My first “real” job after college was as an insurance adjuster in Western KY starting in the fall of 1966. My first claim was on a ‘66 Olds 442 tri-power that caught fire on a dealership post service test drive after working on a carburetor leak. The car burned on the side of the road before the Hopkinsville, KY FD could respond. The car was less than a month old and the owner said when he took delivery the odor of raw gasoline was constantly present. The dealership and Oldsmobile denied the young man’s claim pretty much as stuff happens. The MSRP on the car was over $4k which was about five or six hundred dollars more than the standard 442’s at the time. The owner explained to me and my (trainer) senior claim rep this was a “special” edition but never called it a W-30. He said he would prolly would not be able to replace the burned out unit with a like model. Several months earlier Hot Rod mag did an article on the 442’s and said to remember the option called W-30, I was intrigued by the article, and once I saw the sales invoice provided for the claim settlement I realized that the car was very special. Now I really realize what a “very special edition” that car was.
How did they legally get away with denying that claim? Today that would be a cut and dry case of fraud on the dealership and manufacturers part. Massive lawsuit, the owner would likely get a settlement large enough he and several of his descendants would never have to work again.
Never underestimate an Oldsmobile. I've got a 455 in my jet boat with a tuned Qjet that spanks a lot of big dollar boats. Absolutely a beautiful car! Great vid guys!
i saw an old olds ad- from about 1903. it claimed that the gas fuel supply was much more dependable that trying to find quality hay and oats! times have changed? lol
@@craigrheberling I own a 1927 Ford Model T. It's been in my family for a long time. I recall my Grandfather telling me that during the depression, it was easier to keep one of those running than it was to feed a horse.
@@jackhayes7282NO, they don't, BUT they're a great carb for a mild street car. I've gotten into the 10s in the quarter with a Q-Jet, but it had a LOT of work into it, and that's about as far as it would go. Once I finally replaced it with a Holley, the car went into the 9s on it's first pass off the trailer, and went even faster once the Holley was tuned to perfection. The Q-Jet is a GREAT street carb though, and gets respectable MPGs and good throttle response because of the tiny triple booster design. They start well in the cold also because the automatic choke on them works very well. The HUGE secondaries make some sweet noises when you bury the throttle pedal too... 😁 You are correct though, they are a P.I.T.A. to work on, tuning parts aren't easy to come by compared to Holley parts. The single float bowl is very small, and doesn't hold alot of fuel, it's hard to keep that tiny bowl full of fuel on a fast car, and when the fuel level in the bowl starts to get low it will vastly affect the tuning. They're not a very user friendly carb to work on either, as you have to remove it and take the entire thing apart to get at the jets, power pistons, metering rods, and other tuning parts. And it takes a guy with specific knowledge of them to be able to super tune one. Most guys have no clue how they work, and simply call them "Junk" when they can't get them tuned properly. I've spent MANY hours working on mine to get it to the point of running low 10s, and I now can do then in my sleep. There's a great book put there by Cliff Ruggles if anyone is interested in learning how to super tune them.
Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeah! I'm a on the younger side of your viewership, but man I love old Oldsmobiles. This really is a piece of art that's been masterfully executed.
The air intakes where mounted under bumpers I Race olds w 30 drag cars in 1967. none Olds in St Paul Minnesota sold me one of the 52 drag pack cars the car wone the division nhra champions in 1967 at Minnesota dragways that 66 is not a olds drag PAC car why do I know I had a 65 and a a 66 tri power car bought them new this guy is full of s. Don't get suck in you can check me out Gary Hansen also owner of Tenora Dragways
Thanks for sharing that with us Uncle Tony, Oldsmobile's don't get as much attention as the others in the big three A friend of the family Paul was an Oldsmobile guy and would have loved to see that one for sure
I believe actor James Garner owned one. Being he was involved in offroad with Olds in his Banshee and 442's. His team was American International Racers.
Apparently the stunt drivers were so impressed by his pace on the set of Grand Prix they thought he'd have what it takes to be a racing driver had he chosen that instead of acting. I think it snowballed from there.
The off road Olds was on Jay Leno a while back, it is still being raced. A few things, the chassis is all tube, the body 3/4 ish scale fiberglass , front spindles are Dodge van, the motor is mostly in the passenger compartment. I " think " George Barris made the body.
This is an abso-damn-lutely BEAUTIFUL and rare beast that was clearly shown the love it deserves. Uncle Tony and the owner, you guys both rock. And this is high praise from a Ford and Mopar man.
It has a 3.975 stroke that's not exactly short even by big block standards just slightly less than the 454 stroke. The 427 Ford, 426 Mopars and 427 Chevy were around 3.75 give or take a few.
Welcome to Uncle Tony's Cool GM stuff Corner.. In my past "work" life of car shows and going to them, meeting the people who care for these Special Classics was major plus.. thanks Boss and Boss lady.. @Ø
I also had a 1973 Olds 442. Red with the lower white stripe that ran along the bottom and over the wheel wells with stripe down the hood that came with the fake louvers. Olds 350 Rocket with Turbo 350 which i replaced with a 455 from a 70 Toronado adding a "Mondell Olds" Camshaft and a set of Hooker headers. I ended up ripping the right rear lower control arm out the frame ( it was from Ohio so it was a little rusty) on the 1-2 shift street racing and spinning it into the guard rail on I-680 bridge.
