If I were to list my favorite reviews, it would include the Vector W8 and this - the 1996 Oldsmobile Silhouette. It would be the only list, ever, that includes both the Vector W8 and the 1996 Oldsmobile Silhouette.
Bonda Heat probably had it unlisted and just made it public, maybe waiting for the better quality to get uploaded because when YT videos are uploaded they start at 144P.
@@danny67762 I love wierd and quirky cars as well, but we need both on this channel imo. I also wish he would review regular, boring cars as well like a BMW 535i 2016... don't ask why about that particular model
My dad bought one of these vans used and gifted it to me when I was old enough to drive. I was embarrassed of it at first but I eventually embraced how wacky it looked. I named it “The White Bullet” and it soon became the go to car for road trips and group events. Even my girlfriend fell in love with it. Lots of great memories and handies in The White Bullet. Miss you buddy. RIP king!
This was my exact case as well. Family bought it for my first car. Couldn’t stand it at first, but eventually my friends all loved it. Only difference is that we affectionally called it “the space shuttle” 🥹 miss her all the time
My dad bought one. My mom wanted a lumina sedan but it was dads turn and he chose the van for practically. Had over 280000 miles on it and all 3 of us kids drove it. I changed the alternator one time on the side of the highway. We named it Goober. Over 60 mph, it got lighter steering the faster you drove. Basically and airplane wing.
My response to Doug reviewing a McLaren supercar: "Meh" My response to Doug reviewing a Silhouette minivan: "OH HELL YEAH" I've always been interested in the dustbuster vans. I like the look.
I know the one I drove is now compacted and probably still smells like Ready Lash and Those bath and body works spritzed that were popular with the late 2000s high school gals club
whats interesting in watching these older cars doug reviews is seeing all these features that were so ahead of their time. like the button opening the power sliding doors. stuff like that got lost for 20-30 years. interesting to see it all start to come back in todays vehicles.
I just got a car recently that has the on/off power button instead of using a key. Not new at all, but this was actually a thing way back in the 1950s, then was gone for decades before making a comeback around the 2000s or so. So it is interesting to see how things come and go. Sometimes it's just trends, other time they are ideas that just weren't really ready for mass adoption.
This brings back my childhood and if you think this is ugly, just imagine having it in turquoise. I always thought it resembled a Disney monorail with the sloping windshield, the lines down the side, and the door closing music. A couple of things that weren't mentioned (or omitted) in the video: those rear front vents didn't have a way to close the vents, you could only move them up or down. Although they may have been deactivated if the rear vents were turned off. Also, the ashtray in the rear next to the fan controls for all of the kids that smoked in the 90s.
My Grandma had one in that awful Turquoise color. And I definitely busted my head on the top corner of the front passenger door. After splitting my head open, I made DAMN sure to lean back when opening the door.
In 1990, my parents decided that having one of these wasn't enough so they bought 2. One was silver, the other white and both had a cloth interior with 6 passenger seating. They had the original 3100 V6 and my dad towed a 25' pontoon boat all over Texas with one of them and we went on several mutli-state road trips throughout the entire US and neither van ever had any problems. Both were extremely reliable until they were sold/traded 8-10 years later. A few things Doug failed to mention is the built in auto-leveling and air compressor for pool toys or inflating tires and for leveling the rear end when towing or hauling. The removable seats only weighed 30 lbs. +/- so removing them wasn't a big deal and this modularity made cross country road trips very comfortable. They also had plastic body panels like the Saturn cars did so they were impervious to minor dings or runaway shopping carts. All in all, they were both amazing vans and my childhood was made richer because of them.
Gabriel Shatunovsky Me too! My great uncle had one, I think it was a 98’ because I was about 5-6 when he got it, but I loved that noise so much. It used to make me laugh lol
I had one of these with the 3800 V6. I liked the feature that the rear seats folded flat and could carry an entire 4x8 foot plank of plywood. I also was in the funeral business and once these rear seats were removed, two cots would fit in nicely. The bodies on the said cots would carry an odor/ the vented rear windows were very useful for this purpose.
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I have another theory about the styling. Star Trek The Next Generation was on the air when this minivan came out, and a lot of minivans of that era looked a lot like the shuttles they used on that show.
I always called them shuttlrcraft vans. A few friends started to as well once I pointed out the similarities. I ran into a couple of other people over the years who did the same. I think the design esthetic feel just inside the boundaries of acceptable because of TNG, even if the resemblance wasn't intentional.
"I borrowed this vehicle from a viewer here in San Diego who has a number of 1980's and 1990's General Motors vehicles." Sounds like someone's planning on starting a demolition derby.
That door noise just brought back sooo many child hood memories. We had a 97 Pontiac Transport Montana with the auto door and that was a very memorable sound. We then had the 02 silhouette and coincidentally my first car was a 2000 Montana and that door sound will always mean so much to me.
GM Designer: So what shape are we going for on this luxury mini-van? GM Executive: Have you ever seen a hand-held vacuum before? GM Designer: Say no more fam.
He was able to finish the interior quirks and features and a "driving simulator" while hoisted on the back of a flatbed that was towing the Silhouette at Doug's expense.
"And not just any van, but a perfect diagram of the Silhouette..." That's a huge missed opportunity to say; "And not just any van, but a perfect silhouette of the Silhouette..." C'mon Doug 🤦🏻♂️
I know right?! I literally said that to myself after i facepalmed myself (a bit too forceful). How could he have missed that, diagram isn't even the proper word to use in that context.
Never thought I’d see my childhood minivan reviewed by Doug Demuro. That door closing noise brought back some old memories, I haven’t heard it in 20 years.
I worked at a dealership when these were new. They had two flaws (IMO): the long nose that made parking a little sketchy, and the overly long reach that was required to clean the interior of the windshield. Otherwise they were absolute gems. The aerodynamic advantage over other vans of the era was very evident when driving in a strong headwind. Oh, the "safety noise" when the sliding door closes was just marketing. GM used a stepper motor to drive the door mechanism. Stepper motors make that noise because of how they are driven.
It looks like a military german boxer APC jajajja every owner of this i know they call them by a name jajajja pretty funny thing actually i call mine gregory xd
Doug’s car reviews are always so much fun to watch thanks to his attention to every little detail and his colourful way of presenting quirks and features. 😊
I've seen some of the Pontiac versions over here in EU in the 90s but i don't think they survived long, i even forgot this car was a thing because i haven't seen one for years.
