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An anachronism when new, the ultimate Buick Roadmaster wagon (1991–1996) arrived greater than a decade into an period of downsized automobiles with understated exteriors. It sported skirted fenders, woodgrain paneling, and three rows of seats. When the Roadmaster and its B- platform siblings (the Chevrolet Caprice and the Oldsmobile Customized Cruiser) appeared, nearly all new automobiles had been unibody designs. GM’s full-size wagons for ’91 had been body-on-frame dinosaurs, with V-8 energy and rear-wheel drive—the perfect template for a sleeper muscle automobile.
The Roadmaster launched as a proper, old-school household hauler. “I feel folks revered the wagon, though it was a interval when wagons had been on their manner out,” says Ed Welburn, who, earlier than turning into head of Basic Motors world design, labored on GM’s last rear-drive wagon. Early-’90s households had been driving minivans and Ford Explorers. A station wagon was considerably uncool, in each a college drop-off lane and a staging lane. The Roadmaster’s potential was evident to Martyn Schorr, whose company dealt with East Coast public relations for the tri-shield model in the course of the period. “I managed the construct of two Roadmasters for [Buick fanatic] Nicola Bulgari, with 502 crate motors,” Schorr says. These automobiles, a sedan and a wagon that had been the ultimate variations of every physique type, had been custom-made by Specialised Autos Inc., a revered concept-car fabricator in suburban Detroit.
“These had been critical street warriors—advanced, fast, and quick,” Schorr says. “The whole lot was customized, together with the four-wheel Brembo disc brakes, fuel-injection methods for the 502s, customized wheels with cloisonné Buick emblems within the heart caps, and NASCAR-type coolers for transmission, the engine, and the rear finish.”
Schorr’s builds had been freaks on the time. However since then Welburn has seen the GM wagon transition into a contemporary hot-rod darling. “I observed it just a few years in the past, the beginnings of it,” he says. Some pals from Bulgari’s assortment not too long ago visited him, arriving in two modified Roadmasters. “It is an fascinating phenomenon,” Welburn says. “It is arduous for me to place ‘efficiency’ and that automobile in the identical sentence.”
Not each modified wagon fits his style. “Some look ridiculous,” says Welburn, who prefers stock-looking sleepers with modestly upsized wheels for “a extra balanced look.” However he is open to all modes of vehicular enthusiasm. Boss Wagons ho!
Automotive photographer and Automobile and Driver contributor James Lipman sourced a GM E-Rod 6.2-liter V-8 crate engine from somebody’s misguided Ferrari 400i restomod venture and dropped it into his 1992 Roadmaster wagon. “It is just about plug and play,” he says. “The four-page directions primarily say: Put it within the automobile, join the wiring, drive it.”
Whereas it began life as a Caprice wagon, racer Steve Morris’s longroof has earned its Street grasp stripes. After the Caprice scraped a wall in a race in 2010, “I made a decision to make it right into a woodgrain station wagon,” he says. Below the hood bulge lives a customized twin-turbo 9.4-liter V-8. “It makes 4500 horsepower. We’re making an attempt to do a five-second quarter-mile.”