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1964 Skylark coupe 1965 Skylark sedan 1966 Skylark Convertible. ... The Buick Sport Wagon name was now used on a conventional four-door station wagon that no longer ...
The Buick Sport Wagon was a mid-size station wagon built by Buick and was shared with the Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser, Pontiac Tempest Safari and Chevrolet Chevelle Greenbrier. Featuring a raised roof and skylights over the cargo and second seat area, this model was an extended wheelbase version of the Buick Skylark station wagon. Buick Sport ...
1965 Buick Gran Sport. The 1965 Skylark Gran Sport was the intermediate Buick Skylark with the Gran Sport option added. Although a 300 cubic inches (4.9 litres) V8 was already offered in the Skylark, the Gran Sport had the largest engine permitted by GM - a 401 cubic inches (6.6 litres) Buick V8 (called a 400 by Buick because that was the maximum engine size allowed in intermediate body cars).
Full-size station wagon: Centurion: 1970 1973 B-body: 1 Full-size car succeeding Wildcat: GSX: 1970: 1972 1 Muscle car: Apollo: 1973 1975 X-body: 1 Compact car: Skyhawk: 1974: 1989 H-body (1975–80) J-body (1982–89) 2 Subcompact car: Somerset: 1984 1987 N-body: 1 Compact car. Renamed "Skylark" in 1987. Reatta: 1987 1991 E-body: 1 Grand ...
The Skylark was expanded to a full top-line series that now included two- and four-door sedans, two-door hardtop coupe and convertible, along with a station wagon. The other series models included the base Special and the slightly fancier Special Deluxe, in a more limited range of bodystyles. Also new for 1964 were engines.
1965 GM Beaumont. A II: RWD: 1962: 1969: 1962 – 1969 GM Beaumont; 1964 – 1967 Buick Sport Wagon; 1964 – 1967 Buick Skylark; 1964 – 1969 Buick Special; 1964 – 1967 Chevrolet Chevelle; 1964 – 1967 Chevrolet El Camino; 1964 – 1967 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser; 1964 – 1967 Oldsmobile 442; 1964 – 1967 Oldsmobile Cutlass; 1964 – 1967 ...
The GM B platform was introduced in 1926 with the Buick Master Six, and the Oldsmobile Model 30, and had at least 12 major re-engineering and restyling efforts, for the 1937, 1939, 1941, 1949, 1954, 1957, 1959, 1961, 1965, 1971, 1977, and 1991 model years; along with interim styling changes for 1942, 1969, and 1980 that included new sheetmetal and revised rooflines.
The Oldsmobile Starfire is an automobile nameplate used by Oldsmobile, produced in three non-contiguous generations beginning in 1954.The Starfire nameplate made its debut as a convertible concept car in 1953 followed with the 1954–1956 Ninety-Eight series convertibles that shared a "halo status" with the Buick Skylark and Cadillac Eldorado.