@@danielscott6787 I also had a Mondello 455 full roller motor. I was also one of the 1st 10 people in the US to get the edelbrock aluminum heads when they 1st came out. Mandello did the port work to my heads and Offenhauser intake. Had the Mondello support girdle 1050 holly dom. 600hp motor and 800hp/777tq on a 175 shot of nos. 455 has a long stroke great torque but they don't love rpms.
I once knew a guy who had a "regular" 1966 442 in red with black vinyl top. I tuned it for him in order to get a turn behind the wheel. It was one very sweet car to drive, handled great for a car of the time, rode well, and you could catch rubber at every upshift...and that was without the W30 motor.
I wonder if it has the factory boxed convertible frame. Olds had a lot of options to chose from when ordering a car. Tons of gears, trannys, handling options ect.
Great video. I was unaware that Oldsmobile produced any W30 series cars prior to their 1968 ramrod 350's. I owned a 1969 2-door post coup F85 with the W31 package with the 4:33 rear end. It was an awesome sleeper and on the street surprised a lot of Roadrunners, Chevelles, and GTO's. It ran in the low 14's in F stock at the Grand Bend drag strip in Ontario, Canada.
Thanks for posting this! I have been an Oldsmobile affection ado all my life. Never knew these 1966 was available with a drag package! Very, very great auto to own, congrats!🇨🇦
I knew it existed but never saw one thank you for restoring this time capsle great restoration it can only be original once but you did a OUTSTANDING job of tryining to get the feel of a new oringinal example as you drove it off the line
Reminds me there was a w30 package for the 425 Toronado's. The regional Olds tech school instructor in Kansas city had one. Their were 5 guys init at a stop light when a popular Chevelle 327 pulls up. Imagine he was a little surprised that this hug car jumped him off the line smok coming from the front wheels.
Seeing that Hurst reminded me of my '66 tri-power goat. The greatest driving experience of my life. How I regret not having that car today. Much respect for the thought, skill, time and effort that went into that W-30. I salute you.
Oldsmobile always SO far ahead of the curve and under appreciated! GM used them and abused them and never deserved to have them under their banner! So Many Oldsmobile oddities and amazing stories! Go to the REO museum in Lansing and you will learn about the Genius that started this iconic and storied brand!
I'm at the show and took many many pics of this car to help me in my 66 F85 Deluxe 442 restoration. What's even crazier is that this car didn't win the class, an equally nice 65 F85 442 won.
My Dad had a 67 F-85 std no frills and we loved it. I lived very close to rochester products and had a couple freinds who worked there and came home with some interesting things thrown away. The F-85 grill in 66 was so sexy. I really liked this set up. I am a Ford guy but I love them all.
I bought my 1966 Olds 442 from the showroom floor it came with the her shift and a smooth ride. I also owned a 1968 442 convertible Willow Green with the stripe down the front fender and I also owned a 1985 442 black with gold trim that was a good ride too. But my favorite was my 1966 442 fire engine red. Thanks for sharing you're a nice 442 I'm 80 years old and I still remember my first ride in my 66 442. .
Traded a 1969 Mach 351 Mustang with only 6000 miles showing on the od for a 1967 Buick GS 400 Blk/Blk int. 4spd. 3:91 posi w/fact air & fact. Sun tach back in 1970-71 that had 80,000 miles on od......my friend (a Buick mechanic/auto shop teacher) gave it a super/tune & I replaced the tailpipes with 1967 442 slash cut pipes & installed a Hurst shifter/t-handle ......proceeded to win my first street race over another friend and his newly purchased '69 Z 28 RS twice .....lol
1966 is the first year for the W30. A 66 W30 is a holy grail car for Olds lovers since only 54 were built. Sam Murray's 67 W30 442 (single QJet) runs 10.90's in E Stock so a race prepped 66 W30 would run at least as quick.
Not as rare, but I never see them - the '64 442. I used to see '65s, but never '64s. I finally came to realize the reason for the low '64 production numbers. It was a mid-year response to the success of the iconic '64 GTO - the car that started the big V8 in a small car (muscle car) movement.
There's 3 or 4 64s here at the show. Also, I remember Olds played by the rules per say as GM said no larger than 330 cubic inch engine so Olds came out with a 330. Pontiac got around it by saying it was an option on the Tempest/LeMans.
Tony this is my 3rd comment on here....I'm just so fired up you did some Oldsmobile stuff and did it justice without fluff we have all seen or read 10 million times from peterson publishing. Don't get me wrong peterson pub. Did alot of great stuff. I'm just saying alot of stuff got re-hashed from their archives. Also, again, remember when I said I'm an Oldsmobile guy? Oh yeah and I'm 52 and still have my first car which happens to be a 1970 Olds 442! Lol can't say it enough and thank you for allowing me to get all excited on a piece about my favorite GM make!