The lack of built in car seats nowadays probably has to do with constantly changing safety standards. Kids below 40 lbs are supposed to face the back of the car now. You could design a seat and 5 minutes later some regulatory body changes a recommendation and suddenly your built in seat is a "deathtrap"
Look at toddler-sized car seats as well. For side impact protection they have huge side bolsters, it's too hard to integrate that into a normal seat. Even back then, many of these integrated car seats were lumpy, hard, and uncomfortable when retracted.
The sound of the sliding door brings back memories of my grandma's 2001 Pontiac Montana. Grandpa worked at the GM plant all his working life and back in the day that meant generous car discounts that continued even after retirement, so grandma splurged and got the optional one power sliding door. The kid behind the driver had to shut their own damn door because we aren't made of money, but I still remember the sound.
@@froggodoggo79 Metris' in the US are primarily geared towards being small commercial vehicles for people who may not need as much room as a Sprinter. Most people looking for luxury in a Mercedes-Benz have always looked to the cars.
I can just see one of these marvels zigzagging down the road with that fancy power sliding door stuck in the half open position with a plastic trash bag covering the opening.
I love that Danny DeVito laugh when he reacts to the door opening. Let's not forget that by the end of the movie Danny DeVito had his own Silhouette. 😂
The movie Get Shorty showcased this van a few times. John Trevolta got one as a rental and told everyone it was cool and "the Cadillac of minivans". In the end of the movie everyone was driving it
Yep, me too. They looked like a Star Trek shuttlecraft. As fate would have it... my mom bought a 1997 Pontiac Transport. One year off the Dustbuster design. Truth is it was a much better vehicle. It went 200,000 miles before the head gasket got it. My father in law had a 2003 for 200,000 miles as well before the head gasket got it. And I had a 2001 as a jalopy that went 150,000 miles until I sold it running perfectly fine. But you’d never mistake any of those for Captain Kirk’s ride. That’s for sure.
I owned a 92. It was the most amazing vehicle I ever drove. It practically floated down the road. Had great power. I have forever hated trading it in. Loved it!
@@redram5150 By that logic, you're saying that Doug doesn't have good taste either. Because I have the same taste in cars, as he does. Weird and quirky
Had an older Chevy version of this with the 3.8. Got great mileage on the highway, fairly decent power for the day, about 180 hp at least. I liked the composite body panels, the body never rusted. I didn’t like removing all the seats to carry larger loads, but I could fold all the seat backs down and handled a lot of things that way, on an elevated flat surface. And yes that was a long dashboard. It was good to armor all it so it wouldn’t warp in the sun too much. But it got us through a lot of family trips back in the day.
LOTS of people still use Yahoo email, myself included. It just WORKS. And if he's like me, he's had it for so long that he have to go to GREAT lengths to move all his contacts somewhere else. I also have gmail, but honestly, I don't like it nearly as well, as far as interface goes, as Yahoo.
@@Danielm1114 Oh man, the MICROPHONE! I have a certain level of nostalgia for his old lapel mic that looked like a chunky silver toy. Ah the good ol days 😉
Do you realize what it is to have a 25-year-old address? I reckon I registered mine in 96 or 97. It's almost as old as the original Silhouette/Lumina/Transsport. Yes, it's a spam magnet, but their spam filter still work. BTW, back in the days we didn't consider their styling quirky in any way. It was kinda curious in the first production year, but by 97 it was 'just another car'. They certainly weren't rare in North America then.
I absolutely loved mine. Me and my friends drove mine everywhere. My dog loved the slide window. He could sit on the seat and hang his head out the window in pure bliss!! I drove that van until the drive shaft fell out and I remember how sad I was watching it being loaded up to be taken to the junk yard. Such great memories with my Aerostar ❤️
Armando Morales I hated having to be dropped off to school in that thing well into the 2000s/early 2010s. Eventually convinced my mom to get a new car after it started having reliability issues around the 110,000 mile mark. She’s been driving the red car in my avatar which itself has been a nightmare and will be traded in soon.
I owned one (used) in the early 2000's.... One of the best Vans I have ever owed. I might have had it for many more years than I did, had it not been stolen from my driveway and found about a month later in the Florida Swamps. It was an odd looking van, but it grew on you - and it had so much interior room.
That was also called a chevy lumina.. And you could get it in proper rocket ship style as a 4 door sedan.. Gm was so cool.. They’ve dropped the ball in North America lately.. The Pontiac g8 was big in Australia.. should have been bigger here 😜
Another great review. This van was great in looks--quite ageless, which is why I find it worthy of one of your reviews. I've only driven two minivans--a Grand Caravan I rented for a 1400 mile round trip between Phoenix and Napa to move my Mom and her pets in 2000 when she bought her retirement home in Phoenix. I also almost bought a Toyota Sienna, which rode nice but I chose a Camry instead and gave my Highlander which I bought for hauling utility to me wife. That way I had a car with a nice sedan ride (a poor man's Lexus) and great highway and commute fuel economy and a near 500 mile range on the highway--to Socal and back I only had to get gas once, usually around Indio when I'd go there on a vacation with my wife and daughter. My Camry was hit once, the front end was damaged, but it was a strong car and I, unhurt, had it in a body shop and a replacement car in my garage the afternoon of an accident, thanks to a great insurance company. I've quit driving since I live within easy access of public transport now so I do not need the expense of insurance--if I could get a car just for looks, I'd get a Ford Probe or Mazda RX7 which reminds me of a Porsche 924. I also like the mid 80's vintage Camaro or Firebird for looks, or the modern Mustang. My favorite looking Sedan was a Chevy Corsica--drove a Beretta once and my fiance loved it--it had nice power and looks for its days. This genre of GM van was quite nice in looks. The Aston Martin Lagonda was also cool looking--I believe you did an awesome review of that car too. The only drawback of these streamlined vehicles was the windshield blocking the view of the front end. I always liked seeing the front hood so when stopped in traffic I could use the back two tires of the vehicle in front to keep a safe stopping distance which I'd line up with the top of my hood--my driving instructor and also my father taught me that trick and I never rear ended anyone as a result in a half million miles of driving.
I remember when I was a Kid my best friends Dad drove a silhouette exactly like this one. We used to hate it and call it a Big Nose. He was embarrassed to be dropped off at school in it, and would make his Dad drop him off on the corner. 😂
If I saw one of my classmates get dropped off in this thing, I would respect the hell out of them. Also this thing may be ugly but it’s cool asf much cooler than a Ford Explorer or a Highlander.
I'm suprised to hear they didn't sell as well as the other two because the Olds was definitely a lot more common around here than the Lumina van and even a little more common than the Pontiac.
The first thing Doug learned to count was the large number of crests, insignias and logos on that car. They really wanted Doug to know he was riding in one of THOSE...
