fader control for Front/Rear.
Yeah. I was like, dude even my 90s bmw doesn't have a fader lmao.
I don't think so - cars did not have auto-reverse decks back then (and if they did, the deck cover would say "Auto Reverse"). This was for fast-forward (F) and rewind (R).
In any case, it's not a fader control.
alelokox88 We had a 1992 Chevy Caprice and it had a fader control
@@James-eg3nf, they definitely offered auto-reverse cassette players back then. Wonderful feature when we just had to hear it all again -- and again -- etc..
THIS IS WHAT I WANT TO SEE.
DONT NOBODY GIVE A DAMN BOUT NO NEW MCLAREN OR THE LATEST HYBRID AUDI
IM TRYNA SEE THE CAR FROM BIG FOOT & THE HENDERSON’S
Harry and the Hendersons
Exactly. I’m so sick and tired of new vehicles they’re all the same
Yes, more fun to see old shit :D
@@HitManTPanda "Bigfoot and the Handerspoons" was the bargain bin knock off.
There's nothing cool about this car. Nada!
A true slice of Americana from before the world went SUV crazy. One day we'll realise that the estate/ Station wagon was all the car we ever needed.
In Buick's defense, the 3rd row ash tray is more likely for parents when they're sitting in the back watching their kid's baseball game or whatever. It made a good tailgating vehicle.
I loved this video. I would much rather watch a video about a 1985 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser than any new multi million dollar supercar. Thanks Doug!
Addendum: Awesome easter egg with the clock lol
Every word of this comment, absolutely yes!
Me to. I'm from UK but I love older American cars. This car makes me think of Chevy chase heading to Wally world lol. Good old days 😁
16:10 I actually got out of a ticket one time driving this station wagon because I showed the police officer the way the speedometer was designed and he cut me a break because he could see how it would be hard to tell the exact speed you were going!
My parents had an early model one when I was a kid. We would pile 2 adults and 5 children in this and drive 16 hours to see family several times a year.
Edit: I was telling my 82 yo father about this episode. He reminded me that we drove for 3 days in 78 in the snow storm that shut down the Midwest in this car. My father had transferred offices and we had to get from Duluth Minnesota to Grand Rapids Michigan to close on a house. He had a after market CB in the car and hood ask permission from trucks on the road to tuck in tight behind them to stay on the road. We stayed overnight in Milwaukee in a utility closet at a hotel because they were booked solid. Then made it to Gary Indiana and ended up getting the Honey moon suite because that was all they had. I was 8 at the time and the whole trip is like a dream. My mother stoically calming the kids as my dad white knuckled it for 3 days.
And y'all slept in the damn thing too, didn't you?
@@JL-sm6cg yes! Lol
My dad would put down the seats to make one huge sleeping area. Cramped with 5 kids but not terrible.
@@northernzeus768 sounds very cozy actually.
@@terminator3000 Some people actually converted these to 'camper wagons’, took out the 2nd and 3rd rows of seats and replaced them with a mattress and cabinets...
We had an 1982 white with the wood, blue leather interior, it was a great wagon, the wife and I loved it. We called ours "Intrepid", it was so long it, it was like driving a landing strip on the highway, a fun wagon, many great trips. Thank you Doug
Notice how there’s a 55 wedged between 50 and 60 on the speedometer, a throwback to the national speed limit of 55 mph...
Yes, automakers were ordered to highlight the 55 MPH on all speedometers, also the top speed listed was mandated to be 85 MPH. I know of at least one automaker where the numbers stopped at 85 MPH but the marks went on to 145 MPH. Also the only cars that had speedometers higher then 85 were law enforcement. I could pin the 85 MPH speedometer in my 1978 Cadillac easy.
Good eye!
55 Saves Lives
Ah shit, my 90 Accord has that along with automatic seat belts, always wondered why about the 55.
I'm not american and that 55 caught my eye instantly. Wondered why it was there, so thanks. :)
It might have been common back in the day, but I'm kinda sad that Doug didn't bring up that little feature.
I would rather drive this than any new family sedan. Reminds me of grandmas apartment - safe and warm!
It's not safe though is it... No head rests are a recipe for broken necks and just because it's big doesn't mean it absorbs crash energy well.
