Junkyard Find: 1990 Pontiac Grand Am, With Quad 4 Power

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin
I have photographed and wrote about interesting (to me) junkyard cars for nearly a decade, and so far I have not photographed a single one of the hundreds of discarded BMW E30s I have found in my travels. In fact, I just shot my first E30 the other day (a 325e with automatic, don’t get too excited), but first I must share a car I find far more interesting: an N-Body Grand Am with gray cloth interior and Oldsmobile Quad 4 engine.
Grand Ams are plentiful in junkyards, and they offer us a history of GM’s ups and downs from the beginning of the Malaise Era to the dawn of the current century. When Juggalos captures an alleged thief at the Gathering and his car destroyed by a vengeful, Faygo-fueled mob, what kind of car was it? Grand Am, of course!
During my junkyard adventures, I have photographed this Iron-Duke-powered ’89 with Field Expedient Lexan windows, this extremely hooptie ’91 with Iron Duke and scary stencils, this ’00 with RAM AIR and much plastic cladding, and this ’02 GT with a NO FEAR steering wheel. Yeah, yeah, that E30 is coming soon, I promise.
The Quad 4 engine was quite advanced for 1980s Detroit — maybe not as advanced as the Hydra-Matic transmission in 1940 or the small-block Chevrolet engine in 1955, but still a big technological jump forward. This one displaced 2.3 liters and made 160 horsepower, which was very impressive in 1990.
The original Grand Am (in 1973) also had 16 valves, but they were divided among eight cylinders.
The automatic seat belts of the early 1990s (mandated in cars with no driver’s side airbag) were pure misery, though not as maddening as the flaky seat belt starter interlock systems seen 16 years earlier.
Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole and the Reagan Administration made the center brake light mandatory in all new U.S.-market cars built after September 9, 1985, but it took a few more years for GM to integrate the “Libby Light” into cars in a manner that looked less tacked-on.
This pseudo-velour wasn’t the most comfortable upholstery material ever made and it stained easily, but it withstood harsh sun reasonably well.
If you can stand it this hot, the 1990 Grand Am is one red-hot ride!
Allegedly the best-selling compact in America.[Images: © 2016 Murilee Martin/The Truth About Cars]
Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • CaseyLE82 CaseyLE82 on Aug 24, 2016

    This made me miss the first car I ever bought for myself, which was a 1988 baby blue Grand Am. My friends were "afraid" to ride in it, and I will say that it was in pretty bad shape. Cars that were 10 years old in 1998 (when I bought it) were a lot worse than cars that are 10 years old now. That's for sure.

  • THE_F0nz THE_F0nz on Aug 31, 2016

    I was a Quad 4 aficionado back in the day. Built multiple of them. My favorite was an N/A monster that idled like a Harley Davidson at stoplights. http://www.cardomain.com/member/phantomgtz/ (unfortunately all of my posts are jumbled with the new cardomain site. Just keep loading posts for pretty pictures.) Sold my last turbo motor to a Fiero race team before I could drop it in. I don't think it ever saw track time sadly, as the project moved on. Damn college tuition getting in the way of a 20 year old's dreams...

  • Jalop1991 Is this the beginning of the culmination of a very long game by Tesla?Build stuff, prove that it works. Sell the razors, sure, but pay close attention to the blades (charging network) that make the razors useful. Design features no one else is bothering with, and market the hell out of them.In other words, create demand for what you have.Then back out of manufacturing completely, because that's hard and expensive. License your stuff to legacy carmakers that (a) are able to build cars well, and (b) are too lazy to create the things and customer demand you did.Sit back and cash the checks.
  • Buickman more likely Dunfast.
  • Chris P Bacon "Dealership". Are these traditional franchised dealers, or is Vinfast selling direct?
  • Chris P Bacon Full self driving is a fraud. Even aircraft "autopilot" requires pilot interaction, attention, and most importantly of all, training is required. We've already seen accidents by idiots who think they don't need to interact with their Tesla. The system gets confused by simple lane markings, and there are many more variables driving down the street than there is in a jet aircraft.
  • ToolGuy I read through the Tesla presentation deck last night and here is my take (understanding that it was late and I ain't too bright):• Tesla has realized it has a capital outlay issue and has put the 'unboxed' process in new facilities on hold and will focus on a 'hybrid' approach cranking out more product from the existing facilities without as much cost reduction but saving on the capital.They still plan to go 'all the way' (maximum cost reduction) with the robo thing but that will be in the future when presumably more cash is freed up.
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