When he was born, his first words were "Anyways, now its time to give my Mother's uterus a doug score. Starting with the weekend categories in styling the interior is very dark but the exterior has a nice smooth curve similar in style to the Volkswagen New Beetle and it gets a 5 out of 10 Acceleration is slow due to the massive weight on the chassis and gets a 2 out of ten..."
My parents had a Pontiac version of this when I was a kid. Oddly enough, the Oldsmobile vans never got the face-lift like the Chevys and Pontiacs did, even though the interior looks like it got updated. I actually see Oldsmobiles on the road all the time, but I also constantly keep an eye out for older GMs! We had the SE trim on our 1996 Trans Sport. Green with the gold trim. I remember my whole family being entertained by the sound that the rear door made. We thought the removable seats and all the storage up front was the coolest thing ever. It had well over 200,000 when the transmission finally went, and we took it on several trips to Florida and Lake Erie. I miss that van just as much as our 1989 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser wagon before that. I'm glad there's a niche of people out there that preserve these beaters that were never supposed to be saught after!
I owned one . It was a hand me down from my parents. I was a wedding DJ and I used that van for at least the last 5 years of its life The only reason I sold it was because I stopped being a DJ . I absolutely loved everything about that van . Was comfortable and swallowed up my equipment. I didn’t have a complaint about the power either. It was perfect to haul me and my children around when I wasn’t working.
When I was a child we had a Pontiac Trans Sport 3.8 with nearly the same interior. We are living in Germany and the car was very rare here even in the early 90s. My friends named the Trans Sport a "flight simulator". I have a lot of nice memories watching this video... Vacation with the family driving through Europe..
@@markusantonio4866 When I remember right you could buy these cars in Opel (GM) dealerships. This was also possible for the successor (Chevrolet Venture) that was sold as Chevrolet Trans Sport. By the way: The successor Trans Sport was the same car like the Opel Sintra, but with another engine and long wheel base.
I had a blue one of these. At 300,000 miles the interior fell apart to the point that it was undrivable. The 3800 and trans still ran perfectly. I love how these look, too.
My mom had a turquoise one when I was in middle school and high school. I thought the power sliding door was so cool!! I made sure people were looking when I opened it at school. 😎
Fun fact: the cars you saw were unauthorized copies of this van, the Chinese Nushen JB6500. The Jiangsu Nushen Automobile company copied it. It was founded in 1990 and based in Jiangdou city in Jiangsu Province. They made a series of vans, minivans, and small buses.
@@levinszki LOL. Those bastards do that with everything, don't they? You know what they say? Imitation is the sexiest form of flattery or something to that effect...meh
"THHHISSS is a 1965 Chevrolet Impala lowrider, and I've borrowed it from a viewer here in beautiful South LA. I've always wanted to drive a lowrider, and today, I will do just that."
He “borrows” them and then reviews them next to chain-link fences covered in tarps. Sketch reviews of borrowed cars make for good viewing, criminality be damned!
I bought the Chevrolet version of this: The Lumina APV when we were in dire need of a car. My wife HATED it! She hated the massive windahield. We called it the deer magnet, because before we got rid of it, she had hit 2 of them. I smacked my head with the driver's side door more times than I could count. But I remember loving the quietness in the cabin, because it was so sleek; it cut through the air. The final "nail in the coffin" was a massive oil leak that developed on the back side of the engine. My wife was overjoyed we were finally getting rid of it.
When my grandfather retired from GM, he bought my grandma one and she drove it for years til she couldn't drive anymore and gave it to my dad. When he sold it after owning it several years, it was still running great. That automatic door chime is burned into my memory tho. Such a weird little van.
If I were to list my favorite reviews, it would include the Vector W8 and this - the 1996 Oldsmobile Silhouette. It would be the only list, ever, that includes both the Vector W8 and the 1996 Oldsmobile Silhouette.
Uploaded Today, 16 hours ago, at 11:57Am Feb 11 2020
@Bonda Heat this was a scheduled upload I guess
Bonda Heat probably had it unlisted and just made it public, maybe waiting for the better quality to get uploaded because when YT videos are uploaded they start at 144P.
Doug type of car of the year?
Doug's a time traveler. This was actually filmed in '96
Does anyone else like it more when Doug reviews "normal" cars like this, as opposed to million-dollar exotics?
Personally I love seeing Doug review quirky cars like this, it just fits his personality so well.
yes i like weird cars
How is this normal? You are more likely to see a Rolls Royce on the road than this olds
@@h0rze423 yeah the rolls royces are cool but i prefer cool, weird, and quirky cars
@@danny67762 I love wierd and quirky cars as well, but we need both on this channel imo. I also wish he would review regular, boring cars as well like a BMW 535i 2016... don't ask why about that particular model
her: he's not responding for 25 minutes. he's probably with another girl
me: learning about an Oldsmobile silhouette
That explains our attention span and interests
At least you have your priorities straight
That's very accurate 😂😂
We're cats. We get bored easily
24 min 54 min
*Doug*- “Quality, there was none” (proceeds to open/shut the power door 30 times)
*Silhouette owner*- (nervous sweating intensifies)
Aaron Zufall laughed too hard on that one
Yes and it's like 24 years old.
I was waiting for the cable to snap
Oh shit
🤣🤣🤣
My dad bought one of these vans used and gifted it to me when I was old enough to drive. I was embarrassed of it at first but I eventually embraced how wacky it looked. I named it “The White Bullet” and it soon became the go to car for road trips and group events. Even my girlfriend fell in love with it. Lots of great memories and handies in The White Bullet. Miss you buddy. RIP king!
Same here except it was a 1986 dodge caravan.. I graduated in 2004.
Shootin white bullets in the white bullet
Don't hit the inside of that van with a black light...
This was my exact case as well. Family bought it for my first car. Couldn’t stand it at first, but eventually my friends all loved it. Only difference is that we affectionally called it “the space shuttle” 🥹 miss her all the time
My dad bought one. My mom wanted a lumina sedan but it was dads turn and he chose the van for practically. Had over 280000 miles on it and all 3 of us kids drove it. I changed the alternator one time on the side of the highway. We named it Goober. Over 60 mph, it got lighter steering the faster you drove. Basically and airplane wing.
My response to Doug reviewing a McLaren supercar: "Meh"
My response to Doug reviewing a Silhouette minivan: "OH HELL YEAH"
I've always been interested in the dustbuster vans. I like the look.
oh yeah, i totally agree
@Marcus Smith 100% agree.
Weird stuff is why I even watch in the first place. Hence why I want a Previa so much now.
So you’re more of a Countach guy I see :)
@@miracleeskimobattleship2874 May dad test drove a Previa, I got car sick in the back seat.
