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Buick GNX
The ’80s are generally considered the dark ages of muscle cars and American performance, but there were a few bright moments. One of the cars that restored faith in muscle car movement in the ’80s was the mighty Buick GNX. The story of this model is an interesting one. Back in 1982, Buick started experimenting with turbocharging its line of standard V6 engines.
The results were satisfying, so engineers got permission to go further and develop a performance version that would deliver better acceleration figures. Soon, there was the Buick Grand National with a 175 HP motor, which wasn’t impressive, but it was a start. In the next couple of years, the Grand National got a bigger engine and more power, jumping from 175 HP to 200 HP, and finally to 235 HP.
With those numbers came the acceleration times of under six seconds, making the Grand Nationals quick cars. But in 1987 came the ultimate version Buick called the Grand National Experimental (GNX). It featured the same 3.8-liter turbocharged V6, but with a 275 HP engine with a 0 to 60 mph time of 4.9 seconds. The Buick GNX was the fastest accelerating production model in the world.
With a price tag of $29,000, it was expensive. But, there is a widespread legend about the owners who paid the lease on these cars, just by street racing them for money. Unfortunately, the Buick GNX was a one-year-only model and the company made just 547 of them. Today, those cars are equally praised as they were in the late 80’s.