The United States and the United Kingdom. Two best friends separated by an ocean of water and a common language. Despite our landscape being peppered with buildings older than your entire country, I’ve always thought the UK felt much closer to the US than it does to mainland Europe less than thirty miles away. Probably not surprising, seeing as about eighty years ago all your available young men flew over and squired all our available young women. Latterly, you’ve given us regular-season NFL games and in return we’ve given you James Corden. No, keep him, you’re welcome.
It’s easy enough for any one of us to buy a ticket, jump on a flying death tube, and about ten hours later emerge frazzled and possibly intoxicated in each other’s country. I’ve been to the US a dozen times over the last quarter of a decade, and I always felt much more at home there (here? I’m confusing myself now) than I do in my own country. I’m not sure what this says about me, but the ease at which this can be accomplished says a lot about how the broad strokes of business and pop culture are exchanged between us.
For cars, it’s a bit harder – literally and metaphorically – to make the same leap. In the fifties and sixties, you fell in love with our windswept two-seater sports cars, and certain strata of American high society took to swanning about in a rickety upscale SUV named after a fashion magazine. But because the American market is concerned with such trifles as value for money and build quality, British cars in the US have remained an acquired taste. We’re a nation of classist snobs, so American cars in the UK have always been considered a bit downtown: gaudy fingertip-steered barges for people who think it’s acceptable to be seen in public wearing a bolo tie (although in the interests of full disclosure, I should point out my regular footwear rotation contains a pair of black suede cowboy boots).
The majority of American cars that wash up on UK shores are the usual clichés: Mustangs, Camaros, Firebirds, Corvettes, and the like. Every so often though, something pops up that just beggars the question: what in the name of eight-dollar-a-gallon gas is THAT thing doing here?
It Cost $7 Billion Dollars
Such car had me spitting out my breakfast beer in disbelief this morning. As I doomscrolled and steeled myself to face the horrors of another day, what appeared in my feed was one of the greatest examples of General Motors mediocrity as has ever graced England’s green and pleasant land: a 1989 Pontiac Grand Prix. My understanding had been these cars limped out of the factory with a pre-grunged interior and faded plastics mounted on the skewwhiff, yet here shining out from my phone screen was a mint-condition example available for ten thousand of English pounds. Even more shocking, it’s the ASC/McLaren turbo version. If I didn’t already have a temperamental red 2+2 coupe (yes, it’s broken down again stop sniggering) I’d be all over this like a $99 dollar tuxedo. Strap in, this is going to get a little button-y.
The sixth generation Pontiac Grand Prix was one of the first cars to use the ill-fated GM W-body, an all-things-to-all-GM-brands attempt to build the majority of their volume sellers on a single FWD platform. With a staggering 7 billion with a B dollars devoted to the project – in mid-eighties money, mind you – the idea was to try and wean customers out of bulky, old-fashioned rear-wheel drive cars and into modern, fuel-efficient front wheel drive cars. GM factories would stamp out W-body variants by the hundreds of thousands, the various divisions having their versions differentiated by a simple nose and tail job – badge engineering at its worst. The problem was the market was rapidly changing, and CEO Roger Smith’s technology-led reforms were going down within GM like last week’s leftover burrito. When the W-bodies stumbled into showrooms in 1987 with the Grand Prix, Buick Regal, and Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, the new machines were allegedly losing $2,000 per car sold. Bloody hell.
But It’s A McLaren You Can Afford
What we have here is an ASC/McLaren Grand Prix from 1989. This wasn’t another long-distance transatlantic production line like that other Roger Smith folly, the Cadillac Allante. McLaren in this case referred not to the Woking-based company whose primary business back then was churning out F1 winners, but instead a US-based offshoot of McLaren that only shared a name with the racecar constructor. In partnership with the American Sunroof Company, a small but credible coachbuilder, this McLaren already had some experience juicing up Fox-body era Capris and Mustangs. With the future of the rear wheel drive performance car looking a tad uncertain in the late eighties (the Probe was originally going to be the new Mustang, remember) it probably seemed logical to turn their attention to the latest front wheel drive tire devourer.
The 1989 Grand Prix had received a few upgrades from the launch 1987 version. Chief among these was swapping out the 2.8-liter V6 boat anchor for a bigger 3.1-liter version, giving a whopping 10 bhp increase, for a total of wait for it, 140 bhp. Wow. Control of all this American firepower fell to a four-speed sludgematic, and the ‘89s came equipped with ABS to make your inevitable understeering trip into a ditch a bit slower. Needless to say, there was room for improvement which is where ASC/McLaren got the spanners out. The de rigeur method to increase engine power in the eighties was to bolt on a turbo, so that’s exactly what they did. On the outside, the ASC team looked at the controversial plastic cladding and perhaps thought it needed more of that – so they fattened up the fender flares and redid the front and rear fascias. Then, having decided that wasn’t enough plastic, they added cooling louvres to the hood. Lower and stiffer suspension pieces were added to sharpen up the handling and fill out the bodywork better as well. So unlike a lot of factory hot rods, the upgraded ASC/McLaren Grand Prix (try saying it after ten Busch Lights) wasn’t all hat and no cattle: Power went up to a respectable 205 bhp, zero to sixty went down to around seven seconds, and the top speed was 128 mph.