3:05 missed the perfect chance to say “a button with the silhouette of a silhouette”
Xgalxall1122 I know ,right?
I was about to make the same comment
oh hey, thanks for typing out my comment for me
YES! YES! YES!
Those babies are in plenty of backyards in the midwest. with tall grass around them.
Pontiac's legacy
J S They were junk!,,
I know the one I drove is now compacted and probably still smells like Ready Lash and Those bath and body works spritzed that were popular with the late 2000s high school gals club
I still prefer Prodigy BBS service. On my 14k modem. Yes, that's PRE-Internet, bitches. Bow down to endurance. I'm a Bonobo.
I can speak to that from Texas. Poor old Trans Sport sitting and withering away in someone's yard.
whats interesting in watching these older cars doug reviews is seeing all these features that were so ahead of their time. like the button opening the power sliding doors. stuff like that got lost for 20-30 years. interesting to see it all start to come back in todays vehicles.
Silhouette was truly a very nice vehicle. I was really, really close to buying one. Bought Taurus wagon instead. Cheaper.
I just got a car recently that has the on/off power button instead of using a key. Not new at all, but this was actually a thing way back in the 1950s, then was gone for decades before making a comeback around the 2000s or so. So it is interesting to see how things come and go. Sometimes it's just trends, other time they are ideas that just weren't really ready for mass adoption.
Finally a car that matches Doug's clothes.
Fox Blue River 😂😂C’mon man 😂😂
Why is this so accurate 😂💀
where is the lie 😂
I noticed that too !
😂😩
Prospective customer: "Mind if I open the driver's door to look inside?"
Oldsmobile Salesman: "Knock yourself out. Literally."
The design will leave you floored.
Wake up with a kidney missing🤣
Last thing you hear is them hiding you in the back of the van at the dealership: “weuh weuh weuh weuh” *back door locks*
This brings back my childhood and if you think this is ugly, just imagine having it in turquoise. I always thought it resembled a Disney monorail with the sloping windshield, the lines down the side, and the door closing music.
A couple of things that weren't mentioned (or omitted) in the video: those rear front vents didn't have a way to close the vents, you could only move them up or down. Although they may have been deactivated if the rear vents were turned off. Also, the ashtray in the rear next to the fan controls for all of the kids that smoked in the 90s.
A schoolmate’s mom had a “tranny vanny” in jelly bean blue. It was awful
My Grandma had one in that awful Turquoise color. And I definitely busted my head on the top corner of the front passenger door. After splitting my head open, I made DAMN sure to lean back when opening the door.
My old 80s merc has an ash tray and cigarette lighter for every passenger in the car, yet not a single cup holder
microchip470 cars were more colorful back in the 90s now it’s white silver or black
He also did not mention about the air pump
In 1990, my parents decided that having one of these wasn't enough so they bought 2. One was silver, the other white and both had a cloth interior with 6 passenger seating. They had the original 3100 V6 and my dad towed a 25' pontoon boat all over Texas with one of them and we went on several mutli-state road trips throughout the entire US and neither van ever had any problems. Both were extremely reliable until they were sold/traded 8-10 years later. A few things Doug failed to mention is the built in auto-leveling and air compressor for pool toys or inflating tires and for leveling the rear end when towing or hauling. The removable seats only weighed 30 lbs. +/- so removing them wasn't a big deal and this modularity made cross country road trips very comfortable. They also had plastic body panels like the Saturn cars did so they were impervious to minor dings or runaway shopping carts. All in all, they were both amazing vans and my childhood was made richer because of them.
My grandmother had a 2001 Oldsmobile Silhouette and I was quite literally waiting for the sound the door made. Made my day hearing that iconic sound.
Gabriel Shatunovsky Me too! My great uncle had one, I think it was a 98’ because I was about 5-6 when he got it, but I loved that noise so much. It used to make me laugh lol
🤣🤣🤣
My grandma had the teal colored one with the funny cloth grey seats can’t tell you how many pizzas and Ice cream we ate in there
I'm glad I'm not the only one who enjoyed that sound!
Ah yes me too reminds me of my father’s 1995 Lumina APV especially that sound
3:07 “A perfect diagram of the Silhouette,”
Don’t you mean a perfect *silhouette* of the Silhouette?
Someone who finally gets it.
Such a missed opportunity
It’s an old silhouette 😭
I like the look of it - much more sleek than ugly.
Only Doug could of dropped the ball at this moment
I had one of these with the 3800 V6. I liked the feature that the rear seats folded flat and could carry an entire 4x8 foot plank of plywood. I also was in the funeral business and once these rear seats were removed, two cots would fit in nicely. The bodies on the said cots would carry an odor/ the vented rear windows were very useful for this purpose.
Mine was 3800, as well. I loved this thing. Blue.
When I was a kid my babysitter had one of these, I never thought hearing that door sound again would be so nostalgic
Wanna 🙋 break 🚫 from the ads 💸 watch 👀 this short ⬇ video 📽 for 30 minutes ⏰ of 🚫 ad free 🛇 🔥🎶 music 🎶🔥💯Wanna 🙋 break 🚫 from the ads 💸 watch 👀 this short ⬇ video 📽 for 30 minutes ⏰ of 🚫 ad free 🛇 🔥🎶 music 🎶🔥💯Wanna 🙋 break 🚫 from the ads 💸 watch 👀 this short ⬇ video 📽 for 30 minutes ⏰ of 🚫 ad free 🛇 🔥🎶 music 🎶🔥💯
He’s finally reviewing the new cyber truck. Yeah!!
Ryan Stiles 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Ryan Stiles
Mostly
Mini van door closes ..
Snake charmer recording artist
"My time has come"
Sad Toast lolol
Sssss ahhh
hahaha, literally laughed out loud.
@@DougDeMuro I got a reply from Doug ... I am now worthy
Sad Toast now happy toast
I have another theory about the styling. Star Trek The Next Generation was on the air when this minivan came out, and a lot of minivans of that era looked a lot like the shuttles they used on that show.
Leonard Nimoy did advertisements for this specific Oldsmobile so I think you’re on the money.
I always called them shuttlrcraft vans. A few friends started to as well once I pointed out the similarities. I ran into a couple of other people over the years who did the same. I think the design esthetic feel just inside the boundaries of acceptable because of TNG, even if the resemblance wasn't intentional.
@@JasonNichols75Same.
Came here to say the same thing. My neighbor had one back then and first thing I thought was TNG Shuttlecraft.
Patrick Stewart did the VO for the ads for its sister, the Pontiac Transport.
"I borrowed this vehicle from a viewer here in San Diego who has a number of 1980's and 1990's General Motors vehicles."
