Even though Oldsmobile has been gone for more than a decade— doomed in the marketplace, no doubt, by the focus-group-dismaying first three letters in its name— we still celebrate the marque in music to this day. You don’t see many 1965-70 Olds 88s, on the street or otherwise, these days, so this non-cancerous Colorado ’67 four-door hardtop is a good junkyard find.
I wasn’t sure what kind of 88 I was seeing at first— the junkyard lists it as a Delta, but I am often reminded that junkyards get that stuff wrong all the time. However, you can just make out the shadow of “Delta 88″ emblems on the rear quarters.
I was hoping that we had a genuine Delmont 88 here, because a ’67 Delmont 88 was the car driven by Edward Kennedy in the infamous Chappaquiddick Incident of 1969. Ted Kennedy likely would have had a real shot at the Presidency in 1972 and (even more so) in 1976, if not for the notoriety that stuck to him after incident, and so the ’67 Olds 88 has some historical significance.
It appears that Kennedy’s Delmont was the less sporty four-door sedan.
From what I understand, red valve covers on an Oldsmobile V8 engine of this era indicate that we’re looking at the potent 425-cubic-inch engine here. This would be a fun engine to rescue and drop into an X-body Olds Omega.
I’m betting that someone will grab these taillights and put them on eBay.
“The Toronado Look!”
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