Why. Why Is This Here?
The original list price for the standard 1989 Grand Prix SE was around $25k, and according to Car and Driver the ASC/McLaren conversion cost $5k extra on top of that – equivalent to $72k in 2024 greenbacks. Now, a lot of American cars end up in the UK thanks to the large contingent of US armed forces still based here (we’re all irresistible to Americans, what can I say?), but it’s hard to believe any of them were daft enough to pay the thick end of $30k for a fucking Pontiac Grand Prix. What I’m wondering then is which British subject, having a post-pub flash of inspiration mind back in 1990, looked around at all the UK market offerings, thought “hmmm it’s all a bit too tasteful and sophisticated for me.” And then placed a long-distance phone call to Billy Bob’s Pontiac, Swamp Boat, and Bullshit Emporium in Sweat Bowl, Florida to get a Walmart BMW put on the next boat to the UK?. Let me walk you through some of the alternatives that were available at that time, ripped straight from the back pages of the March 1990 issue of Car magazine:
Audi Quattro, £32,995
BMW 325i, £17,975
Ford Sierra RS Cosworth, £21,300
Lancia Delta Integrale, £20,350
Lotus Elan SE, £19,950
Mazda RX7 Turbo, £21,999
Nissan 200SX, £16,997
Toyota Celica GT4, £22,380
In 1990, the exchange rate was much more favorable than it is these days. Back then, you would have got $1.70 for each of your £1 sterling, giving our Pontiac a UK price equivalent of about £18k. But on top of that you would have had to pay to ship it, then import duties, and finally Value Added Tax on the lot at 15%. You would have been going blind in paperwork for a month getting the blessed thing registered and made road legal, making the entire endeavor more expensive than all the above cars bar the Audi. And a lot more hassle. So why? The only possible explanation is the original owner had a thing for tactile controls, namely buttons. Because on a button-per-dollar metric, this Grand Prix is outstanding value.
How Many Buttons? All Of Them
I’ve mentioned before how the GM interior design team liked using two buttons when one would do but look at this thing: haptic fetishism taken to its illogical extreme. I found a historical listing from four years ago for a similar car on BaT, and the owner reckons it has 137 of them. One hundred thirty seven. I’m glad they counted them because I wasn’t going to. Hell, there are eleven on the steering wheel alone. Punch the horn in anger and you’ll end up tuning the radio to static and blasting the speaker cones out the doors. And in what interior design manual does it suggest putting the fader on the steering wheel is a banner idea? It’s bonkers. Good job there’s no airbag here, because in an accident you’d be getting a full spread of low-grade GM plastic shuriken embedded in your face.
That’s not the end of the electronic eccentricity either. There’s a heads-up display to make you feel like a fighter pilot and nestled in the center console of some kind of digital compass-cum-trip-computer thing, but it doesn’t contain enough digits for everything it’s trying to display. Both the driver and the passenger can get comfy in the every-which-way power-adjustable seats, but only one of them at a time, because both seats share controls. The pod-mounted wiper and lighting controls on either side of the instrument panel are more perplexing than Evangelion fanfiction: I watched Mr. Regular try to figure them out multiple times and I’m still confused. There’s a five-band graphic equalizer with the bands adjusted by rocker switches. Aren’t these supposed to have a minimum of six or seven bands? Perversely the instrument cluster itself is ANALOG. Was there only one small baggie of LEDs and seven-segment displays per car, and once they were all used up, that was it? And what’s that cylinder of numbered reels in front of the passenger for? A combination lock for the glove compartment? This truly is an interior of dreams and madness my friends. This feature overload was meant to present modernity in the face of increased European and Japanese competition but all it’s serving is ergonomic bewilderment. BMW would have been laughing their asses off at this thing.
I Need It.
Nevertheless, the person who imported this 1989 (registered in 1990) example must have loved it, because they kept it for 33 years. According to the advert it’s never been out in the rain (it must never have been out in that case because it rains here whenever the day ends with the letter Y) and everything still works. This is important because although the old saying goes a GM car will run worse for longer than most cars will run at all, it’s always the electronic parts that age out. The mileage is listed as a tick under 50k, but slightly worryingly the DVLA (the UK equivalent of the DMV) website lists it as not having had an MOT since 2015, although a new one is part of the purchase price.