Sounds like someone's planning on starting a demolition derby.
I have a saying the uglier the car the more i want it. To be honest i would get more disgusted and laughter of people than a normal lambo or ferrari.
@Make America Great Again - DUMP TRUMP! The Aztek didn't come out until 2000.
Make America Great Again - DUMP TRUMP! That would probably win honestly lol
"Drives pretty well" While vehicle shakes violently.
*best comment award*
That is "pretty well" for a 1990s GM vehicle.
@@DougDeMuro Just messin around. Love your content. Keep up the good work.
Fiat: *Laughs in Soviet exports*
😂😂😂😂
“This car actually drives fairly normally”
(Shakes violently)
Logan Caras
Also puffs white smoke out the back. Lol
omg i cried
lmaooooo
@EricTheNotSoRed facts
he probably ran over a squirrel
That door noise just brought back sooo many child hood memories. We had a 97 Pontiac Transport Montana with the auto door and that was a very memorable sound. We then had the 02 silhouette and coincidentally my first car was a 2000 Montana and that door sound will always mean so much to me.
This channel in a nutshell:
- Day 1: McLaren 720s
- Day 2: Oldsmobile Silouette
- Day 3: Pagani Zonda
- Day 4: Bugatti Chiron
- Day 5: PT Cruiser
Kenzer 161 other than the 720s they’re all the same class what you on about
He should do the pt convertible it's so retarded
He demolished a pt cruiser with a hummer awhile back
I'm still waiting for the Ford Cortina Estate in two tone colour.
keith cunningham BS. The PT is an absolute turd, even compared to the exotics
GM Designer: So what shape are we going for on this luxury mini-van?
GM Executive: Have you ever seen a hand-held vacuum before?
GM Designer: Say no more fam.
Grew up in these vehicles. All of my family called them Dust Busters. That V6 kicked ass though lets not lie
And the GM exec was simply trying to find his dust buster, the rest is history.
Let's copy Toyota previa 😆
They looked at the Renault Espace. The removable seat system is also the same.
When they say 'lozenge design' I think they mean Preparation H Suppository.
I like the “no parking sign” next to the van. Doug is badass.
"Towed at owner's expense." Not Doug's problem! 😁
#DougLife
@@coreygrant5974 lol
We had a 95 we bought used in 96, very comfortable with lots of power. Love the fact that you're reviewing older vehicles!
Doug's wife: Hunny how do I look
Doug: Stylish and luxurious back in 1990's
Also Doug: Quite unattractive to modern standards.
Bruh how does he have a wife he's a simp
Underrated
@@djnoah225 Having a variable height between 6''1 and 6'4 helps a lot with the ladies
I read your comment right as he said "Stylish and Luxurious back in 1996" lmfaoooo
@@uraldamasis6887 , indeed. It helps one cater to all preferences.
"It's an Oldsmobile Silhouette."
"But I booked a Cadillac."
"It's the Cadillac of minivans..."
Get Shorty - 1995
ooooo irreverent.
Just where I saw it
Chili Palmer 😂
THIS is the comment I came here for.
24:42 thank me later.
😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
Sign: "NO PARKING"
Doug: "THIS IS..."
LOL!!!!
Hugh Jass totally
0:14
Sovereign Citizin: 'I am not parking, I am reviewing'
He was able to finish the interior quirks and features and a "driving simulator" while hoisted on the back of a flatbed that was towing the Silhouette at Doug's expense.
doug score be like: "lets see how this minivan stacks up against a Ferrari"
"Let's see how this Ferrari stacks up against the Spacex rockets"
"And not just any van, but a perfect diagram of the Silhouette..."
That's a huge missed opportunity to say;
"And not just any van, but a perfect silhouette of the Silhouette..."
C'mon Doug 🤦🏻♂️
He needs to work on his dad jokes since he plans on having kids
I was waiting for doug to say that but nothing :(
same, I was deffo like, what, how can you not say silhouette of the Silhouette?
I know right?! I literally said that to myself after i facepalmed myself (a bit too forceful).
How could he have missed that, diagram isn't even the proper word to use in that context.
Never thought I’d see my childhood minivan reviewed by Doug Demuro. That door closing noise brought back some old memories, I haven’t heard it in 20 years.
My grandpa had one, drove it into a lake... true story.
Wait...what? I think this calls for the story to be told.
If it flipped over you could probably have just used it as a boat
i hope it wasn’t cuz he was tryna avoid another car at night and flew over the guardrail
Cool
Can't say I blame him, it does look like a boat
I worked at a dealership when these were new. They had two flaws (IMO): the long nose that made parking a little sketchy, and the overly long reach that was required to clean the interior of the windshield. Otherwise they were absolute gems. The aerodynamic advantage over other vans of the era was very evident when driving in a strong headwind.
Oh, the "safety noise" when the sliding door closes was just marketing. GM used a stepper motor to drive the door mechanism. Stepper motors make that noise because of how they are driven.
This van reminds me of the Monorail from Disney World...
Brian Fisher lol true
Oh my gosh yessss
They do kinda look like a monorail train car, doesn't it??
Or the front of a japanese train. Lol
Well, sir, there's nothing on earth
Like a genuine, bona fide
Electrified, six-car monorail.
Car: has leather seats
Doug: LUXUURYYY
aaaaaaand tinted windows
My mom had a gray one when I was six and I even remember looking at it as a child and thinking “why does this look like a space ship”
i think my mom had a purple one back in 2008 and we always called it barney cuz it was big n purple
Thought the Pontiac Transport version was better looking.
It looks like a military german boxer APC jajajja every owner of this i know they call them by a name jajajja pretty funny thing actually i call mine gregory xd
@@vfspectrum4652 that's hilarious lol
They all did. The Toyota Previa van from the 90s was weird too.
Doug’s car reviews are always so much fun to watch thanks to his attention to every little detail and his colourful way of presenting quirks and features. 😊
My family used to have one of these lol the door fell off in traffic once
😂😂😂
Thanks! I needed a good laugh!
😂😂
Damn
😹😹😹😹😹
Too funny 😂
I loved the Pontiac Version. I worked at a pontiac dealer when these were new and we called them Door Wedgie vans
Rest in piece
Savage Sock how many pieces?
I've seen some of the Pontiac versions over here in EU in the 90s but i don't think they survived long, i even forgot this car was a thing because i haven't seen one for years.
Sign: "No Parking"
Doug: "QUIRKS AND FEATURES"
He didn't choose the thug life; the thug life chose him.
I was only there for a minute!
I absolutely hated these things back then, but I'm very sentimental, so something about seeing it makes me so happy that I feel like I want one.