Crashing an older car was different those bumpers destroyed anything you hit and I remember when I was a kid you never saw as many car in a ball wrecks the car just didn’t go as fast
Somebody put a corvette engine in a 1984 98 Regency, sedan version of this car. Tripled the horsepower. His wife didnt understand until she drove it and then she didnt want to give it up. About the steering if you owned the car you could steer it with one finger, effortlessly spinning the steering wheel. I know this be ccause i bought an 84 98 Regency in 1991 and used until donating it 2 years ago. Those bumpers had horizontal shock absorbers that gave the bumpers 5-6 inches of shock absorbtion. There was a metal front structure that the fiberglass front clip bolted onto that gave an additional 6 inches of crush. Loved the car it could eat miles at 80 - 90 miles an hour and you felt like you were sitting in your living room.
@@LordEvan5 The car wrecks didn't appear as bad because the cars didn't have crumple zones. You know what the crumple zone was? The human body taking all the energy of the crash. The bumpers were much better, though, because they were built to a higher regulation standard.
SPCStudios 2017
I totally agree with you. I once drove Chevrolet Caprice Classic wagon from early 80's and that was SO nice experience. Not like today's bubble cars.
*Doug:* Can you imagine today someone coming out with a car called "The Custom Cruiser"? It’s just ridiculous
*Ferrari Superfast:* Hold my beer
@@Mandrak789 Yeah, I'm especially struggling to keep up with Mercedes' nomenclature these days.
It's easier with supercars as they're far less common.
The Ferrari La Ferrari: I dropped the beer
TheRealCarlos \ lmao
*Ferrari: hold my red wine
Bazinga!!!
I miss the days when I would go down the road in one of my 4 station wagons. I had a 62 Falcon Squire, 71 Plymouth Sport Suburban, 71 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser and a 66 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser. Not only could you load them for anything you could think of from a trip to the ocean or climbing a mountain, but it seemed that they could handle it all with no effort as well. They might not have been the technological wonders that today's cars seem to be, but they were ready to go when I was. Today, I drive one of the expensive so-called luxury German brands that always seems to break down when I want to use it. How I would love to be heading into the sunset just once more in a big heavy station wagon, a time machine from my past.
The first and second generation Vista Cruisers were beautiful cars, with their roof glass.
Oh the memories of chain smoking Marlboros while my mum drove me to school. Fun fact: In the 80s school desk came with ashtrays.
Holy what? Ashtrays from what year on
@@the_retag my school I graduated from was a district alternative school and in 98/99 they finally did away with smoking permission slips. But u could only get them at the 2 alternative schools. It was wild. Oh yea it was only for 16 and up by then too.
@@davidtryon1205 still damn lotta lobbyists i guess to manage that kinda stuff
Not in the civilized world they didn't.
Those werent ashtrays, Putz, they were pencil holders...
My uncle had this car.
That deep pocket in the trunk area is where I used to vomit during long car rides.
Ahh, memories..
EWW
Too much detail bro, too much detail...
lmao
how did they empty it ? with a bucket ?
@@filipce3 I don't know.
My uncle cleaned it. 😅
The fact the clock is at 4:20 in the car makes so much sense, this is like the ideal stoner vehicle.
Get high and then sleep in the back. It makes perfect sense.
@@travishabursky4362 I was gonna suggest something else for that open area... but now that I consider it, a young man back then, with this car, was probably doing more sleeping alone than anything else haha!
Those shocks wouldn’t be getting and rigorous testing, that’s for sure.
@@travishabursky4362 it seems like the perfect car for being a hotbox lmao
Imagine you and two stoner friends passing a big-ass bong in the back, listening to Metallica and complaining about their Dads. Fuckin’ mint.
My dad had a 1972 Town &country station wagon, and it was a big boat. It floated down the road. It had a 440cubic inch engine. It had all power windows, tail gate window.
Dad used it to hall trash to the dumps.
8:56 The foot well has a cover, you just didn't flip it closed. It locks with the door key too.
I was going to say that plus he had the the switch on the tape deck wrong it wasn't for the fader it was Forward and Reverse. I don't know what's wrong with the one he drove but the 2 I had rode smooth
@@chriswilson2748 I drive these cars... they may handle like a marshmallow, but they are smooth and quiet.
