A good modern sleeper (for cheap) would be a first gen Hyundai Genesis with the 4.6 V8. 375 hp, 330 ft-lb torque (with 91 Octane) and 0-60 in 5.7 seconds.
I had a '94 SSEi, the car was comfortable and quick. It was a lease return when I bought it. I kept it several years and replaced it with a '98 Lexus LS400.
Thank you for doing a video on the 92 Bonneville redesign. These were absolutely gorgeous and inventive cars, and I will die on this hill. I've had seven 92-99 Bonnevilles over the years. The community of enthusiasts for this car is small, but we are very dedicated. It's really great and also bizarre to see these cars finally get some recognition, after years of being overlooked. Thanks again for this great showcase, from me and my 1992 Bonneville! Would love to one day see an interview with the interior designer.
My dad had two bonnevilles, an 88/90 in grey and I believe a 93/95 in green. I'm looking for one right now online but despite listing being at a minimum, I'll find one and make that one of my project cars. We out here!! ✊🏾
I've owned three of these, an 1989 SSE, 1995 SSEI, & 1998 SSEI, I loved these cars but the 98 was my favorite because of the more comfortable seats & the extra horsepower. I'd buy another if I could find one.
Those tail lights aren't "smoked".... they're striped. This is a great trick to kind of simulate tinted lenses, but because the striped aren't transparent... they won't fade like tints tend to do, and they give that "tinted" feel because they mute the loud red/amber lenses. It was a cool look that only Pontiac figured out.
I worked at a couple of Pontiac dealership when these cars were out. I drove a few of them and I really liked them. Good-looking, comfortable, sporty, and dependable. I couldn't ask for more.
I’ve read that these bonnevilles were a dream to drive, but we’re very unreliable with frequent electrical issues across the board. Did you experience this?
@@Forge17 I worked at 2 Pontiac dealerships and the Bonnevilles didn't come in for too many repairs. The N-Body cars (looking at YOU Grand Am), were a different story.
Same. I worked at a small town Louisiana Pontiac, GMC, Oldsmobile dealer and people loved these cars. We constantly ran the 1 penny over invoice specials and would make a killing on the backend adding service plans and other fluff items.
I would like to think of myself as someone who’s up to speed on 90s GM vehicles, I have an 03 Monte Carlo SS but wow those bonnevilles had a lot of feature that I had no idea about. It seems like that car was almost ahead of it’s time. The seats are crazy and I can’t believe it has a heads up display. Maybe not the first to have some of these things but definitely paved the way for features GM still currently uses
I had a ‘95 SSEi as a company vehicle. It was what I would call British Racing Green in color with gold graphics that was a very popular color across the entire Bonneville lineup. It was fairly well built and for the time was a strong performer. One of the things I most remember about the interior was driving at night and the overwhelming amount of buttons and switches that were all lighted by Pontiac’s orange glow backlights. It was like a sea of Halloween decorations. Adam is correct about the seating. If you couldn’t find a comfortable position with those seats, then the problem was your own body, not the seat! 😉
My parents had a Bonneville just one like these I wanted it but they ended up drinking it cuz they didn't drive it until this day I still say another Bonnie but they're probably impossible to find now
My wife and I borrowed my mother in law’s new 1988 Bonneville (base model) to drive to Kansas City to look for a house due to a job change. I thought I was driving a 4 door sports car, it handled so nicely. Mind you, this was the base model with base suspension. And we got 31 mpg on that trip as well! I didn’t think it was a nice looking car, but when I was sitting on the inside, I didn’t care what it looked like on the outside.
My first new car was a 93 SE, it was a nice looking car and the regular 3.8 V6. I replaced it with a new 96 SE with the optional 240 horse supercharged engine. It was quite quick for a big front driver. In 99 I bought an SSEi again with the supercharged engine. Common strong points: roomy and comfortable with great seats and large trunk. Ride was pretty nice, amazing fuel economy even with the supercharged engine. Apart from my comment below about transmissions they were very reliable too. Very attractive looker too. Common weak spots: lousy performing brakes that also warped quickly. Torque steer was annoying on base cars and even worse on the supercharged cars. Transmissions were failure prone with the supercharged engine. Interior looks good in the slightly blurry brochure photos but it was typical 90’s GM Tupperware quality in real life. Another GM wide weak link was how quickly the ride quality would degrade, after 40-50k miles it drove like a Toyota with 150k miles. Interestingly my 93 SE was the best handler of the three as Pontiac kept reducing spring rates over the run to address hard ride complaints. Another interesting tidbit was that my 96 car was much faster than my 99. Having read up on those engines recently I’ve discovered why. The 96 supercharged engine was newly improved that year and was underrated at 240 horse. By the end of the model year it was obvious that the engine was burning out transmissions so they quietly lowered the boost for 97 but didn’t change the rated power or torque numbers. Further confirmation of this was when my friend bought a new 97 Grand Prix GTP with the supposedly same 240 horse engine as my 96 bonneville but despite it being in a smaller lighter car (identical axle ratio and transmission) I’d walk him easily in my 96 Bonnie. My 93 had R12 AC which was polar vortex in cooling ability, the subsequent years switched coolant and while sufficient they were a big step down. My 99 was the best looker of the bunch in black with tan leather and sharp factory chrome mags but as mentioned the engine didn’t have the grunt of the 96. Also it had adjustable shock valving and it was lousy in both soft (sloppy) and firm (flinty). Overall excellent comfortable sporty looking car only let down by the typical GM bean counter front drive chassis.
