The Oldsmobile Nobody Bought That Beat Ferraris on the Race Track
The article revisits Oldsmobile’s competitive rise and fall, using the brand’s 1990s era as the backdrop for how quickly momentum shifted. It recounts Oldsmobile’s differentiation in earlier decades, citing innovations such as the Rocket V8, early turbocharging, front-wheel-drive powertrains, and the Hydra-Matic automatic gearbox, alongside performance models like the A-body Cutlass Supreme, the 442, and the front-drive Toronado. By the mid-1990s, it says Oldsmobile had become downsized and altered after decades of emissions restrictions and internal brand turmoil within GM, competing not only with other U.S. makers but also with Japanese giants like Honda, Nissan, and Toyota. The narrative notes efforts dating to 1989 to develop a new full-size luxury sedan for the new millennium, identified as the Aurora, framed as the brand’s last major push in its traditional segment. The piece also includes historical commentary on a powerful 1966 FWD Oldsmobile.