Great car, very desirable collector and restoration job. This looks like an Oldsmobile meet, and reminds me of a funny memory from the late '70s. A friend of mine had a beautiful '69 Hurst/Olds, and wanted to attend an Olds gathering in Milwaukee. That same weekend, the Daytona/Superbird Club had their summer meeting in town, so I decided to drive my Superbird up along with his Hurst/Olds. His meet was on Saturday, mine on Sunday. I drove my 'Bird to HIS meet, and I asked him where I could park my car. He pointed at an empty space and said, "why don't you just park it there?" So right there amongst all those beautiful Oldsmobiles with their hoods up, doors opened, people standing around and yacking, sat my big obnoxious Vitamine-C Orange shark-nosed Superbird, wing sticking proudly 50 feet up in the air, with "PLYMOUTH" blasting out from the rear quarters, staring all of those other cars flat into the pavement. Some guy later asked me to move it. Go figure.
I am proud of and will never sell my set of Olds "B" heads with the "tr" code stamped on the pad for a set of original L-69 tri power cars...not to be confused with the super rare w-30 like this one they made, oh crap forgot the exact number, 2700 ish tri power L-69 cars. Also got the 400 block from same set of heads but unfortunately know for a fact the original donor body is long gone. Still tho want to find the right home for these B heads and a bad Ass g block 400 olds and hit up pure stock. It's not like I've never turned a wrench on a classic olds before!
I saw a magazine article on the three carburetor olds and they had 1275 L69s I think plus 54 W30s with the forced induction air cleaner. I own a L69 intake and carbs with 3 tiny air filters. I used it on a low compression 455 from a 73 or so cutlass.
FINALLY got my hot rod inline 6 Mustang back together, and took it to a show last night AND today... people liked and respected it. But this Old's is on another level...DANG!!!!
One of my best buds from high school had a '66 tri power, 4 sp with 4:11 gears. A very strong running car. We all have a car we wish we could have back...
Nice to see an Olds from a Quad 4 owner. I really think GM biggest mistake of that era was NOT allowing their various 7 liter engines to be dropped (with all around disc brakes) in the later 60's musclecars, because if they did I don't think Chrysler would have a market for their cars outside the hemi 426. These 442's would have been damn near unbeatable with the Toronado 425 in there. I talked with an 442 owner at Carsile pa GM fairgrounds show, who said swapping in the 425 into the late 6's442's was a popular swap with Olds owners.
I had a 65' I bought in 69'. On Friday or Saturday night 1rst street cruises in San Jose CA. We would throw our hoods open. My engine would measure up to be as big of a block as the 427s, a head scratcher? I investigated, turns out the 65 442s 400s was a 425ci block taken from a surplus of them from their Olds 98 line, reduced to 400ci by the heads. That explained why I could run in the red but competition usually had to back off or blow! That engine was indestructible! That's the engine that tee'd things up for years to come.
Omfg that car is beautiful and sounds amazing. Andy is so relaxed. I could never own a car that nice. Well I could but I wouldn't want anyone or anything near it. I'd be nervous 24/7
_I'd be nervous 24/7_ And this is the problem; Cars like this don't get used. I'm glad they exist as specimens but that's all they are, a display piece, not a real car.
@@buggs9950 true, the originals are too rare to be driven much, if at all, which is kinda sad but would be more sad to see or hear of one getting totaled in a traffic incident. This is the reason I have no problem with building clones/tributes.... provided the clone/tribute isn't being passed off as an original.
Same roofline appeared on some 1966 Chevelles (and on Beaumonts in Canada), but half of them had Stovebolt 6's that always stalled when the light turned green (because of their infamous intake manifold gasket vacuum leak)
A set of Radials would make a world of difference in cornering and handling....I know that's not period correct, but it makes a world of difference on my 1954 Cadillac 2 door holiday coupe.. I had a 1965 442 with a 4 speed 390 rear end, but have to admit, the brushed chrome console, and tach really made the interior.......what a blast to drive it back in the late '70's.....
Thanks U.T. that was informative , i never knew the W30 existed in '66. If you guys could get a moment with Ray Barton, that would be priceless. Thanks in advance from a Mopar nerd, Closet Buick geek, and certified Willys jeep addict.
What an amazing find and very worthy of the restoration! 🇺🇸 I love the fact that it has carpet and wood trim. No sense in being completely plebeian, after all! 👍
Wow. What a beaut! Back in '69 I had a '67 Cutlass with a 330/Quadrajet 4brl. VERY much a sleeper car, especially for a small block! It was white with a black vinyl top and black interior. It still appears in some of my dreams at times! LOL!
Mr Tony, if you remember, I am die hard Oldsmobile guy. A real 1966 W-30 there was only 54 made, about 37 documented left in existence. About 400plus "drag packs" were sold, being the parts to "convert" to a "w-30" in 1966. Love how this man's car is a documented #27 car. Also Tony, when you said "wait till you hear this car idle" ... I got such a bad ass story about just that!!! I forgot this guy's name but talked with him at least twice at two events and he is knowledgeable and cool AF. I gotta get back to my conspiracy theory vids now (lol) but just wanted to throw y'all some Love! Uncle Kathy too (she always remembers my name! Sorry I've been in hiding). Oh those chambered tail pipes sound soooo freaking good with the "328" cam thumping
The 66 Sports coup ( post car ) comes in around 3,430 pounds. The hard top Holiday coup is almost 3,700 pounds. I was amazed how smooth the W-30 cam sounded with the 308 Der. X .472 lift compared to my W-31 cam with a 295 Der. X .472 lift, however I changed to a 110 deg center line for a wider power band for Automatic trans .