Owned one for 3 years, sold it when the back door locks were constantly needing to be serviced due to living on a gravel road. The trunk had a tool kit, white gloves included and an air compressor to reach all 4 tires. Very nice car, probably not desirable with high mileage, so many things to go wrong.
I currently own a 1995 Bonneville sse red like your last picture. I love the car it looks great and it has a more comfortable ride then my wife's 2008 Buick lacrosse. Mine doesn't have the super charger but when I bought the car a little over a year ago it only had 77 thousand kilometers on the odometer and I bought it from the original owner. Tha ks for featuring it.
I had a 2008 Buick Lacrosse with the somewhat rare 3.6 engine. It was quite the wheel spinner if you punched it hard from a stand still. The 3.8 was significantly more reliable however.
Always loved these cars from the day the first SSE was introduced in ‘88. Sadly I never owned one but ‘circumstances’ in 1995 put me in GM’s Oldsmobile variant … the 88 LSS. Loved that car but winced every time I saw an SSEI on the road. Still do and watching this video inspires me to launch a search so I can finally make good on my dream to own one. Thanks Adam.
I'm a big fan of those 90s Bonnevilles. I remember seeing them all over the place. They had great performance and the exterior had a really nice design. The dash layout starting in 1993 was so elegant, other than the clumsy compass.
I absolutely loved my ‘98 Bonneville (sadly only a loaded SE). One of my first cars, I drove it daily through high school, college and beyond. Other cars were purchased but I kept that Bonneville around. A great road trip vehicle, one of the most comfortable I’ve owned.
I love these videos, Adam. You cover all of the cool details people often gloss over. My first car was my dad's old '95 SSEi, and it was a lot of fun. I drove it well into adulthood and put 237K miles on it. It had some cool details you didn't often see in cars (e.g. the seat belt light and chime would stop once you got the seatbelt about a foot out versus having to wait till it was buckled; you could touch the windshield washer and let go, and it would spray a designated amount of time in addition to wiping versus having to hold wash down to keep it spraying like most GM cars of the era; etc.) in addition to the more noteworthy ones you covered. Really enjoy your interviews too. Thanks for the great content! Mitch Quade - Madison, WI
I owned a 1994 Bonneville and then read how the platform was carried over from the previous generation. After that, I immediately started recognizing shapes and dimensions from my dad's 1989 Buick Electra. Keeping with that theme, I also owned a 1995 Pontiac Grand Prix and test drove a 2000 Grand Prix as a possible replacement. As soon as I got it on the street, it became clear to me it was the exact same car.
I always appreciated the thoroughness of design and packaging of these cars, and that red one you featured at the end of the video is very good looking.
@@davidblevins9513 ram 1500 yes. At least fca upgrades the interior qualiy with the Laramie and Limited trims. GM keeps it cheap to the top of the line
Did anyone actually have this car? Only thing they did well was highway cruise and still the “sport suspension” was too garbage for comfortable ride yet not sport enough to take a curve
I worked at a high end body shop back in the early 90’s. Loved the SSE and SSEis when one would come in every once in a while. Dad bought and SE a while back. I remember seeing the Pontiac Salen brand new and they had a bumper sticker saying powerless. Lol!
My parents had a very early model '87 Bonneville SE... solid metallic red with grey cloth. What a great car and much better looking to my eyes, then the replacement. In fact, I remember my dad being invited to look at a new SSEi, and he came back laughing at how "busy" the exterior was. My dad was a life insurance guy, so I wasn't shocked, but when I laid eyes on it myself, it was a lot to take in for sure and agreed with him. He went on to buy a new Acura Legend. But, with the passing of time, I really miss all of these cars now.
I guess they lost the tec to build a car like it today. 30mpg was the norm. I had a 93 APV mini van with a 3800 that routinely got 32. I've heard, they forgot how they got to the moon too...imagine that.
I miss Pontiac so much. I loved my Grand Prixs and kept them longer than any cars I've had. The GTP I had had the series 2 supercharged engine and it was torquey reliable and fuel efficient. I sold it at 148,000 with the notorious cooling system elbows and a couple of serpentine belt pulleys being the only non-maintenance issues I ever had.
Hi Adam - another great video, thanks, and please keep them coming! I bought new a triple black 96 Bonneville SE, because I loved the styling inside and out, and the IP. It turned out that the base seats, in my opinion, were very uncomfortable on long trips, and the car rode like a brick. So, I traded it on a slightly used 96 Olds 88 LS, which I loved and drove for 10 years and about 130k miles without one issue. Even though they both had the same drivetrain, the Olds seemed just so much smoother in about every way.
