Ads
related to: bleecker buick gmc photos
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Buick would introduce the Marquette to handle the upper end of the gap between Buick and Oldsmobile. Oldsmobile would introduce the Viking , which took care of the lower end of the same gap. Oakland's part in this plan was the 1926 Pontiac , a shorter-wheelbase "light six" priced to sell at a four-cylinder car's price point, but still above ...
The first automobile made by the Buick Company. Four: 1909 1915 1 Passenger car, the first model as a General Motors division. Six: 1914 1925 1 Senior model to the Four: Master Six: 1925 1928 B-body: 1 Standard Six: 1925 1929 A-body: 1 Limited: 1931: 1942: C-body: 2: Full-size car: Century: 1936 2005 B-body (1936–58) A-body (1973–96) W-body ...
The 2,600,000-square-foot (240,000 m 2) factory opened in 1937 to build Buick, Pontiac, and Oldsmobile vehicles from "knock down kits".Linden was the second of several B-O-P "branch" assembly plants (the first being the Pontiac-operated South Gate plant), part of GM's strategy to have production facilities in major metropolitan cities.
Buick Cadillac GMC Vauxhall: 1926: 1936: Holden plant. Acquired by GM Australia before it merged with Holden's Motor Body Builders Ltd. Holden Mosman Park Plant: Mosman Park (formerly Cottesloe Beach), Western Australia: Australia: Chevrolet Pontiac Oakland Oldsmobile Buick Cadillac GMC Vauxhall Bedford Holden: 1926: 1972: Holden plant. Built ...
The Marquette nameplate was revived when the Buick division of General Motors launched their junior brand for model year 1930. Along with Viking, LaSalle, and Pontiac, the Marquette was conceived to span a price gap in General Motors' market segmentation plan, and shared the GM B platform with the Buick Standard Six and Buick Master Six.
Acadians were sold alongside the rest of the Pontiac lineup at Pontiac-Buick-GMC dealerships until 1971. When the mid-sized Chevrolet Chevelle was introduced in 1964 it was sold in Canada as the Acadian Beaumont ('Beaumont' was formerly the top-level trim of Chevy II-based Acadian), and in 1966 Beaumont became its own marque.