Beautiful love the w-30 olds daughters 71 w-30 sitting in my garage now have original intake someday take off the Holley dominator and mondello 850 Holley put on intake and original quadrajet engine has small 308 cam
When I was a kid, my best friend had a silver and black coupe 66. His brother owned or leased 4 dragstrip in the area. One in Kettlersville didn't have finish line lights so 2 of us were posted with flashlights. You could tell from the distinctive sound the Oldsmobiles. Good times.
GREAT VIDEO UTG!!!👍👍 GREAT CAMERA WORK ULTRA KATHY!!! Imagine having to wait 11 years to get your car back from restoration. That's a sweeet lookin' car and it sure does sound AWESOME. Music to my ears!!😊
Beautiful looking car , my Brother has a 66 oldsmobile f85 , it's not a 442 but after we got done with it she turned out beautiful and he loves that car 👍👍✌
Just for fun, the Oldsmobile 3 carb setup was a J-2 option, Tri-power was Pontiac. These cars (the W-30 option)came from the factory with a balanced engine. Pontiac got a lot more press and they were fantastic cars no doubt about it, but this thing was a monster and would destroy any challenger.
I had a 67 I bought with a blown engine for $800, gad new paint, tires, upholstery, and exhaust. I got it because I had a 66 tgat i bought, and was broadsided on the way to work around 1978. The insurance company totaled it, but i bought it back, because the engine only has about 35k miles on it after a friend of mine rebuilt it. I got the 67 from a guy i worked with in a print shop in San Leandro, Ca. I put the engine from the 66 in it. I toom the headers off of the engine because of the new exhaust. I loved the way that engine sounded.
Sometimes I can appreciate a trailer queen...... and this is one of those times.... that thing is beautiful.
wow this is incredible! the attention to detail is insane!
My dad had a 66 delta 88 4dr I loved that car so this was cool to see thanks
Olds fan forlife.badazz what ever
My first “real” job after college was as an insurance adjuster in Western KY starting in the fall of 1966. My first claim was on a ‘66 Olds 442 tri-power that caught fire on a dealership post service test drive after working on a carburetor leak. The car burned on the side of the road before the Hopkinsville, KY FD could respond. The car was less than a month old and the owner said when he took delivery the odor of raw gasoline was constantly present. The dealership and Oldsmobile denied the young man’s claim pretty much as stuff happens.
The MSRP on the car was over $4k which was about five or six hundred dollars more than the standard 442’s at the time. The owner explained to me and my (trainer) senior claim rep this was a “special” edition but never called it a W-30. He said he would prolly would not be able to replace the burned out unit with a like model. Several months earlier Hot Rod mag did an article on the 442’s and said to remember the option called W-30, I was intrigued by the article, and once I saw the sales invoice provided for the claim settlement I realized that the car was very special. Now I really realize what a “very special edition” that car was.
How did they legally get away with denying that claim? Today that would be a cut and dry case of fraud on the dealership and manufacturers part. Massive lawsuit, the owner would likely get a settlement large enough he and several of his descendants would never have to work again.
@@outspokengenius yeah unfortunately litigation is an everyday occurrence people are looking for ways to make money without actually making money
i would’ve sued the shit out of the dealer and GM! That could’ve killed the whole family!
@@ahoneyman He posted that it burned after the dealer worked on the carb, didn't catch if it was him that was driving, could have been the mechanic?
Bought a new 442 in 69. Paid just over 5 grand.
Haven't seen one of these in years. Beginning of the "W" machines. Love the Olds love.
Never underestimate an Oldsmobile. I've got a 455 in my jet boat with a tuned Qjet that spanks a lot of big dollar boats. Absolutely a beautiful car! Great vid guys!
i saw an old olds ad- from about 1903. it claimed that the gas fuel supply was much more dependable that trying to find quality hay and oats! times have changed? lol
@@craigrheberling
I own a 1927 Ford Model T. It's been in my family for a long time. I recall my Grandfather telling me that during the depression, it was easier to keep one of those running than it was to feed a horse.
those old Qjets would run better than a holy would, if you could find someone that new how to properly tune one
@@jackhayes7282NO, they don't, BUT they're a great carb for a mild street car.
I've gotten into the 10s in the quarter with a Q-Jet, but it had a LOT of work into it, and that's about as far as it would go. Once I finally replaced it with a Holley, the car went into the 9s on it's first pass off the trailer, and went even faster once the Holley was tuned to perfection.
The Q-Jet is a GREAT street carb though, and gets respectable MPGs and good throttle response because of the tiny triple booster design. They start well in the cold also because the automatic choke on them works very well. The HUGE secondaries make some sweet noises when you bury the throttle pedal too... 😁
You are correct though, they are a P.I.T.A. to work on, tuning parts aren't easy to come by compared to Holley parts. The single float bowl is very small, and doesn't hold alot of fuel, it's hard to keep that tiny bowl full of fuel on a fast car, and when the fuel level in the bowl starts to get low it will vastly affect the tuning. They're not a very user friendly carb to work on either, as you have to remove it and take the entire thing apart to get at the jets, power pistons, metering rods, and other tuning parts. And it takes a guy with specific knowledge of them to be able to super tune one. Most guys have no clue how they work, and simply call them "Junk" when they can't get them tuned properly.