Came to say exactly this. Folded totally flat with the front seats, too. Could fit a 2'x4'x10' box in that space
These cars can carry a 9'6" kayak (laying on the front seat between the headrests), and tons of camping equipment, and keep everything inside, and out of the rain!
12 foot long 2x8s are no problem either, from the dashboard, with only a few inches past the tailgate, with the rear window lowered.
Chris Wilson I know right. That pissed me off. I really think he gave this car no justice
15:02 I see what you did with that clock.
ayeee
Yeah BUDdy!
nice
nice
Nice
Why didn't you play the tape?! I will die wondering what's on the Oldsmobile demo tape
James Mustillo fr
Play music in a youtube video? Probably would've gotten a copyright strike faster than you could say "quirks and features"
Because the tape player would have eaten the tape - and its not his to ruin
@@Halfpipesaur He could have at least TOLD us what was on it, assuming they had a list on the inside cover.
@@SAXONWARLORD1000AD lmao...you just dated yourself haha but you are so correct
god i love cars like this so much. i was born in the 2000s and never got to witness the glory of these being popular but i so badly want to own one and want to see vehicles like this brought back
Fun fact: Back in the day a horse and wagon were used to pick up supplies at the local rail way station hence the term station wagon........
my guy
Thank you
Thanks so much for the history lesson.
"Estate car" in the UK during that era. Now they are called "tourers" or "sports tourers"
Never knew that. Would assume it was just a name the car companies came up with.
I drove one of these for most of the 90's. I called it my "Poor Man's Suburban". It was our anti-minivan. It was glorious. I knew my wife, two kids and Labrador Retriever were all safe. Doug, thanks for the great memory.
U were a poor man lol
Damn if that was me I'd be so glad. I love this car and the Ford country squire.
@@Nexalian_Gamer Thing is, these were just used cars then. Imagine thinking similarly about a 16 year old Ford Explorer? People didn't look at Wagons with much fondness then, and there was a "wagons are un-cool and nothing to aspire to" stigma that I still don't understand.
@@simplesimon8255 why he was poor? Just because he drove a cool old car, doesn't mean that he was poor.
Maybe he bought the car because: one, he liked its style; two, he bought it because it was practical and maybe, MAYBE, I could be wrong, because he had two kids, a wife and a dog. But like I said, I could be wrong
I think you are safer today crashing in a Toyota Yaris than in this
*Crash Test Engineer* “Hmmmm so I’m looking for a crumble zone”
*Owner* “The crumble zone is the other car it hits”
*crumple
LMAO
Lewis Job - crumble? Apple or rhubarb?
@@markfox1545 rhubarb
What about pedestrians?
My dad had an '82 Chevy Impala station wagon with a 267 (4.4 Liter) 2bbl V8 good for 120hp. This video brings back a lot of memories. We kids used to sit in the rear-facing back seat and wave. We'd go on trips with 8 people inside and our luggage strapped on the roof rack. Sometimes, we'd go for cargo runs with the middle & back seats folded flat. Those wire-wheel hubcaps were a pain to clean & polish. Remember the chore of scrubbing the whitewall tires? BTW, the third brake light came out in 1985. On new cars and motorcycles from 1978 to '87, the speedometer only went up to 85mph, with the 55mph speed limit highlighted. That was a government mandate to get people to drive slower & save gas. Also, before 1986, odometers on American cars only had 5 digits. So when people saw the odometer up at 70K or so, they would trade the car in sooner and buy a new one. German & Japanese cars in the 80's had 6-digit odometers. Nowadays, people keep their cars for 150K miles or longer.
Inspired by National Lampoon's Vacation, I bought a 1979 Chevy Caprice Wagon (almost identical to this Olds) and drove it 1,200 on a road trip to California. It was an hilarious good time. The wagon, 25 years old at the time, held up mechanically and we were even squealing the tires at sea level. The fuel cost drained our budget and we barely made it back home -- although we did sleep in it most nights, so we saved on hotels. This car deserves a higher Doug score just because of its cultural significance.
superlazyorg it was “a hilarious good time”.....a......A... don’t f around
That's the hardest part of planning trips. You almost never have enough money for the return trip home. Cost of eating and gas kills the budget more than anything. Why do we get so hungry away from home?