THIS! is the kind of shit I love to see on this channel.
+1
Same
yeah better than watching a 1 million ferrari
No swearing this is a Christian mine craft server!
MHT why?
Looks like the car i drew in pictures when i was 5 😂
hahahahahaha
GM probably hired a group of 6 year olds to design this thing lmao
Hahahahaha
😂😂😂
oh look it's me
The lack of built in car seats nowadays probably has to do with constantly changing safety standards. Kids below 40 lbs are supposed to face the back of the car now. You could design a seat and 5 minutes later some regulatory body changes a recommendation and suddenly your built in seat is a "deathtrap"
blah blah regs, blah blah liability... but you are right.
Look at toddler-sized car seats as well. For side impact protection they have huge side bolsters, it's too hard to integrate that into a normal seat. Even back then, many of these integrated car seats were lumpy, hard, and uncomfortable when retracted.
Better as a booster seat
Doug the type of guy to park in a no parking zone
I agree. Blah Blah Blah. Just a reason to make people spend more money. Car seat exp dates.....what a joke.@@alexlollar3293
The sound of the sliding door brings back memories of my grandma's 2001 Pontiac Montana. Grandpa worked at the GM plant all his working life and back in the day that meant generous car discounts that continued even after retirement, so grandma splurged and got the optional one power sliding door. The kid behind the driver had to shut their own damn door because we aren't made of money, but I still remember the sound.
“A technology all modern minivan take for granted”
Mercedes metris crying in the corner
The US market Metris is so boring compared to the Euro V-Class. Their van is DRIPPING with luxury.
@@froggodoggo79 Metris' in the US are primarily geared towards being small commercial vehicles for people who may not need as much room as a Sprinter. Most people looking for luxury in a Mercedes-Benz have always looked to the cars.
As Danny Devito said in Get Shorty, “It’s the Cadillac of mini vans.”
I believe it was John Travolta who said that line. Danny DeVito took it for a test drive.
I can just see one of these marvels zigzagging down the road with that fancy power sliding door stuck in the half open position with a plastic trash bag covering the opening.
*MERCEDES
I love that Danny DeVito laugh when he reacts to the door opening. Let's not forget that by the end of the movie Danny DeVito had his own Silhouette. 😂
It was John travolta
12:23
Doug is the type of guy who reviews a car at a no parking zone
He’s safe because a tow truck ain’t even gonna touch that shit
Needed that laugh thanks
All the tow trucks are busy with Range Rovers so I don’t think he’s worried.
He's fine, the sign specifically says at the vehicle owner's expense lol
The movie Get Shorty showcased this van a few times. John Trevolta got one as a rental and told everyone it was cool and "the Cadillac of minivans". In the end of the movie everyone was driving it
I only watch this video for 4 reasons:
1) “THIS”
2) quirks
3) features
4) Doug being doug
bumper to bumper
But what is this comment's dougscore?
Number 1 and 4 !!
Viktor Shokur I totally agree, he’s the only one I would spend 25min watching review a van!!!😂😂😂
I watch this vid since I knew it was gonna b good
As a small child in the late 90s, these were my favorite car and i was dead certain I'd own one as an adult. Don't ask me why.
is it your car now?
lol
@@hugonubario Still waiting for a response?
@@baronvonjo1929
I forgot about it but yes sure!
same but mid nineties
Yep, me too. They looked like a Star Trek shuttlecraft.
As fate would have it... my mom bought a 1997 Pontiac Transport. One year off the Dustbuster design.
Truth is it was a much better vehicle. It went 200,000 miles before the head gasket got it. My father in law had a 2003 for 200,000 miles as well before the head gasket got it. And I had a 2001 as a jalopy that went 150,000 miles until I sold it running perfectly fine.
But you’d never mistake any of those for Captain Kirk’s ride. That’s for sure.
How in the world did I get here from watching a Chiron review??? I love this channel, never a dull moment!!!
Fax dude.
Is there a prompter...? Or is he nailing facts for 25 min every vid
same way I got to ACCCCCE watching a silhouette review..... 😉
I owned a 92. It was the most amazing vehicle I ever drove. It practically floated down the road. Had great power. I have forever hated trading it in. Loved it!
I had a 95 and I too feel like you do.
I like how there is a “No parking” sign behind the van where he is reviewing it.
😂🤣 I didn’t even notice that!!
💀
4:20 💀💀💀
It's funny. Truth is, though if someone came along, he's there, so then he'd just have to pack up his stuff and drive away.
Doug is 'edgy' that way...
We had a Pontiac Transport when I was a kid so this brought back a ton of memories.
My freinds mom had one its quick for a large ass minivan back then and floaty lol
I'm not afraid to admit that I've always liked these vans
Eric Allison loved the Transport version. It was my dream car when I was a kid.
Way to advertise you have no taste.
Me too
@@redram5150 By that logic, you're saying that Doug doesn't have good taste either. Because I have the same taste in cars, as he does. Weird and quirky
@@swatisquantum Yeah same here.
Had an older Chevy version of this with the 3.8. Got great mileage on the highway, fairly decent power for the day, about 180 hp at least. I liked the composite body panels, the body never rusted. I didn’t like removing all the seats to carry larger loads, but I could fold all the seat backs down and handled a lot of things that way, on an elevated flat surface. And yes that was a long dashboard. It was good to armor all it so it wouldn’t warp in the sun too much. But it got us through a lot of family trips back in the day.
Everyone roasts Doug on his cargo shorts, but can we talk about that YAHOO email address???
LOTS of people still use Yahoo email, myself included. It just WORKS. And if he's like me, he's had it for so long that he have to go to GREAT lengths to move all his contacts somewhere else. I also have gmail, but honestly, I don't like it nearly as well, as far as interface goes, as Yahoo.
We need to roast his mic. He’s way to popular to have mic audio that bad
@@Danielm1114 Oh man, the MICROPHONE! I have a certain level of nostalgia for his old lapel mic that looked like a chunky silver toy. Ah the good ol days 😉
Was just thinking the exact same thing.. we still in the 1990s 🤣
Do you realize what it is to have a 25-year-old address? I reckon I registered mine in 96 or 97. It's almost as old as the original Silhouette/Lumina/Transsport. Yes, it's a spam magnet, but their spam filter still work. BTW, back in the days we didn't consider their styling quirky in any way. It was kinda curious in the first production year, but by 97 it was 'just another car'. They certainly weren't rare in North America then.
3:06 Im mad at you for not saying Silhouette of a Silhouette
I see a little silhouetto of a van!
Scaramouche, Scaramouche....