I've spent MANY hours working on mine to get it to the point of running low 10s, and I now can do then in my sleep. There's a great book put there by Cliff Ruggles if anyone is interested in learning how to super tune them.
Right on the money in several ways. Damn near brought a tear to my eye.
As in most restorations, it’s much nicer than the say it was new. They did not have as nice of paint
Two Oldsmobile videos in two days! I’m in heaven! Ty uncle Tony!
I've seen 2 Olds vids just today. Keep 'em coming.
Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeah! I'm a on the younger side of your viewership, but man I love old Oldsmobiles.
This really is a piece of art that's been masterfully executed.
No Flowmaster will ever sound like this car, that son is unique sound of true American Muscle.
The air intakes where mounted under bumpers I Race olds w 30 drag cars in 1967. none Olds in St Paul Minnesota sold me one of the 52 drag pack cars the car wone the division nhra champions in 1967 at Minnesota dragways that 66 is not a olds drag PAC car why do I know I had a 65 and a a 66 tri power car bought them new this guy is full of s. Don't get suck in you can check me out Gary Hansen also owner of Tenora Dragways
Thanks for sharing that with us Uncle Tony, Oldsmobile's don't get as much attention as the others in the big three
A friend of the family Paul was an Oldsmobile guy and would have loved to see that one for sure
I've never heard a car like that in my life. what a absolute gem
I believe actor James Garner owned one. Being he was involved in offroad with Olds in his Banshee and 442's. His team was American International Racers.
Apparently the stunt drivers were so impressed by his pace on the set of Grand Prix they thought he'd have what it takes to be a racing driver had he chosen that instead of acting.
I think it snowballed from there.
He also ran off-road modified Rambler SC/Ramblers as well. Quite a legacy...
Check out the Big Oly Bronco Garner raced. Super, super cool. James Garner was one of the greats.
@@disgruntledmarmotcustomsan1530 cool! Will do thx!
The off road Olds was on Jay Leno a while back, it is still being raced. A few things, the chassis is all tube, the body 3/4 ish scale fiberglass , front spindles are Dodge van, the motor is mostly in the passenger compartment. I " think " George Barris made the body.
I love how he beat Uncle Tony to saying "See ya tomorrow" lmfao
Thank you for starting the car! That exhaust note is truly amazing
This is an abso-damn-lutely BEAUTIFUL and rare beast that was clearly shown the love it deserves. Uncle Tony and the owner, you guys both rock.
And this is high praise from a Ford and Mopar man.
Thanks Tony! This is the holy grail of olds. We have a guy in our olds club with one...it's just a beast with the short stroke 400
It has a 3.975 stroke that's not exactly short even by big block standards just slightly less than the 454 stroke. The 427 Ford, 426 Mopars and 427 Chevy were around 3.75 give or take a few.
The 68+ 400s had a 4.25 stroke, same as the 455, the 65-67 400s had forged steel crank and rods and were known to be more rev happy than 68+.
@@olznut 67 330 had the same goodies inside... lucky to have the 394417 block that has a 39° cba
@@robd7365 Yes, all 330, 400 and 425 from 64-67 had those goodies.
Welcome to Uncle Tony's Cool GM stuff Corner..
In my past "work" life of car shows and going to them, meeting the people who care for these Special Classics was major plus.. thanks Boss and Boss lady..
@Ø
I always loved those chambered tailpipes; they have a distinct, unique sound.
Handy is never smiling much but you can tell he is having a stellar good time, good for you men!
You are becoming a legend!
Glad you told him to start it up Tony 👍
Nuthin like a factory stock Hot Rod. Love those Rare Cars. Absolutely Beautiful.
Sweet. I owned a 1973 W45 Hurst/Olds. With the swivel buckets...
The 73 is such a one off look...... they are sweet.
My favorite of the early colonnade cars. They look absolutely menacing with the front bumpers off.
I also had a 1973 Olds 442. Red with the lower white stripe that ran along the bottom and over the wheel wells with stripe down the hood that came with the fake louvers. Olds 350 Rocket with Turbo 350 which i replaced with a 455 from a 70 Toronado adding a "Mondell Olds" Camshaft and a set of Hooker headers. I ended up ripping the right rear lower control arm out the frame ( it was from Ohio so it was a little rusty) on the 1-2 shift street racing and spinning it into the guard rail on I-680 bridge.
@@danielscott6787 I also had a Mondello 455 full roller motor. I was also one of the 1st 10 people in the US to get the edelbrock aluminum heads when they 1st came out. Mandello did the port work to my heads and Offenhauser intake. Had the Mondello support girdle 1050 holly dom. 600hp motor and 800hp/777tq on a 175 shot of nos. 455 has a long stroke great torque but they don't love rpms.
@@theeoddments960 yes, the front bumpers are flippin' HUGE!!! They do look good when properly shaved...
This has always been one of my favorite cars, the 66 442! Comfort and power!
What an amazing restoration, very cool car. Well done boys! That exhaust is music to the ears.
I once knew a guy who had a "regular" 1966 442 in red with black vinyl top. I tuned it for him in order to get a turn behind the wheel. It was one very sweet car to drive, handled great for a car of the time, rode well, and you could catch rubber at every upshift...and that was without the W30 motor.
I wonder if it has the factory boxed convertible frame. Olds had a lot of options to chose from when ordering a car. Tons of gears, trannys, handling options ect.
