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1968 Buck Electra 225 4-door sedan. The 1968 Electra 225 received a revised grille and taillight trim along with concealed windshield wipers. Inside, there was a revised instrument panel with a square speedometer and other instruments, plus a new steering wheel. Shoulder seat-belts were standard for both the driver and front passenger. [12]
The "LeSabre", which is French for "the sabre", was Buick's mid-level full-size sedan above the Special but below the Electra during the 1960s then remained in its market position when the Electra was replaced with the Park Avenue. The LeSabre was available as a 2-door convertible, sedan or hardtop, a 4-door sedan or hardtop and station wagon ...
Buick Electra 225 In celebration of GM 's Fiftieth Anniversary, the Buick Limited name was revived as a single-year halo car for the Division in model year 1958. In comparison to the chrome-laden junior models in the Buick lineup, the GM C platform -based Limited was slightly more restrained than the Special , Century , Super and Roadmaster .
The following year, Electra 225 and LeSabre were redesigned and downsized, and the Buick brand saw its best model year sales to date with 773,313 vehicles sold. 1978 marked Buick's 75th anniversary and welcomed a redesigned Century as well as a redesigned Regal coupe which was now available with a turbocharged V6 engine. Buick model year sales ...
English: A 1968 Buick Electra 225 Custom four-door (pillared) sedan in Wantagh, Long Island, NY. Assembled in Flint, MI. ... [Category:1968 Buick automobil ...
Full-size luxury sedan succeeding Electra. Discontinued in North America in 2005. GM Zeta platform version sold in China 2007–2012. Roadmaster (revival) 1991: 1996: B-body: 1: Rendezvous: 2001 2007 U-body: 1 Midsize crossover: Rainier: 2003 2007 GMT360: 1 Midsize luxury SUV. Excelle: 2003 2023 GEM: 2 Compact sedan marketed in China: Terraza ...
The bore was increased to 3.75 in (95.25 mm), and stroke increased to 3.4 in (86.4 mm), increasing displacement to 225.3 cu in (3.7 L; 3,692 cc). Since the engine was similar to the popular small-block Buick V8—now with a cast-iron block and displacement of 300 cu in (4.9 L), the engine was made cheaply at the same factory with much of the ...
Buick Estate is a nameplate that was used by the Buick division of General Motors, denoting its luxury full-size station wagon from 1940 to 1964 and from 1970 to 1996. The Estate nameplate was derived from the term country estate in wealthy suburban areas and estate car, the British term for a station wagon.