My parents had a 88 Bonneville that I learned to do reverse 180's in, and later I owned a 94 Bonneville se, I had the engine rebuilt with a roller cam and rocker arms, that car could do some wicked burn outs.😁😁😁
I remember when these came out. Loved these. Those “aircraft landing lights” in front bumper where so striking for a sedan. There was simply nothing else like it.
Still have my ‘92 ssei drive it back and forth to work. Everything still works and still looks pretty good. People can’t believe the car is over 30 years old. Reliable and comfortable.
Neat video on a car that many people have forgotten about. I had a '95 SE in medium blue and drove it for about 6-7 years. Great looking car for the time. The seats were the most comfortable I'd ever had. Another plus was the car routinely hit 30 mpg on a long, highway trip!
These really were affluent in appearance. Looks that were pleasantly superior to anything in its class.(especially when you consider they were hitting dealerships already in July of '91)
The 3800 V6 is a legendary engine, they run forever and make decent power, especially with the supercharger. I love seeing these cars that were everywhere during my childhood in pristine condition nowadays.
You need one of these in your collection Adam..! Always loved these and the ones previous with their three-spoke design aluminum wheels. They had a very distinctive sound. My favorite was the black exterior with the black wheels and tan interior.
I used to have a 1990 SSE and I realized that the onboard compass worked better than my iPhone6S. The compass on my iPhone was completely out of align, yet the SSE compass worked flawlessly. I later drove it in circles to recalibrate it and it didn't change much.
Bothe the Bonneville SSE and SSEi were incredible full size sports touring sedans with refinement not found in their price range matching their category. Great cars.
Had a 93 ssei. Loved the car. Gave it a medium performance chip and a 5% underdrive on the blower. It was a monster. I had a guy walk up yo me in a parking lot where I worked at the time and ask what I had done with this car. Long story short I told him I really didn't know we were racing.
The Bonnevilles of the nineties are a world different from my grandfathers Bonnevilles of the sixties & seventies!!! I think he'd approve & be happy to drive one!! 👍🙂
Thanks for sharing your knowledge about the SSEi and a few other models. I have never had the opportunity to drive the supercharged model nor experience those awesome seats. I have back troubles and I bet they would make a long drive seem shorter with all of their support.
In '97, I had a '96 Z28. I was in HS, on a lunch break, with a packed 4th gen Camaro, and I wound up at a light next to one of these. Yuppie dude behind the wheel, pretty typical scene. He wants to go, we go. I get him pretty good, and at the next light he's yelling and screaming. Good memories.
This was one of my favorite cars as a kid on the 90s Was like a sporty LeSabre I always thought. Even though it was a Pontiac Bonneville and not a Buick LeSabre. I really love these so much! More now than ever!
I really liked this video, it brought back a lot of great memories of a car that really felt so "special" back in the early 90's. I'd also like to point out that the supercharged 3800 was available as an option on the SSE as well. I'm not sure about '92, but for '93 it most certainly was. You didn't have to get the SSEi trim to get the engine.
Back in the late 90s parents had the exact maroon SSE you featured in the beginning inset pic. The interior seemed rich with tan leather although the seats were heavily bolstered it was more for a 300 lb man. The car handled amazing and was pretty quick with the 3800.
I miss my 87 Bonneville. My 99 wasn't such a great car, was relieved to get rid of it when I did. Intake gaskets, oil pump, fuel pump, transmission solenoid, lots of other failures before 70k. That said, it was sharp, peppy and generally comfortable. I wish GM still made full sized cars like that.
love your channel..i had 3 bonni,s a..1988,1989 and a1993 . 93 being my fav. none supercharged.. all 3800..I loved the 93 it had everything i wanted ..the final gear had it just right 25 mpg yet sporty . i drove it to Florida from cincy 2x I sold it with 180k.. .my 2000buick lesabre got 30 mpg but no guts like the Bonni
The finest and highest end used car in my youth I always admired and slowly passed by while I was chasing sheer look rwd cars and extraordinarily well configured GMT400s. Tho I do recall many a exquisite SSEi and other C/H cars of the early mid 90s.
Tell me about it. I had a 95 achieva for a while and it was a total garbage inteior. I only got it cuz it was dirt cheap and was happy when the tranny shit the bed. I then got a 94 Buick Regal custom which had a quality (albeit oddly styled) inteior and was a terrific vehicle. I was always suprised those 2 cars could be so different and from the same company.
I owned several Bonnies and Rivieras of the era.. the series 1.5 3800 was too sweet.. and utterly bulletproof. One of my favorite engines of all time! I ran 125 shot dry NOS on one for 2 year solid! Blew up 9 transaxles but she was fun!
Great overview of the Bonneville Adam, I think it would be cool if you did a video on the last Grand Prix, which in my opinion also has an interesting styling. Thanks.
We bought a 95 LeSabre brand new. Car was good, once we had the windows tinted, the car looked fantastic. Now have a 2005 GXP with the block threads repaired. Surprisingly fast, and high revving.