Super cool Olds and absolutely stunning resoration!
Great video. I was unaware that Oldsmobile produced any W30 series cars prior to their 1968 ramrod 350's. I owned a 1969 2-door post coup F85 with the W31 package with the 4:33 rear end. It was an awesome sleeper and on the street surprised a lot of Roadrunners, Chevelles, and GTO's. It ran in the low 14's in F stock at the Grand Bend drag strip in Ontario, Canada.
LOVE.... LOVE.... LOVE THAT EXHAUST NOTE! 🥰
Thanks for posting this! I have been an Oldsmobile affection ado all my life. Never knew these 1966 was available with a drag package! Very, very great auto to own, congrats!🇨🇦
I knew it existed but never saw one thank you for restoring this time capsle great restoration it can only be original once but you did a OUTSTANDING job of tryining to get the feel of a new oringinal example as you drove it off the line
If it was rusty and crusty like he said , then it needed a resto.
Glad to see it saved.
Perfect accompaniment to my Sunday morning coffee here in NZ.
It's cocktail hour for me!
Sunday morning?? Still Saturday evening here in Canada lol
It’s a comment from the future lol
Once the choke valve opened up, the engine sounded lovely! I love the X brand musclecars!
Reminds me there was a w30 package for the 425 Toronado's. The regional Olds tech school instructor in Kansas city had one. Their were 5 guys init at a stop light when a popular Chevelle 327 pulls up. Imagine he was a little surprised that this hug car jumped him off the line smok coming from the front wheels.
W-34 package
Seeing that Hurst reminded me of my '66 tri-power goat. The greatest driving experience of my life. How I regret not having that car today. Much respect for the thought, skill, time and effort that went into that W-30. I salute you.
Definitely agree ! My 66 goat with the 389 tri-power was the absolute best car I've ever owned !
Oldsmobile always SO far ahead of the curve and under appreciated! GM used them and abused them and never deserved to have them under their banner! So Many Oldsmobile oddities and amazing stories! Go to the REO museum in Lansing and you will learn about the Genius that started this iconic and storied brand!
I'm at the show and took many many pics of this car to help me in my 66 F85 Deluxe 442 restoration. What's even crazier is that this car didn't win the class, an equally nice 65 F85 442 won.
Beautiful, OUTSTANDING, I love the sound of that cam.
This car is unbelievably beautiful. Fantastic restoration. Obviously, money was not spared. Pleasure to see this car.
WOW! That exhaust note is BEAUTIFUL. Thank you so much.
Top 10 fastest cars of the era. People just don't know how quick these are.
My Dad had a 67 F-85 std no frills and we loved it. I lived very close to rochester products and had a couple freinds who worked there and came home with some interesting things thrown away. The F-85 grill in 66 was so sexy. I really liked this set up. I am a Ford guy but I love them all.
Same here, Ford Torino's from 68/69 especially, but love them all from the Big 3 +1, even the oddballs of the 4dr and wagon lines.
I bought my 1966 Olds 442 from the showroom floor it came with the her shift and a smooth ride. I also owned a 1968 442 convertible Willow Green with the stripe down the front fender and I also owned a 1985 442 black with gold trim that was a good ride too. But my favorite was my 1966 442 fire engine red. Thanks for sharing you're a nice 442 I'm 80 years old and I still remember my first ride in my 66 442.
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I had a '67 Olds Cutlass Supreme that I wanted to do something like this with. This was different. An actual factory built race car. Love it.
I had a 67 442 back in 1973. They always had a distinct exhaust sound. We used to say it sounded like the didn't have any exhaust valves.
Traded a 1969 Mach 351 Mustang with only 6000 miles showing on the od for a 1967 Buick GS 400 Blk/Blk int. 4spd. 3:91 posi w/fact air & fact. Sun tach back in 1970-71 that had 80,000 miles on od......my friend (a Buick mechanic/auto shop teacher) gave it a super/tune & I replaced the tailpipes with 1967 442 slash cut pipes & installed a Hurst shifter/t-handle ......proceeded to win my first street race over another friend and his newly purchased '69 Z 28 RS twice .....lol
Cool. Yes I have heard of it. One of my uncle's was an Olds mechanic, 38 years. We always owned Olds. Man that has the Olds sound. Been a long time.
Incredible and underrated slice of Detroit muscle
I had a 70 W30 car bought in Cali, all original with the matching F heads but this 66 is certainly a grail and a dream to have.
gm really had the best looking midsized car in 66 and 67 to me.
I'm an Olds guy and this is totally awesome! Thanks for sharing!!!
That is amazing the reasearch and attention to detail that went into the restoration and presentation of that rare old's. Very nice job Guys!👍
I cant say enough . Great work guys . keep up the top Notch work and teaching the new Hot Rodders what its all about .
The SOUND!!! Beauty of a car
A real "Time Capsule"!! Cool ride!!
1966 is the first year for the W30. A 66 W30 is a holy grail car for Olds lovers since only 54 were built. Sam Murray's 67 W30 442 (single QJet) runs 10.90's in E Stock so a race prepped 66 W30 would run at least as quick.
There's a 67 W30 in front of that 66 just to the left at 2:30 in, I'm at the show now.