Almost identical? They were identical.
@@kevaninthe4135 I believe he's talking about the color.
@@DeiHarper9361 Aha that would make more sense then.
I remember sitting in the very back seat when when i was 10 my dad purchased the same Oldsmobile new wagon to move to San Diego California from Detroit in the 70s RIP Dad!
😭😭😭😭😭 sorry for your loss
@@RealDexterMidnight thank you!
I was thinking about the one my grandfather had I'm so glad he did this
Rip
He keeps saying mothers drove them but it was mainly fathers driving them ……
Doug, the F /R switch is Forward and Reverse control for the cassette. It's standard with the Ralley Fun Pack.
How embarrassing Doug!
@jdslyman I used to have a '84 98 Regency Brougham.
Love that Vacation reference! Well played!
lol. I laughed so hard when he showed that switch. Then I just felt old.
@@jheff7309 Thank you for spotting it. Every year, fewer and fewer get the obscure references from the "old days."
*Is this the thing i sometimes find on GTA V? some families going on vacay and you hijack it and its slow AF and cant escape one star?*
Yes sir it is that POS with all the shit in the roof rack
D U N D R E A R Y R E G I N A
yes, but with about $1000 and a summit racing or Jeg's catalog, you can really wake that engine up!
you mean it's the best car in gta?
@@dzikrawardhani5585 No, slurpface, real life
When I was a kid, my best friend's parents had a '68 Olds Vista Cruiser wagon with the glass window in the roof over the back seat.Now that is a classic
2:45 "Or, for our European friends out there..."
*Gives length in feet*
Misha Seka he was referring to the Mercedes
@@Patrick3183 Right. But most Europeans don't know how long a foot is and seem to have issues with google.
37cm longer than a long-wheelbase S-Class
@@kyle857 If they can't figure out what a foot is then I pity them.
Born in 89 here my parents had an 84 ( give or take a year or two) custom cruiser and it was olive green with same interior green color. To this day it’s one of my favorite cars ever. Even if one of the back hubcaps was missing after moving one year lol
The only thing I think about when I see this car is Chevy Chase.
"You think you hate it now, wait til you drive it!"
and me
GRISWOLDS
Pig N A Poke and I uhh...oink, oink oink! 🐽
This is a 1985 Family Truckster.
I'm happy to see somebody has kept that nice old wagon in great shape.
I would like to know how it was stored. My parents owned one. It was ratty after 4 years. The wood grain pulled under the gas filler.
I wish Doug would include a bit of backstory how these clean versions of 30 year old cars came to be preserved.
They are probably restored
*Doug reviews a Model-T*
“It’s crazy to think you got a horn that sounded like aWOOOGA but that’s how things were back then.”
Even crazier is giving it a Doug Score.
😂😂
I would so watch that! But he probably wouldn't be able to start and drive it... it's not that easy.
Unlike the pansy sorry excuses for a horn that the Asian stuff has nowadays.
If gas prices were as low as when this car was released, I’d be mighty tempted to pick up a big ol’ boat like this. There’s an ‘89 Mercury Grand Marquis wagon on CarGurus for $3,300 about 20 miles from me, wood paneling and all. If only…!
I think this is my favorite Doug review. There was nothing like those big Detroit boats. I learned how to drive on the first generation version of this car, ours was a Chevy Caprice Estate. It was longer - long enough the third seat faced forward, with a large cargo area behind that seat. Imagine parallel parking that monster. The ride was insanely soft, and steering so numb you could steer that thin wheel with one finger. The first time I drove a small coupe, I was shocked that the whole car turned a corner at once.
Being an Oldsmobile enthusiast, my day has been made. Thank you Doug!
Same
Joseph Althaus my uncle has a 442
It’s really cool
@@andrewauto6082 I have an 80 Cutlass Supreme... It's really slow 😂
@@andrewauto6082 what year?
Custom Cruiser might be a silly name, but is it any less silly than stuff like CXQ-6 AWD Touring?
har har har har!!!! so true....