@@hupsou4237 no no no it should be;
I see a little silhouetto of a van!
Oldsmobile! Oldsmobile! will it do the fan-dan-go??!....
I never thought I would hear Doug say “Ford Aerostar”. That name still sends shivers down my spine.
About the only worse minivan than this one
What I liked mine.... And my friends has 300k miles. My lumina broke down after 150k
I absolutely loved mine. Me and my friends drove mine everywhere. My dog loved the slide window. He could sit on the seat and hang his head out the window in pure bliss!! I drove that van until the drive shaft fell out and I remember how sad I was watching it being loaded up to be taken to the junk yard. Such great memories with my Aerostar ❤️
Armando Morales I hated having to be dropped off to school in that thing well into the 2000s/early 2010s. Eventually convinced my mom to get a new car after it started having reliability issues around the 110,000 mile mark. She’s been driving the red car in my avatar which itself has been a nightmare and will be traded in soon.
@@HahahaLOL2011 cool but was Pablo Escobar ur dad
I owned one (used) in the early 2000's.... One of the best Vans I have ever owed. I might have had it for many more years than I did, had it not been stolen from my driveway and found about a month later in the Florida Swamps. It was an odd looking van, but it grew on you - and it had so much interior room.
nobody:
Doug: *parks in front of a no parking sign to make a video*
Tyler Tomashowski damn I didn’t see this comment when I just posted about it. Damn now I have to delete mine :(
I laughed heartily when the door slid open to reveal the sign 🤣
Collab with GTOger?
It was time.
A weird looking Minivan.
It is the Best day of my Life
I'd love to see him review a Fiat Multipla when they become legal in the US.
Ultraguy87
He would puke several times during the review, because of the multiplia
*Toyota Previa memories*
Dusty Dude
Hope he won’t be recording during the "reactions"
@@ultraguy8771 wait
looks like your wish has been granted!
I can smell the inside of this car though the screen
how does it smell?
@@Matt-dz3xe Like cigarette smoke.
@@butwhataboutdragons7768 oh, yes, the smell of childhood.
YOOO I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE.
Smells like Play-doh and McDonald's
That was also called a chevy lumina..
And you could get it in proper rocket ship style as a 4 door sedan..
Gm was so cool..
They’ve dropped the ball in North America lately..
The Pontiac g8 was big in Australia.. should have been bigger here 😜
There was also a Chevy lumina coupe 🤯
Doug: Reviews a Lamborghini
Me: Oh, that’s nice.
Also Doug: Reviews a Silhouette
Me: Oh my god yes😁
that van looks like a 7 seater Lamborghini
I'm the same way.... We had a 94 lol
"driving the Silhouette"
*starts laughing as RSX passes being towed* lol
This is the kind of cars I want to see Doug review, please like you agree 👍.
Totally agree!!!!
Another great review. This van was great in looks--quite ageless, which is why I find it worthy of one of your reviews. I've only driven two minivans--a Grand Caravan I rented for a 1400 mile round trip between Phoenix and Napa to move my Mom and her pets in 2000 when she bought her retirement home in Phoenix. I also almost bought a Toyota Sienna, which rode nice but I chose a Camry instead and gave my Highlander which I bought for hauling utility to me wife. That way I had a car with a nice sedan ride (a poor man's Lexus) and great highway and commute fuel economy and a near 500 mile range on the highway--to Socal and back I only had to get gas once, usually around Indio when I'd go there on a vacation with my wife and daughter.
My Camry was hit once, the front end was damaged, but it was a strong car and I, unhurt, had it in a body shop and a replacement car in my garage the afternoon of an accident, thanks to a great insurance company.
I've quit driving since I live within easy access of public transport now so I do not need the expense of insurance--if I could get a car just for looks, I'd get a Ford Probe or Mazda RX7 which reminds me of a Porsche 924. I also like the mid 80's vintage Camaro or Firebird for looks, or the modern Mustang.
My favorite looking Sedan was a Chevy Corsica--drove a Beretta once and my fiance loved it--it had nice power and looks for its days. This genre of GM van was quite nice in looks.
The Aston Martin Lagonda was also cool looking--I believe you did an awesome review of that car too.
The only drawback of these streamlined vehicles was the windshield blocking the view of the front end. I always liked seeing the front hood so when stopped in traffic I could use the back two tires of the vehicle in front to keep a safe stopping distance which I'd line up with the top of my hood--my driving instructor and also my father taught me that trick and I never rear ended anyone as a result in a half million miles of driving.
Ah, being a kid in the 90s.The flood of memories is strong with this one..
Esp that rear window thing. Being a kid and just wanting it to open more so I stopped dying.
yup yup yup
My Kids would agree!!!!
I remember when I was a Kid my best friends Dad drove a silhouette exactly like this one. We used to hate it and call it a Big Nose. He was embarrassed to be dropped off at school in it, and would make his Dad drop him off on the corner. 😂
Plot twist when he got his license it was his passme downs and adored it🤣🤣
If I saw one of my classmates get dropped off in this thing, I would respect the hell out of them. Also this thing may be ugly but it’s cool asf much cooler than a Ford Explorer or a Highlander.
Me: I’m not spending 25 minutes watching a video on a minivan.
Also me: Watches whole video
Hahah me to!
@@detroitengineering782 It's 2020, so you're excused on wanting to escape into a dust buster video in a dust bowl year.
U can play it twice the speed or x1.75 you get to save up time
Exfuckingactly
tbf most of that 25 minutes was about a sliding door
I'm suprised to hear they didn't sell as well as the other two because the Olds was definitely a lot more common around here than the Lumina van and even a little more common than the Pontiac.
"Has an amazing group of 1980s and 1990s GM cars" is a sentence never before heard.
@anonymous dude probably has a B-Body or 2, lets be honest. with a repertoire like that is basically mandatory.
Amazing in its quantity, I guess
@anonymous it was an attempt at levity, GM has made some cool cars in the 80's a 90's. My childhood favourite was a 95 Suburban.
😂😂😂😂🤣🤣
@anonymous "rare" lol
When Doug was born and his parents brought him home from the hospital the first thing he did was give their car a Dougscore
When Doug was born the first thing his parents did was give HIM a Dougscore.
@@stinkycheese804 Value: 6
The first thing Doug learned to count was the large number of crests, insignias and logos on that car. They really wanted Doug to know he was riding in one of THOSE...
Lmfaoooooooo
When he was born, his first words were "Anyways, now its time to give my Mother's uterus a doug score. Starting with the weekend categories in styling the interior is very dark but the exterior has a nice smooth curve similar in style to the Volkswagen New Beetle and it gets a 5 out of 10 Acceleration is slow due to the massive weight on the chassis and gets a 2 out of ten..."