Not as rare, but I never see them - the '64 442. I used to see '65s, but never '64s. I finally came to realize the reason for the low '64 production numbers. It was a mid-year response to the success of the iconic '64 GTO - the car that started the big V8 in a small car (muscle car) movement.
There's 3 or 4 64s here at the show. Also, I remember Olds played by the rules per say as GM said no larger than 330 cubic inch engine so Olds came out with a 330. Pontiac got around it by saying it was an option on the Tempest/LeMans.
Absolutely beautiful! The attention to detail is off the charts!
Tony this is my 3rd comment on here....I'm just so fired up you did some Oldsmobile stuff and did it justice without fluff we have all seen or read 10 million times from peterson publishing. Don't get me wrong peterson pub. Did alot of great stuff. I'm just saying alot of stuff got re-hashed from their archives.
Also, again, remember when I said I'm an Oldsmobile guy? Oh yeah and I'm 52 and still have my first car which happens to be a 1970 Olds 442!
Lol can't say it enough and thank you for allowing me to get all excited on a piece about my favorite GM make!
Great car, very desirable collector and restoration job.
This looks like an Oldsmobile meet, and reminds me of a funny memory from the late '70s. A friend of mine had a beautiful '69 Hurst/Olds, and wanted to attend an Olds gathering in Milwaukee. That same weekend, the Daytona/Superbird Club had their summer meeting in town, so I decided to drive my Superbird up along with his Hurst/Olds. His meet was on Saturday, mine on Sunday. I drove my 'Bird to HIS meet, and I asked him where I could park my car. He pointed at an empty space and said, "why don't you just park it there?" So right there amongst all those beautiful Oldsmobiles with their hoods up, doors opened, people standing around and yacking, sat my big obnoxious Vitamine-C Orange shark-nosed Superbird, wing sticking proudly 50 feet up in the air, with "PLYMOUTH" blasting out from the rear quarters, staring all of those other cars flat into the pavement.
Some guy later asked me to move it. Go figure.
Extraordinary restoration. Thank you.
I am proud of and will never sell my set of Olds "B" heads with the "tr" code stamped on the pad for a set of original L-69 tri power cars...not to be confused with the super rare w-30 like this one they made, oh crap forgot the exact number, 2700 ish tri power L-69 cars. Also got the 400 block from same set of heads but unfortunately know for a fact the original donor body is long gone. Still tho want to find the right home for these B heads and a bad Ass g block 400 olds and hit up pure stock.
It's not like I've never turned a wrench on a classic olds before!
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I know how you feel, sir... as an old machinist/racer, I saved an LS6 and a w30455
I saw a magazine article on the three carburetor olds and they had 1275 L69s I think plus 54 W30s with the forced induction air cleaner.
I own a L69 intake and carbs with 3 tiny air filters. I used it on a low compression 455 from a 73 or so cutlass.
Makes me want to get back to my Olds project, 65 Jetstar vert. Great to see the old American iron restored and on the road.
Nice. Brings back fond memories. I owned a 67' Olds 442. Fast as hell. My cousin's son ,owns his dad's 66'olds 442,coupe.
This Olds is soooo cool, congratulation on this unique find and incredible work!
FINALLY got my hot rod inline 6 Mustang back together, and took it to a show last night AND today... people liked and respected it.
But this Old's is on another level...DANG!!!!
I remember a commercial on TV saying that’s not your daddy‘s Oldsmobile from the by gone era !!!
My hubby had a '66 442 red with black vinyl top-but his good friend had one of these W30 '66-same color. What a great car!
Love that wheel chock. Looks just like a fire extinguisher!
One of my best buds from high school had a '66 tri power, 4 sp with 4:11 gears. A very strong running car. We all have a car we wish we could have back...
Nice to see an Olds from a Quad 4 owner. I really think GM biggest mistake of that era was NOT allowing their various 7 liter engines to be dropped (with all around disc brakes) in the later 60's musclecars, because if they did I don't think Chrysler would have a market for their cars outside the hemi 426. These 442's would have been damn near unbeatable with the Toronado 425 in there. I talked with an 442 owner at Carsile pa GM fairgrounds show, who said swapping in the 425 into the late 6's442's was a popular swap with Olds owners.
I had a 65' I bought in 69'. On Friday or Saturday night 1rst street cruises in San Jose CA. We would throw our hoods open. My engine would measure up to be as big of a block as the 427s, a head scratcher? I investigated, turns out the 65 442s 400s was a 425ci block taken from a surplus of them from their Olds 98 line, reduced to 400ci by the heads. That explained why I could run in the red but competition usually had to back off or blow! That engine was indestructible! That's the engine that tee'd things up for years to come.
I love Oldsmobiles.
Omfg that car is beautiful and sounds amazing. Andy is so relaxed. I could never own a car that nice. Well I could but I wouldn't want anyone or anything near it. I'd be nervous 24/7
_I'd be nervous 24/7_ And this is the problem; Cars like this don't get used. I'm glad they exist as specimens but that's all they are, a display piece, not a real car.
@@buggs9950 true, the originals are too rare to be driven much, if at all, which is kinda sad but would be more sad to see or hear of one getting totaled in a traffic incident. This is the reason I have no problem with building clones/tributes.... provided the clone/tribute isn't being passed off as an original.
The beauty, that sound, "please be still my heart" .
Mopar lifer here… that is a seriously cool package! And a wonderful restoration, congratulations.