Both the B- and C-bodies of the late ‘80s and early ‘90s had the paint-peeling issue, which started happening within just a few years after they were produced. I believe it was due to mandated lower-VOC or water-based paints, and it took the US car makers (particularly GM and Chrysler) about a decade to figure out a paint system that’d hold up. That’s why you hardly see any of this generation of cars around any more. Someone please correct me if I’m wrong on that.
I had a black 1990 Bonneville SSE that I bought at 18 years old. It was the coolest car in the world to me at the time. You should do a video on that model. I remember it had no airbags but it did have about 12 buttons on the steering wheel and nine to adjust the seat!
I had a beautiful blue one "SSEI" and the seats were the best seats I have ever had in any automobile I've ever owned and I've been driving cars since 1981❤! I thought for a bigger car it handled pretty well too! It takes super unleaded is the only drawback but if you can afford the gas this is an American BMW all day long! Adams wrong about the compass mine was extremely accurate and it did give you the feeling you're in a fighter jet the way it would move around on the dash while you're driving I thought it was super cool!❤
I had a 88 Bonneville LE(my first car), wrecked it like an idiot. It was as plain as could be, manual windows, seats and everything else but it ran great. Next car i bought was 88 bonneville se, it had power bucket seats, moonroof all the power options. Later on i bought a 99 bonneville se, never got the ssei like i wanted lol. I still have a set of 18" gxp wheels off a 08 bonneville just sitting around, i ran them on my 98 Aurora for a while, looked pretty good imo. Enjoyed the video!
That was the first 4 door I liked.I bought a used 92 SE it was green metallic. They were expensive cars when new. I never see them on the road anymore.
a friend of mine always had (has i suppose!) first dibs on the trade in lot of his parents dealership - when we were in highschool he snatched the keys to an ssei .. dark green with the beige leather interior .. that thing put in a lot of work for our friends haha
I actually had a dark emerald green 1992 SSEi with the tan interior and all the buttons on the inside with all the amazing interior lighting at night. It was an amazing car and handled crazy well and could get 33 mpg on the open road.. Mine had every possible option including the HUD. I traded it for a Crown Victoria for better reliability after having lots of problems... Great Video!!! I can say the Bonneville handled 20x better than the Crown Vic, but the Crown Vic never had an issue for years and years...
I always wanted one of these as a teenager, I have a long deep seated love of sleepers.
A good modern sleeper (for cheap) would be a first gen Hyundai Genesis with the 4.6 V8. 375 hp, 330 ft-lb torque (with 91 Octane) and 0-60 in 5.7 seconds.
As a kid of both the 1980's and the 90's it was so cool to watch the transformation of styling.
Now we have windstream amebas with wheels.
They made 4 door sedans great again!
Agreed! Todays cars are all just variations of the same sausage link. And about as exciting as the prospect of buying an "EV." No, thanks.
@@roccosophie6498 'sausage link' 🤣🤣🤣
@@nycstarport8542 😁
I had a '94 SSEi, the car was comfortable and quick. It was a lease return when I bought it. I kept it several years and replaced it with a '98 Lexus LS400.
Thank you for doing a video on the 92 Bonneville redesign. These were absolutely gorgeous and inventive cars, and I will die on this hill. I've had seven 92-99 Bonnevilles over the years. The community of enthusiasts for this car is small, but we are very dedicated. It's really great and also bizarre to see these cars finally get some recognition, after years of being overlooked. Thanks again for this great showcase, from me and my 1992 Bonneville! Would love to one day see an interview with the interior designer.
Are you on drugs??? That is one of most ugly pieces of shit ever created and a far cry from the beautiful cars the US made in the 50s, 60s and 70s...
My dad had two bonnevilles, an 88/90 in grey and I believe a 93/95 in green. I'm looking for one right now online but despite listing being at a minimum, I'll find one and make that one of my project cars. We out here!! ✊🏾
I've owned three of these, an 1989 SSE, 1995 SSEI, & 1998 SSEI, I loved these cars but the 98 was my favorite because of the more comfortable seats & the extra horsepower. I'd buy another if I could find one.
One of my favourite Pontiac Bonneville generation. Was a revelation when it was released.
Those tail lights aren't "smoked".... they're striped. This is a great trick to kind of simulate tinted lenses, but because the striped aren't transparent... they won't fade like tints tend to do, and they give that "tinted" feel because they mute the loud red/amber lenses. It was a cool look that only Pontiac figured out.
I think they called them Rally Lights, at least on the grand prix’s they did, but those were muriform not striped
I especially like the honeycomb design on the tail lights of the fourth gen Firebird
Exactly
Looked like an cross design overlay to me. True, they were not smoked but gave the illusion they were.
I had two 1991 SSE's. They were just great road cars, fun to drive, and had those big comfy wide seats.
Loved these cars. My uncle had a 94 or so hunter green SSEi. Beautiful car that would RUN!
I worked at a couple of Pontiac dealership when these cars were out. I drove a few of them and I really liked them. Good-looking, comfortable, sporty, and dependable. I couldn't ask for more.
I’ve read that these bonnevilles were a dream to drive, but we’re very unreliable with frequent electrical issues across the board. Did you experience this?
@@Forge17 I worked at 2 Pontiac dealerships and the Bonnevilles didn't come in for too many repairs. The N-Body cars (looking at YOU Grand Am), were a different story.
