, because the people who named cars back then were forced to read Euripides
and Sophocles as undergrads. In fact, the car was named after Electra Waggoner Bowman Biggs, a Texas heiress and sculptor who married the brother-in-law of Harlow Curtice, who ran the Buick Division before being promoted to president of General Motors in 1953. How did she feel when the last Electra rolled off the assembly line in 1990? The junkyard is full of history, if you know where to look.
The Electra lived on the same platform as the Cadillac DeVille and Oldsmobile 98 from start to finish, and it was the most expensive Buick available in 1962. The MSRP of this one was $4,051, or about $41,462 in 2023 dollars.
The engine in this one was present when it arrived at U-Pull-&-Pay, but a junkyard shopper grabbed it within a couple of days of arrival. It would have been a 401-cubic-inch (6.5-liter) “Nailhead” V8
, rated at 325 horsepower and a whopping 445 pound-feet of torque (keep in mind that these are gross, not net, power numbers
). The Nailhead’s small valves meant that it wasn’t much good for high-rpm use, but its big torque was perfect for moving two-ton land yachts. The final Nailheads were installed in 1966 Buicks.
, the Dynaflow was considered a two-speed automatic but drove more like a CVT with two selectable drive ranges. For 1964, the three-speed Super Turbine 300 automatic (known as the Turbo-Hydramatic 400 when installed in vehicles made by other GM divisions) replaced the Dynaflow in the Electra.
Car radios sold in the United States from the 1953 through 1963 model years were required to have the CONELRAD nuclear-attack-warning frequencies of 640 and 1240 kHz marked with Civil Defense triangle symbols on their dials, and that’s what’s in the dash of this Buick.
This car’s body appears to have been bent up and repaired with thick layers of body filler on more than one occasion, though there isn’t much serious rust. Detroit post sedans of this era aren’t worth nearly as much as their convertible, coupe and hardtop counterparts, so there wasn’t much chance of this one getting restored.
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