Beautiful car! Can't help thinking Dodge nicked that roof line for the '68 Charger.
Same roofline appeared on some 1966 Chevelles (and on Beaumonts in Canada), but half of them had Stovebolt 6's that always stalled when the light turned green (because of their infamous intake manifold gasket vacuum leak)
I saw this car at the MCACN show in 2021. Andy is a great guy and that car is awesome!
A set of Radials would make a world of difference in cornering and handling....I know that's not period correct, but it makes a world of difference on my 1954 Cadillac 2 door holiday coupe.. I had a 1965 442 with a 4 speed 390 rear end, but have to admit, the brushed chrome console, and tach really made the interior.......what a blast to drive it back in the late '70's.....
Amazing Car and Detailed Restoration!... Thanks for Sharing
Wow!!! That is my number one pick for if I ever win the lottery. Thank you for showing it.
Big Oldsmobile fan had two a 64 jetstar88 and a 67 Delmont 88. Saddened me when they discontinued the brand.
Thanks U.T. that was informative , i never knew the W30 existed in '66. If you guys could get a moment with Ray Barton, that would be priceless. Thanks in advance from a Mopar nerd, Closet Buick geek, and certified Willys jeep addict.
What an amazing find and very worthy of the restoration! 🇺🇸
I love the fact that it has carpet and wood trim. No sense in being completely plebeian, after all! 👍
Wow. What a beaut! Back in '69 I had a '67 Cutlass with a 330/Quadrajet 4brl. VERY much a sleeper car, especially for a small block! It was white with a black vinyl top and black interior. It still appears in some of my dreams at times! LOL!
If you thought the 330's were quick, you would have LOVED the 455.
sounded great once the choke opened up, never seen one before.. beautiful
Mr Tony, if you remember, I am die hard Oldsmobile guy.
A real 1966 W-30 there was only 54 made, about 37 documented left in existence.
About 400plus "drag packs" were sold, being the parts to "convert" to a "w-30" in 1966.
Love how this man's car is a documented #27 car.
Also Tony, when you said "wait till you hear this car idle" ... I got such a bad ass story about just that!!!
I forgot this guy's name but talked with him at least twice at two events and he is knowledgeable and cool AF.
I gotta get back to my conspiracy theory vids now (lol) but just wanted to throw y'all some Love! Uncle Kathy too (she always remembers my name! Sorry I've been in hiding).
Oh those chambered tail pipes sound soooo freaking good with the "328" cam thumping
The 66 Sports coup ( post car ) comes in around 3,430 pounds. The hard top Holiday coup is almost 3,700 pounds. I was amazed how smooth the W-30 cam sounded with the 308 Der. X .472 lift compared to my W-31 cam with a 295 Der. X .472 lift, however I changed to a 110 deg center line for a wider power band for Automatic trans .
Beautiful love the w-30 olds daughters 71 w-30 sitting in my garage now have original intake someday take off the Holley dominator and mondello 850 Holley put on intake and original quadrajet engine has small 308 cam
When I was a kid, my best friend had a silver and black coupe 66. His brother owned or leased 4 dragstrip in the area. One in Kettlersville didn't have finish line lights so 2 of us were posted with flashlights. You could tell from the distinctive sound the Oldsmobiles. Good times.
Wow! Nice job l know how much work that is. Interesting l was born in '66 and I'm 54.
Love UTG!. Such a wide variety of awesome car content! And has some oldsmobile content from time to time!
To do a concours level restoration you need to know your stuff!
Awesome indeed!
GREAT VIDEO UTG!!!👍👍 GREAT CAMERA WORK ULTRA KATHY!!!
Imagine having to wait 11 years to get your car back from restoration. That's a sweeet lookin' car and it sure does sound AWESOME. Music to my ears!!😊
His name is, Scott !
It needs a coat of tire rubber at the rear wheel wells to go with the factory overspray.
YES! Because he has documentation that says it was raced.
PLEASE ADD THIS DETAIL!
Would make a great burn out video.
What a wonderful ride! Olds with trips! Yay!
Beautiful looking car , my Brother has a 66 oldsmobile f85 , it's not a 442 but after we got done with it she turned out beautiful and he loves that car 👍👍✌
Just for fun, the Oldsmobile 3 carb setup was a J-2 option, Tri-power was Pontiac. These cars (the W-30 option)came from the factory with a balanced engine. Pontiac got a lot more press and they were fantastic cars no doubt about it, but this thing was a monster and would destroy any challenger.
J2 is from the 1957 & 58 model years. The Oldsmobile L69 tri carb option was available for 1 year only, 1966.
I had a 67 I bought with a blown engine for $800, gad new paint, tires, upholstery, and exhaust. I got it because I had a 66 tgat i bought, and was broadsided on the way to work around 1978. The insurance company totaled it, but i bought it back, because the engine only has about 35k miles on it after a friend of mine rebuilt it. I got the 67 from a guy i worked with in a print shop in San Leandro, Ca. I put the engine from the 66 in it. I toom the headers off of the engine because of the new exhaust. I loved the way that engine sounded.
That's really cool. I had no idea those existed. The Olsmobiles of that era are awesome cars.
Thank you for being quiet every once in a while to let that man talk. Awesome car.
Served our Country and Iiving the gearhead dream. Thank you Sir