@@rogerhinman5427 ah good to know, I wouldn’t mind owning one of these Bonnevilles. Shame on those Grand am’s though
Same. I worked at a small town Louisiana Pontiac, GMC, Oldsmobile dealer and people loved these cars. We constantly ran the 1 penny over invoice specials and would make a killing on the backend adding service plans and other fluff items.
I would like to think of myself as someone who’s up to speed on 90s GM vehicles, I have an 03 Monte Carlo SS but wow those bonnevilles had a lot of feature that I had no idea about. It seems like that car was almost ahead of it’s time. The seats are crazy and I can’t believe it has a heads up display. Maybe not the first to have some of these things but definitely paved the way for features GM still currently uses
I had a ‘95 SSEi as a company vehicle. It was what I would call British Racing Green in color with gold graphics that was a very popular color across the entire Bonneville lineup. It was fairly well built and for the time was a strong performer. One of the things I most remember about the interior was driving at night and the overwhelming amount of buttons and switches that were all lighted by Pontiac’s orange glow backlights. It was like a sea of Halloween decorations. Adam is correct about the seating. If you couldn’t find a comfortable position with those seats, then the problem was your own body, not the seat! 😉
My parents had a Bonneville just one like these I wanted it but they ended up drinking it cuz they didn't drive it until this day I still say another Bonnie but they're probably impossible to find now
The Head Up display was great, should have been in EVERY car as a safety feature.
These were far more reliable than the chrysler LH cars they compeated against.
That could be debated. Each had thier pros & cons. If we take Chrysler's 2.7 out of the equation, they're both equally good cars.
I had a 1997 Grand Prix with the supercharged 3800. Awesome engine! Impressive power when passing on the highway.
Same! White with tan leather interior. I loved that car. 28mpg highway too.
These videos always lead me to check the classifieds after watching. Remember renting these Bonnevilles from Hertz on business trips back in the day
Same here. Great memories
My wife and I borrowed my mother in law’s new 1988 Bonneville (base model) to drive to Kansas City to look for a house due to a job change. I thought I was driving a 4 door sports car, it handled so nicely. Mind you, this was the base model with base suspension. And we got 31 mpg on that trip as well! I didn’t think it was a nice looking car, but when I was sitting on the inside, I didn’t care what it looked like on the outside.
The earlier understated styling was very nice indeed. Wonderful 3800 engine, comfortable and roomy cabin, big trunk, pretty good handling. Great cars.
3.8 engine is legit one of the best motors ever made
@@joshkeeling82from ford as well
@@joshkeeling82you can see my 3.8 mustang and Bonneville in my pic lol
The Toyota Previa minivan also rocked the ribs, as did the gen 3 Mitsubishi Eclipse
My first new car was a 93 SE, it was a nice looking car and the regular 3.8 V6. I replaced it with a new 96 SE with the optional 240 horse supercharged engine. It was quite quick for a big front driver. In 99 I bought an SSEi again with the supercharged engine.
Common strong points: roomy and comfortable with great seats and large trunk. Ride was pretty nice, amazing fuel economy even with the supercharged engine. Apart from my comment below about transmissions they were very reliable too.
Very attractive looker too.
Common weak spots: lousy performing brakes that also warped quickly. Torque steer was annoying on base cars and even worse on the supercharged cars. Transmissions were failure prone with the supercharged engine. Interior looks good in the slightly blurry brochure photos but it was typical 90’s GM Tupperware quality in real life. Another GM wide weak link was how quickly the ride quality would degrade, after 40-50k miles it drove like a Toyota with 150k miles.
Interestingly my 93 SE was the best handler of the three as Pontiac kept reducing spring rates over the run to address hard ride complaints.
Another interesting tidbit was that my 96 car was much faster than my 99. Having read up on those engines recently I’ve discovered why. The 96 supercharged engine was newly improved that year and was underrated at 240 horse. By the end of the model year it was obvious that the engine was burning out transmissions so they quietly lowered the boost for 97 but didn’t change the rated power or torque numbers. Further confirmation of this was when my friend bought a new 97 Grand Prix GTP with the supposedly same 240 horse engine as my 96 bonneville but despite it being in a smaller lighter car (identical axle ratio and transmission) I’d walk him easily in my 96 Bonnie.
My 93 had R12 AC which was polar vortex in cooling ability, the subsequent years switched coolant and while sufficient they were a big step down.
My 99 was the best looker of the bunch in black with tan leather and sharp factory chrome mags but as mentioned the engine didn’t have the grunt of the 96. Also it had adjustable shock valving and it was lousy in both soft (sloppy) and firm (flinty).
Overall excellent comfortable sporty looking car only let down by the typical GM bean counter front drive chassis.
I had one of these and I loved it! The styling was so cutting edge for the day. I would love to have one today!
Owned one for 3 years, sold it when the back door locks were constantly needing to be serviced due to living on a gravel road. The trunk had a tool kit, white gloves included and an air compressor to reach all 4 tires. Very nice car, probably not desirable with high mileage, so many things to go wrong.
