Junkyard Find: 1990 Buick Reatta

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin
The Buick Reatta is one of the more interesting attempts made by The General to steal back some North American buyers who had defected to European luxury brands. For a while, I’d photograph every junked Reatta I found, but more and more kept showing up in big self-service wrecking yards and I stopped paying attention for a while.Only about 20,000 Reattas were made, but the last 10 years have seen Full Depreciation for these cars. Still, I hadn’t done a Reatta Junkyard Find since 2012, and I spotted this shiny-looking ’90 in a San Francisco Bay Area yard a couple of weeks back, so here we go!
The E-Body Riviera served as the basis for the Reatta, which meant that this supposed Mercedes-Benz 560SL-killer got its power from a primitive pushrod V6 engine. Shifting was slushbox-only, of course.
The Electronic Control Center went away after 1990, but the ’90 model came with a futuristic-looking digital instrument cluster.
Like many GM cars of this era, this Reatta had a broken hood latch, and I wasn’t willing to tear up all my knuckles trying to pry the hood open for engine-compartment photos. If you must see an early-90s Buick 3800 V6, you can look at this car.
The Reatta’s radical styling and two seats scared away the increasingly elderly “traditional” Buick buyers, and the younger crowd preferred the R107 Benz (which outsold the hell out of the Reatta in the United States). The same sort of thing happened with the Oldsmobile Toronado Troféo.
Handcrafted luxury for two.
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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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  • Garak Garak on Mar 26, 2019

    Slow, ugly, impractical, leaf-sprung front-driver, what a truly epic halo car.

  • Hifi Hifi on Mar 31, 2019

    Seeing this sitting next to an Aveo, which is over 20 years newer than the Reatta, it's clear that GM has not evolved since the 1980s. In fact, GM has regressed.

    • ToolGuy ToolGuy on Mar 31, 2019

      hifi, Here are the vehicles GM cares about/makes an effort on (US market): - Fullsize utilities - Corvette - Fullsize pickups, sort of Now even judging them on just those products, they still aren't evolving very quickly.

  • Teddyc73 Beautiful color, although the overused black wheels detract from it. It's nice to see a car in an interesting color instead of the also grossly overused dull greys.
  • Master Baiter If you rear-end someone, it's your fault, period. If motorcycles need more time to stop, then riders need to increase their following distance.
  • Master Baiter Until recently, virtually every cell phone and computer was made in China and no one seemed to care. The majority are still built there. I'm not a fan of tariffs as it just gives domestic makers a price umbrella to sell their garbage products to U.S. consumers at higher prices.
  • Teleedle It would seem that if the Chinese made cars and trucks are ready to compete on the world market that they should be able to compete without the need for government help through subsidies. That's never going to happen with the mindset of their leadership. The rate at which they've transferred the ability to copy to the rate of their abilities to innovate isn't really astounding, but it is truly indicative of their inherent abilities to see through problems and overcome without a lot of fuss. They just have a different way that seems to continually baffle the Western mind. It only goes back a few thousand years. The rest of the world just has to catch up... Without tariffs, three Seagulls could be bought for the price of one loaded Toyota Corolla. I would settle for a nice small pickup truck that can get 30-35 mpg, if the Chinese want to build something with real durability and value. I'm sure they can do that for about $10-12k US, too, dumping them all the way to the bank. Neither Trump or Biden or Bugbrain want that, though. Restrictive 'targeted' tariff ideas indicate that they all want protectionism and the Chicken Tax to continue. The price of living in freedum in the non compete world... and the hallmark of one upmanship by the political class towards more and more expensive transportation related needs. All costs are ALWAYS passed onto the end consumer. Tariffs are the burden of the extra cost. Tariffs are punitive, remember... as intended. The political class is still living off the backs of their constituents throughout the world... same as it ever was.
  • Theflyersfan One day, some of these sellers will come to the realization that cars are not houses and putting expensive upgrades into one doesn't equal a higher selling price down the road. $29,000? The only Challenger that has a chance of value down the road, and only with low miles, is the Hellcat.
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