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Muscle’s Second Act: The 1983 Oldsmobile Hurst/Olds
Oldsmobile’s reborn performer also gave rise to a new 442 Muscle car fans were thrilled when Detroit finally started to acknowledge its performance past in the mid 1980s by reintroducing offerings ...
One might think that after covering so many Oldsmobiles over the years, we have developed a thing for certain models that the defunct brand made. But we haven’t. Not unless they tick a few important ...
In an age where people are comfortable with real lemons in their furniture polish and artificial ones in their lemonade, some things just don't seem right. Thankfully, Pro Stock racing hasn't gone the ...
The Oldsmobile Hurst/Olds didn’t begin as an Oldsmobile model, but rather developed from George Hurst’s relationship with Pontiac. The whole thing began when Pontiac installed Hurst shifters in the ...
Over the decades, Detroit has made some wild calls—from GM’s bizarre retreat from factory racing in 1963 to the modern-day murder of the HEMI and Dodge Challenger. But back in the golden era of ...
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When Oldsmobile dropped the Hurst/Olds W-30 hammer
The Hurst/Olds W-30 sits at the intersection of muscle car mythology and limited-production rarity, which is exactly why collectors still chase it hard today. Oldsmobile only paired the Hurst ...
George Hurst is the father of the Oldsmobile Hurst/Olds, but well before George started working with Oldsmobile, he was supplying Hurst shifters to Pontiac for the GTO. Hurst first produced shifters ...
This '63 Oldsmobile made its public debut at the Grand National Roadster Show in 2007. All weekend long, the area around it was clogged with spectators eager to see the amazingly finished Olds-not to ...
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