Early 90s was generally good quality stuff. Was rocking a 93 Crown Victoria. Beyond great car that one.
I currently own a 1995 Bonneville sse red like your last picture. I love the car it looks great and it has a more comfortable ride then my wife's 2008 Buick lacrosse. Mine doesn't have the super charger but when I bought the car a little over a year ago it only had 77 thousand kilometers on the odometer and I bought it from the original owner. Tha ks for featuring it.
I had a 2008 Buick Lacrosse with the somewhat rare 3.6 engine. It was quite the wheel spinner if you punched it hard from a stand still. The 3.8 was significantly more reliable however.
I own a 1992 pontiac too, it has been the best car I ever owned
Always loved these cars from the day the first SSE was introduced in ‘88. Sadly I never owned one but ‘circumstances’ in 1995 put me in GM’s Oldsmobile variant … the 88 LSS. Loved that car but winced every time I saw an SSEI on the road. Still do and watching this video inspires me to launch a search so I can finally make good on my dream to own one. Thanks Adam.
I'm a big fan of those 90s Bonnevilles. I remember seeing them all over the place. They had great performance and the exterior had a really nice design. The dash layout starting in 1993 was so elegant, other than the clumsy compass.
My project manager back in the day had one. Looked great, had a great ride.
We had a 93 Bonneville, Black and it was a great car. Very comfortable, especially on long trips
I absolutely loved my ‘98 Bonneville (sadly only a loaded SE). One of my first cars, I drove it daily through high school, college and beyond. Other cars were purchased but I kept that Bonneville around. A great road trip vehicle, one of the most comfortable I’ve owned.
Thank you for posting this. Great video. I was 15 when this generation came out and I was just getting into cars and I was wild about these.
I love these videos, Adam. You cover all of the cool details people often gloss over. My first car was my dad's old '95 SSEi, and it was a lot of fun. I drove it well into adulthood and put 237K miles on it. It had some cool details you didn't often see in cars (e.g. the seat belt light and chime would stop once you got the seatbelt about a foot out versus having to wait till it was buckled; you could touch the windshield washer and let go, and it would spray a designated amount of time in addition to wiping versus having to hold wash down to keep it spraying like most GM cars of the era; etc.) in addition to the more noteworthy ones you covered.
Really enjoy your interviews too. Thanks for the great content!
Mitch Quade - Madison, WI
I owned a 1994 Bonneville and then read how the platform was carried over from the previous generation. After that, I immediately started recognizing shapes and dimensions from my dad's 1989 Buick Electra. Keeping with that theme, I also owned a 1995 Pontiac Grand Prix and test drove a 2000 Grand Prix as a possible replacement. As soon as I got it on the street, it became clear to me it was the exact same car.
Always loved the Bonnevilles. I had an ‘87, ‘91, and a loaded 1997 SSE which was beautiful, comfortable, and fun!
I always appreciated the thoroughness of design and packaging of these cars, and that red one you featured at the end of the video is very good looking.
These cars were from a time when I thought GM could do no wrong. Now after having owned several GM's I wouldn't touch one.
My beef with new GMs is that they still suffer from cheap interiors.
@@Henry_Jones ever ride in a new dodge lol
@@davidblevins9513 ram 1500 yes. At least fca upgrades the interior qualiy with the Laramie and Limited trims. GM keeps it cheap to the top of the line
@@Henry_Jones ever heard of a high country or Denali?
Did anyone actually have this car? Only thing they did well was highway cruise and still the “sport suspension” was too garbage for comfortable ride yet not sport enough to take a curve
I worked at a high end body shop back in the early 90’s. Loved the SSE and SSEis when one would come in every once in a while. Dad bought and SE a while back. I remember seeing the Pontiac Salen brand new and they had a bumper sticker saying powerless. Lol!
My Dad had this car. It was fuckin' amazing. So smooth and fast and comfortable. I really miss that legendary GM 3800 V6
I had an ssei, still one of the all time best cars I've ever owned or driven. It did everything so well, you just had to love it.
My parents had a very early model '87 Bonneville SE... solid metallic red with grey cloth. What a great car and much better looking to my eyes, then the replacement. In fact, I remember my dad being invited to look at a new SSEi, and he came back laughing at how "busy" the exterior was. My dad was a life insurance guy, so I wasn't shocked, but when I laid eyes on it myself, it was a lot to take in for sure and agreed with him. He went on to buy a new Acura Legend. But, with the passing of time, I really miss all of these cars now.
We had the supercharged 3800 in the commodore of this era in rear wheel drive, only automatic transmission.
Had a 92 Bonneville...3800....Great highway machine!
These were just so Pontiac. Loved these at the time. Great video!
1:07 My 1989 Bonneville looksed like this body style, but with a deeper red color! I loved it very much and it had the awesome 30mpg 3800 V6 engine.
I guess they lost the tec to build a car like it today. 30mpg was the norm. I had a 93 APV mini van with a 3800 that routinely got 32.
I've heard, they forgot how they got to the moon too...imagine that.
I have a Bonneville gxp 2004, love it. Love Bonnevilles from way back as well.