@Vivian Stimpson but that was one letter per car model.
Actually, Olds used this nomenclature in the Vista Cruiser, their smaller wagon. Arguably, Vista Cruisers were the coolest of all wagons with the little rooftop windows over the rear seat.
@@kbasa For Vista Cruisers, the rooftop windows over the rear only lasted from 1964 (the start) to 1972. 1973 - 1977 models are not really "Vista Cruisers" except in name.
One of the quirks he forgot to mention for the '85 Custom Classic is that the shifter had two D's on it, including a D in a circle. The D in the circle is overdrive, the gear you would want to use when you drive on the freeway.
Love the flipped over air filter cover. I did that to my ‘72 Monte Carlo. Didn’t improve performance at all, but it sounded cool.
Yup, noticed that right away. Doesn't do a dam* thing but that was the style at the time!
I learned how to drive, AND PARALLEL PARK, in one of these. 1979 Olds Custom Cruiser with the 350 and 4-barrel. Brown over brown with fake wood paneling.
1. The tailgate is officially a "3-way": 1, window up-and-down, 2. swing open, 3. swing down.
2. Those bumpers were meant to BUMP INTO THINGS without needing a trip the the body shop. Thus, BUMPER. A shopping cart will do $3000 damage to a modern "bumper". That's stupid.
3. The utility of those old wagons is not appreciated. How many modern "SUVs" can haul a dozen full 4x8 sheets of drywall INSIDE them? How many can haul ONE? How many can seat 8 passengers? Some minivans can do it.
4. Usually the rear seat was left folded closed. The footwell was for storage of things like jumper cables, gloves, etc. The cover locks too.
5. You completely missed the full-size spare storage on the passenger side in the back. That whole giant passenger-side trim piece comes out and exposes the spare (with a lifting basket), and a bumper jack. (Though by '85 it was a frame jack.)
6. You also completely missed the upside-down air cleaner lid. That's an old hot-rodders trick. Adds a tiny bit more power, and a whole lot of great sound at wot from the four barrel.
7. Those are not wire wheels. Those are fake wire wheel hubcaps on steel wheels. Pull that center emblem and there is a keyed bolt holding the hubcap onto the wheel. Heaven help you if you lost the keyed wrench and got a flat...
8. The A/C vents were plenty good. The old R-12 "Freon" air conditioners were much better than modern R-134A A/C. It's really shocking how much worse A/C has gotten in the last 30 years. The fan also moved a lot of air (until the high-speed relay melted). Between the four dash vents and two (priceless!) crotch vents, nobody in that boat was uncomfortable even on the hottest days in Florida.
9. The clock in the '79 was analog and the escapement had a solenoid-wound mainspring. It was ridiculous. When the spring wound down, it would close an electrical contact for a solenoid that would hit it like a hammer and wind it back up. It did that every couple of minutes. You could hear it when the car was off: tick-tick-tick-tick-BOING-tick-tick-tick-tick. Needless to say, it would only last 3-4 years before it would die. I put a digital VFD clock in the housing with the help of a Dremel in about 1985...
10. Say what you will about those weak-ass Olds engines (and they were weak), they were reliable for the day. My 79 wagon has over 100k on it when I got rid of it, and being a young punk I buried that 85 MPH speedometer on many occasions. With whitewalls... I also had a 1982 Delta 88 with the VIN Y 307 and metric 250 (horrible) transmission. Had to replace the trans at 50k, but the engine lasted until 130k before throwing a rod. I drove it for three weeks after it did. Oil looked like silver paint...
I learned to drive in one of these as well. It was the diesel version! Yeah, the A/C rocked on ours. With 5 people inside on a 90° summer day, you'd be cold in less than a minute - even in the back!
Do you at least know why the fuck they stopped using R12 refrigerant in vehicles for civilian market ? Because it was so destructive for the ozon, way more than R134A
Damn dude, killer comment! 👍
Maxime Fortier of course he knows that, did you read his comment? This dude knows everything. He’s amazed that technology as a whole hasn’t advanced in the consumer market.
