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For 1984, Chevrolet introduced a five-door Celebrity station wagon with a liftgate and hatchback rear window. [7] For the first time since 1977, a mid-size Chevrolet station wagon was available with a third-row seat. [7] Throughout its production, Chevrolet introduced few updates to the model line, with minor exterior updates in 1984, 1986, and ...
For 1982, the Chevrolet Cavalier (J-car, subcompact) replaced the Monza/Vega, offering coupe, hatchback, sedan, and station wagon designs. The Chevrolet Celebrity (A-car, mid-size) replaced the Malibu, offering 2/4-door sedans, and a 5-door station wagon; the front-wheel drive Celebrity shared its chassis underpinnings (including its wheelbase ...
For the 1989 model year, Chevrolet introduced the Lumina, effectively consolidating the Celebrity and Monte Carlo into a single model line, with the Lumina APV replacing the Celebrity station wagon. At its 1990 introduction, the Lumina APV was offered in two trim levels; a base trim and an up-level CL trim. [4]
Starting in 1990, Chevrolet offered a high-performance version of the Lumina, the Lumina Z34. It came standard with the FE3 sport suspension package, the 210 hp (157 kW; 213 PS) LQ1 V6 engine shared with the Lumina Euro 3.4 (sedan), the 5-speed Getrag 284 manual transmission, dual exhaust, and 4-wheel anti-lock brakes.
1989: the Celebrity drops its two-door models. The Cutlass Ciera, Century and 6000 receive major updates. 1990: the Celebrity drops its four-door models, leaving only the station wagon. 1991: The Pontiac 6000 (all models), Chevrolet Celebrity wagon and Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera coupe are dropped. 1992: Buick dropped the Century coupe.
Vista Cruiser wagon: 1964: 1977 Cutlass Supreme: 1966: 1997 Toronado: 1966: 1992 Hurst/Olds: 1968: 1984 Notes ... 1987 Aerotech; 1988 Aerotech II; 1989 Aertotech III ...
The 6000 STE was a sport-tuned model unique to Pontiac; the STE was named to the Car and Driver Ten Best three times (from 1983 to 1985). [1] Following the discontinuation of its full-size namesake, the 6000 Safari was the final Pontiac to use the nameplate, becoming the final Pontiac station wagon in 1991.
The Chevrolet Cavalier was introduced in Mexico in model year 1990 to replace the Chevrolet Celebrity, which had been until then the entry point to the Mexican GM lineup. The initial offering consisted only of a 4-door sedan with a 2.8 L MPFI V6 with a 5-speed manual gearbox, or a 3-speed automatic as an option.