I miss Pontiac so much. I loved my Grand Prixs and kept them longer than any cars I've had. The GTP I had had the series 2 supercharged engine and it was torquey reliable and fuel efficient. I sold it at 148,000 with the notorious cooling system elbows and a couple of serpentine belt pulleys being the only non-maintenance issues I ever had.
Hi Adam - another great video, thanks, and please keep them coming! I bought new a triple black 96 Bonneville SE, because I loved the styling inside and out, and the IP. It turned out that the base seats, in my opinion, were very uncomfortable on long trips, and the car rode like a brick. So, I traded it on a slightly used 96 Olds 88 LS, which I loved and drove for 10 years and about 130k miles without one issue. Even though they both had the same drivetrain, the Olds seemed just so much smoother in about every way.
I had a 1987 LE version. Lots of good memories in that car.
I LOVED 1990’s Pontiac styling back then. I still do.
Loved these cars as a teenager. Still have an affinity as a 42 year old. I'd totally daily one of these.
I once owned a 1999 bonneville SE it had the same gold paint and beige leather seats. That brought back some good memories what a great car.
Had a friend who had an '88 SSE and those 18-way adjustable seats were so comfortable!
My parents had a 88 Bonneville that I learned to do reverse 180's in, and later I owned a 94 Bonneville se, I had the engine rebuilt with a roller cam and rocker arms, that car could do some wicked burn outs.😁😁😁
I remember when these came out. Loved these. Those “aircraft landing lights” in front bumper where so striking for a sedan. There was simply nothing else like it.
My friend had one in the early 2000. Pretty spunky. Super comfy
Still have my ‘92 ssei drive it back and forth to work. Everything still works and still looks pretty good. People can’t believe the car is over 30 years old. Reliable and comfortable.
Neat video on a car that many people have forgotten about. I had a '95 SE in medium blue and drove it for about 6-7 years. Great looking car for the time. The seats were the most comfortable I'd ever had. Another plus was the car routinely hit 30 mpg on a long, highway trip!
Because they were so forgettable.
These really were affluent in appearance. Looks that were pleasantly superior to anything in its class.(especially when you consider they were hitting dealerships already in July of '91)
The 3800 V6 is a legendary engine, they run forever and make decent power, especially with the supercharger. I love seeing these cars that were everywhere during my childhood in pristine condition nowadays.
You need one of these in your collection Adam..! Always loved these and the ones previous with their three-spoke design aluminum wheels. They had a very distinctive sound. My favorite was the black exterior with the black wheels and tan interior.
Loved the Bonnie. Full sized performance
I used to have a 1990 SSE and I realized that the onboard compass worked better than my iPhone6S. The compass on my iPhone was completely out of align, yet the SSE compass worked flawlessly. I later drove it in circles to recalibrate it and it didn't change much.
Bothe the Bonneville SSE and SSEi were incredible full size sports touring sedans with refinement not found in their price range matching their category. Great cars.
Had a 93 ssei. Loved the car. Gave it a medium performance chip and a 5% underdrive on the blower. It was a monster. I had a guy walk up yo me in a parking lot where I worked at the time and ask what I had done with this car. Long story short I told him I really didn't know we were racing.
These were cool growing up all it missed was a driveshaft to the back tires!!
My parent bought a blue 88 and then a black 92 with the tan interior and to this day I miss that car.
The Bonnevilles of the nineties are a world different from my grandfathers Bonnevilles of the sixties & seventies!!! I think he'd approve & be happy to drive one!! 👍🙂
My mother had a 92 Bonneville. One of the coolest cars she ever owned.
At a time when it was difficult to find exciting cars, these Bonnevilles were very special and stood out in an otherwise boring crowd.
I had 2 in my life time. 1995 & 1997. Still own the 97 and looks like new now in 2023 with only 67.000 miles on it.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge about the SSEi and a few other models. I have never had the opportunity to drive the supercharged model nor experience those awesome seats. I have back troubles and I bet they would make a long drive seem shorter with all of their support.
In '97, I had a '96 Z28. I was in HS, on a lunch break, with a packed 4th gen Camaro, and I wound up at a light next to one of these. Yuppie dude behind the wheel, pretty typical scene. He wants to go, we go. I get him pretty good, and at the next light he's yelling and screaming. Good memories.
This was one of my favorite cars as a kid on the 90s
Was like a sporty LeSabre I always thought. Even though it was a Pontiac Bonneville and not a Buick LeSabre. I really love these so much! More now than ever!
The SSEi was a fabulous car. Those front seats, the most comfortable I've ever sat in while driving.
I really liked this video, it brought back a lot of great memories of a car that really felt so "special" back in the early 90's. I'd also like to point out that the supercharged 3800 was available as an option on the SSE as well. I'm not sure about '92, but for '93 it most certainly was. You didn't have to get the SSEi trim to get the engine.
This really is a good looking car. I've come to appreciate it's styling more as it ages.
Back in the late 90s parents had the exact maroon SSE you featured in the beginning inset pic. The interior seemed rich with tan leather although the seats were heavily bolstered it was more for a 300 lb man. The car handled amazing and was pretty quick with the 3800.