True story, we had a customer who put a little model railroad on the dash
Lol whoa
That's a neat idea.
I always loved these vans, I called them Space shuttle vans. Especially when they have that paint scheme
*Doug the type of guy rate his one-night-stand as "Ugly, weird and incredibly rare".*
Most of those Doug is the type of guy comments are boring and unoriginal. That one is actually funny.
I remember the “safety noise” on my 2001 Pontiac Montana mini-van
Mitch Hugo haha yup me too, on my 01 Chevy Venture... I took it to a mechanic when I first drove it all confused thinking it was broken. 🤦♀️
Same here!!!!!!! On my mom's Pontiac Montana!!!!
@@razzyp
M
90s gm “It’s a Dustbuster”
2020s Elon “It’s Blade Runner”
Make that a LUXURY DUSTBUSTER!!!! (fortunately there was no Cadillac version...)
My grandma had two, they were both green and looked like tic tacs.
Her last one had two power sliding doors.
My dad had a 1993 Chevy Lumina APV... this brings back memories of road trips when I was young!!
Looks like a 1980s concept car that was only actualized 10 years later.
Because it is, though technically, the design first came out in 1990, so it's really only 4 years. Look up "1986 Pontiac Trans Sport Concept"
@@Teraforce88 I mean that it almost looks like a concept car from the *early* 1980s.
My parents had a Pontiac version of this when I was a kid. Oddly enough, the Oldsmobile vans never got the face-lift like the Chevys and Pontiacs did, even though the interior looks like it got updated. I actually see Oldsmobiles on the road all the time, but I also constantly keep an eye out for older GMs!
We had the SE trim on our 1996 Trans Sport. Green with the gold trim. I remember my whole family being entertained by the sound that the rear door made. We thought the removable seats and all the storage up front was the coolest thing ever. It had well over 200,000 when the transmission finally went, and we took it on several trips to Florida and Lake Erie. I miss that van just as much as our 1989 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser wagon before that. I'm glad there's a niche of people out there that preserve these beaters that were never supposed to be saught after!
Bugatti Chiron Divo or Oldsmobile Silhouette?
Everyone: Bugatti!
Daddy Doug: Oldsmobile!
I need a couple nights to choose one. uuuuummm
I would love the Olds, it's not a Buick but it's still nice.
That’s why non car guys would choose the Bugatti because it’s fast and looks nice while car guys who know about older cars would choose the olds.
Neither, I chose a rusty 2000 Toyota Tundra
What's the point in looking at a Bugatti when 99.99% can't afford one. I'd rather learn about this dust buster than a billionaire's exclusive
This is the Doug content I crave and desire deep in my bones.
I owned one . It was a hand me down from my parents.
I was a wedding DJ and I used that van for at least the last 5 years of its life
The only reason I sold it was because I stopped being a DJ .
I absolutely loved everything about that van .
Was comfortable and swallowed up my equipment.
I didn’t have a complaint about the power either.
It was perfect to haul me and my children around when I wasn’t working.
When I was a child we had a Pontiac Trans Sport 3.8 with nearly the same interior. We are living in Germany and the car was very rare here even in the early 90s. My friends named the Trans Sport a "flight simulator". I have a lot of nice memories watching this video... Vacation with the family driving through Europe..
I didn’t think Pontiac or GM was in Germany.
@@markusantonio4866 When I remember right you could buy these cars in Opel (GM) dealerships. This was also possible for the successor (Chevrolet Venture) that was sold as Chevrolet Trans Sport. By the way: The successor Trans Sport was the same car like the Opel Sintra, but with another engine and long wheel base.
Oldsmobile Silhouette: Working on this van is a nightmare.
Honda Fit: Hold my beer.
True dat
Dont believe what Doug says , you can work on this car just as easy as any other fwd ....
@@Dankcatvacs It's probably that parts for this thing are few and far between. You can't really work on it without the correct parts to do so.
Kate O i’m confused
Kate O why?
I think you need to drop the "doug score" and introduce the 'Quirk-o-meter"
I'm still salty he didn't call it the Doug descoreo
We should have both.
That's amazing lol!!!!
Jason Langdale
Doug Would be the type of guy to have a Score system than I’d a metric system
“The Cadillac of minivans”
Now imagine if GM had actually slapped a Cadillac logo on one of these
The cringe.
I’m honestly surprised they didn’t......
Thats the dodge grand caravan 😂
That would be horrible
@@katherine3276 lol 😂
I had a blue one of these. At 300,000 miles the interior fell apart to the point that it was undrivable. The 3800 and trans still ran perfectly. I love how these look, too.
My mom had a turquoise one when I was in middle school and high school. I thought the power sliding door was so cool!! I made sure people were looking when I opened it at school. 😎
This van was insanely popular in China in the 90s, known as the "Bullet head". We saw it on streets all the time for a very long time.
Fun fact: the cars you saw were unauthorized copies of this van, the Chinese Nushen JB6500. The Jiangsu Nushen Automobile company copied it. It was founded in 1990 and based in Jiangdou city in Jiangsu Province. They made a series of vans, minivans, and small buses.
Didn't know Oldsmobile sold cars in China too
@@anthony_rivera4735 read above comment
wow never knew Oldsmobile sold cars to the Chinese market, neat.
@@levinszki LOL. Those bastards do that with everything, don't they? You know what they say? Imitation is the sexiest form of flattery or something to that effect...meh
Why is it that every time Doug says he borrowed a car it sounds like he’s saying he stole it.
"THHHISSS is a 1965 Chevrolet Impala lowrider, and I've borrowed it from a viewer here in beautiful South LA. I've always wanted to drive a lowrider, and today, I will do just that."
He says it’s borrowed for legal reasons, when the car is reported stolen 😂
He has quite a selection.
He “borrows” them and then reviews them next to chain-link fences covered in tarps. Sketch reviews of borrowed cars make for good viewing, criminality be damned!
I bought the Chevrolet version of this: The Lumina APV when we were in dire need of a car. My wife HATED it! She hated the massive windahield. We called it the deer magnet, because before we got rid of it, she had hit 2 of them. I smacked my head with the driver's side door more times than I could count. But I remember loving the quietness in the cabin, because it was so sleek; it cut through the air. The final "nail in the coffin" was a massive oil leak that developed on the back side of the engine. My wife was overjoyed we were finally getting rid of it.
When my grandfather retired from GM, he bought my grandma one and she drove it for years til she couldn't drive anymore and gave it to my dad. When he sold it after owning it several years, it was still running great. That automatic door chime is burned into my memory tho. Such a weird little van.