Yes, I know why "the fuck" R-12 was stopped. But R-134a was a scam pushed by the chemical companies over cheaper, better alternatives. At the time, R-12 was $0.60/pound a few years before it was banned. R-134a was $15.00/pound ($25 in today's money!). R-134a is typically 30% less efficient at cooling, so takes 30% more gasoline for the same amount of air conditioning. DuPont Chemicals company said "Of course we love the Earth! We love profits more!". They made a killing on the forced changeover.
We should have changed over to R-290a. It is MORE efficient than R-12, has 1/1000 the global warming potential of R-134a, and costs less than $1.00/pound TODAY. R-134a is still $7.00/pound. "Ooooh but its flammable!". True, but so is R-134a. When R-134a burns you get hydrogen fluoride gas which is extremely toxic. When R-290a burns you get water and CO2. Think about then when you see a car wreck with a fire.
Doug: "For our European friends: this is 3 feet longer than a Mercedes C-class"
Europeans: "Wtf is feet?"
😂
we had feet n inches in the England before your country existed boy 🇺🇸😃🏴
Bad Larry no you didn’t. At least not like feet and inches are now.
Kevin Webster I’ was referring to imperial measurements
Try not to get too upset I was only having a laugh (I was joking/not being too serious)
Lot's of people in Europe still deal in feet, inches and miles. The European dictators (EU) tried to force us all to use metric measurements but most people don't bother.
@@dhalsim-1 where are you from ?
Wagons are great, transportation for families, holding long items such as surfboards, ladders small kayaks, our Pontiac safari went completely flat in the rear seat area and was great for camping and hauling stuff. I have owned 3 Volvo wagons but these nice long wagons are rare. Beautiful old car.
"For my European friends out there: This is three feet longer..."
What are feet in ells again?
Watching Doug driving the station wagon, he looks a lot like Clark Griswold.
Haha exactly, and it makes me wonder if that was this car in the movie?
I just remember that they sell their old Vista Cruiser to get a newer car.
@@PeterBee911 The Wagon Queen Family Truckster was a modified Ford station wagon. This does come close.
Wally World here we come!
I guess I'm old. This was the downsized full size car that came out in 1977. I remember it as being noticeably smaller than the 1976 and earlier GM wagons that had the clamshell tailgate. Oh, and you know you can't drive around with the tailgate glass rolled down. If you do, the exhaust sucks into the car.
The tailpipe was out the side to prevent that!
Only if it's down all the way -Every 4runner owner
@@colormesarge But I get that great blast of CO when I floor it! 4Runner for the MFW!
This Wagon (1977 - 1990 generation:) 4000 Pounds
Clamshell Wagons (1971 - 1976 generation:) 5,000 Pounds, give or take a few hundred depending on which G.M. make and model.
Not too surprising why the Clam wagons usually got about 10 - 12 MPG, especially since they had 350s or 400s or 455s (depending) and did not have Overdrive transmissions.
My mother owned a 1966 ford wagon I really like that wagon as a young kid. It had a cool square front end the whole body was square. My mother said it used to much gas in the 1970's she traided it for a bigger newer Ford wagon it had a 6 cylinder in it and I remember the back tail gate opening both ways dropping down or side ways. My parent's sold that wagon at the end of the 1970's and bought a brand new empty van. My Pop's and my brother's built the inside of it wall to wall carpeting with custom benches the bottoms flipped up to store stuff in. I always sat in the back of the van by the back window. They owned that all through the 1980's then my mother bought a new mini van drove it for 10 year's and bought another new mini van great on gas good people carrier and groceries or what ever you want to put in it and great on gas for traveling with the mini van.
My dad had a 1980-81(?) charcoal grey one with red pin stripping. He had it all the way into the late 90s. I drove it through the last three years of highschool (87-89). I took it on dates and to the drive in. It was great, especially the powerful engine and space for all your friends!👍🏼
In the 80s, sharp, boxy corners were all the rage until the Ford Taurus changed the game.
November update: OMG, the cybertruck is gonna bring boxy corners back.
doug demieo is a buzzkill he shoud small babydolls he susks
Lol
Brian Anthony um how bout learning how to spell first
@@briananthony3645 did as your has is stronk
@@briananthony3645 what the fuck are you trying to convey? If it's anything other than the fact that you are SO stupid and lazy you can't even string a tiny sentence together, you failed.