I had a 94 SE. loved that car!
I miss my 87 Bonneville. My 99 wasn't such a great car, was relieved to get rid of it when I did. Intake gaskets, oil pump, fuel pump, transmission solenoid, lots of other failures before 70k.
That said, it was sharp, peppy and generally comfortable. I wish GM still made full sized cars like that.
love your channel..i had 3 bonni,s a..1988,1989 and a1993 . 93 being my fav. none supercharged.. all 3800..I loved the 93 it had everything i wanted ..the final gear had it just right 25 mpg yet sporty . i drove it to Florida from cincy 2x I sold it with 180k.. .my 2000buick lesabre got 30 mpg but no guts like the Bonni
The finest and highest end used car in my youth I always admired and slowly passed by while I was chasing sheer look rwd cars and extraordinarily well configured GMT400s. Tho I do recall many a exquisite SSEi and other C/H cars of the early mid 90s.
Where GM cars of this era really disappointed was in the interiors. Most particularly the myriad of cheap grey plastic buttons and knobs.
Tell me about it. I had a 95 achieva for a while and it was a total garbage inteior. I only got it cuz it was dirt cheap and was happy when the tranny shit the bed. I then got a 94 Buick Regal custom which had a quality (albeit oddly styled) inteior and was a terrific vehicle. I was always suprised those 2 cars could be so different and from the same company.
I owned several Bonnies and Rivieras of the era.. the series 1.5 3800 was too sweet.. and utterly bulletproof. One of my favorite engines of all time! I ran 125 shot dry NOS on one for 2 year solid! Blew up 9 transaxles but she was fun!
Great overview of the Bonneville Adam, I think it would be cool if you did a video on the last Grand Prix, which in my opinion also has an interesting styling. Thanks.
I love the SSEi,my high school dream ride
We bought a 95 LeSabre brand new. Car was good, once we had the windows tinted, the car looked fantastic.
Now have a 2005 GXP with the block threads repaired. Surprisingly fast, and high revving.
I had one of these love this car hope to find one in good condition
I am sure you get so many comments of how much Pontiac is missed and it truly is. I liked the SSEi as well as many other models
A lot of these cars in my area, have the the paint peeling off, mainly on the hood or trunk. Very cheap paint.
Both the B- and C-bodies of the late ‘80s and early ‘90s had the paint-peeling issue, which started happening within just a few years after they were produced. I believe it was due to mandated lower-VOC or water-based paints, and it took the US car makers (particularly GM and Chrysler) about a decade to figure out a paint system that’d hold up. That’s why you hardly see any of this generation of cars around any more. Someone please correct me if I’m wrong on that.
I had a black 1990 Bonneville SSE that I bought at 18 years old. It was the coolest car in the world to me at the time. You should do a video on that model. I remember it had no airbags but it did have about 12 buttons on the steering wheel and nine to adjust the seat!
I'm weird but I like videos like this on fun facts and special models of an otherwise everyday more mundane sort of car.
My mother in law owned a 1993 model. Amazing car!!
I had a beautiful blue one "SSEI" and the seats were the best seats I have ever had in any automobile I've ever owned and I've been driving cars since 1981❤! I thought for a bigger car it handled pretty well too! It takes super unleaded is the only drawback but if you can afford the gas this is an American BMW all day long! Adams wrong about the compass mine was extremely accurate and it did give you the feeling you're in a fighter jet the way it would move around on the dash while you're driving I thought it was super cool!❤
They really were cool cars with great engines. I wouldn't mind owning one today.
My first car absolutely loved it
My friends mom drove these they owned a Chevy Pontiac geo dealership for a long time. I eventually worked a that dealership i always liked these cars.
I had a 88 Bonneville LE(my first car), wrecked it like an idiot. It was as plain as could be, manual windows, seats and everything else but it ran great. Next car i bought was 88 bonneville se, it had power bucket seats, moonroof all the power options. Later on i bought a 99 bonneville se, never got the ssei like i wanted lol. I still have a set of 18" gxp wheels off a 08 bonneville just sitting around, i ran them on my 98 Aurora for a while, looked pretty good imo.
Enjoyed the video!
I had no idea the sheet metal under the plastic fenders was so similar to the prior generation.
That was the first 4 door I liked.I bought a used 92 SE it was green metallic. They were expensive cars when new. I never see them on the road anymore.
a friend of mine always had (has i suppose!) first dibs on the trade in lot of his parents dealership - when we were in highschool he snatched the keys to an ssei .. dark green with the beige leather interior .. that thing put in a lot of work for our friends haha
I remember seeing a blue one in the movie Thinner and i fell in love with it. Looked really nice
I actually had a dark emerald green 1992 SSEi with the tan interior and all the buttons on the inside with all the amazing interior lighting at night. It was an amazing car and handled crazy well and could get 33 mpg on the open road.. Mine had every possible option including the HUD. I traded it for a Crown Victoria for better reliability after having lots of problems... Great Video!!! I can say the Bonneville handled 20x better than the Crown Vic, but the Crown Vic never had an issue for years and years...