Despite the Radwood stink pervading out of every gap in the interior trim I absolutely adore this car. Considering its rarity (the advert says only 749 were made – I could find no evidence to counter or support this figure) I can even forgive it the color. The US and European markets are so much more homogenized now – we even get the Mustang over here in right-hand drive – so the time when American cars were forbidden exotics only found in warm photographs nestled in the pages of Car and Driver are long gone. Compared to a BMW or a Sierra Cosworth this Pontiac makes no sense whatsoever, so whoever imported it all those years ago, I salute you. It’s a brash, trashy, low-rent, low-profile-shod contraption, a concentrated shot of the shiteosity that Roger Smith was infecting GM with at the time, and I cannot help but find that sort of earnest hopelessness endearing. And I do love American cars. Especially the magnificently crap ones.
David
Matt
Jason, can you DM me the company credit card details please?
All images courtesy of Fairmont Sports and Classics, Essex, United Kingdom.
- The Most Popular Car In Monterey Is Our $3,600 Pontiac Aztek
- An Unironic Review Of The Pontiac Aztek
- Analog Dashes Are Boring: 1986 Chrysler LeBaron GTS vs 1989 Pontiac Grand Prix
- GM Sent Us Never-Before-Seen Sketches Of The Pontiac Aztek From Before It All Went So Wrong
Just watch this to help the desire.
The 90s was a brilliant time, wasn’t it?
We didn’t realise how good we had it. What I couldn’t; quite work into the article is I would have had to journeyed into central London to find copies of the American car magazines, and they would have been expensive. Worth every penny.
I didn’t have to go as far, but here in the US, I had to make a special trip to get the UK mags and they were also expensive.
Ngl, all those buttons are awesome to me. That Light button cluster looks awesome!
RE: the light and wiper control pods
I had a 1991 Pontiac Sunbird with the same pods, and the nostalgia hit of seeing them again was intense. I don’t know what Mr. Regular or Adrian are on about, honestly – they were perfectly intuitive and, more to the point, impressively tactile.
Having owned both an early W-body Buick Regal and a Gen1 Sable in my youth I can say the Ford was overall better built and engineered. The only thing GM had over Ford at this time was corrosion protection, early W-bodies did not rust.
You are a liar sir! My (beat) Regal with the 2.8 had a feature that your Sable didn’t…. it would burn enough oil that you never had to actually change it, just keep adding. I saved so much money on oil changes!
Plus it had amazing near vertical flush door handle placement (2 door coupe) and if you pulled too hard on them when frozen they would simply snap off.
/s for the “features” obv
“We’re a nation of classist snobs”
Are you? I only know British society from Dr Who reruns:
For those who don’t know Doctor Who is a sci-fi TV show about an all powerful Lord who despite having the entire time space multi verse at his fingertips has weird obsession with England, mostly Victorian to The Battle of Britian; whose good graces are the only thing keeping humanity from constant alien/foreign peril and who keeps commoners around as amusing pets till they die horribly or he gets bored with them.
Was there a 4 door version of this maybe a Grand Am.. or something else. A buddy had a Pontiac like this in highschool with the steering wheel buttons and all of these electronic stuff in it, but I am sure it had 4 doors.
There was a 4-door Grand Prix as well (I believe delayed introduction), but the button fetish spread across all of Pontiac (the Bonneville SSEi was similarly equipped).
Pontiac’s button proliferation increased exponentially with the 6000 STE and ’87-91 Bonnevilles, with these GPs rapidly approaching Peak Button.
If you’re talking 90’s to aughts you could get the Grand Am and Grand Prix as a 4 door or a 2 door. They stopped making the 2 door Grand Prix after a facelift in I want to say 2005. Around the same time they replaced the Grand Am with the G6 which they offered as a 4 door sedan, 2 door coupe, or a 2 door convertible.
The 2 door Grand Prix in particular was the car young men who couldn’t afford a Camaro or Firebird went for. They were a very common sight on campus when I was in college. It made sense because they had youthful style, durability, and steep depreciation. You want to send your kid to college in an inexpensive car they will enjoy but won’t have you constantly sending money for the next repair? You could do worse than a Grand Prix.
All the buttons?! That’s the exact number of buttons I like!
“GM Plastic Shuriken”
Nice job, Adrian, you’ve named yet another of my ever-gestating side bands.
I am a big fan of the design. I owned a black on black 2000 GP GT coupe with the mesh wheels. Miss that car. In fact, I always thought I wanted to pick up an IROC but since everything from those years wasn’t exactly a speed machine, I think going with one of these is the better bet.
Lost it when I got to this, brilliant!
“Billy Bob’s Pontiac, Swamp Boat, and Bullshit Emporium in Sweat Bowl, Florida”.
Need the T-Shirt.
Thanks Adrian
Me too, I died of laughter
Also for some reason my one happy face has given you seven. Hmm
Can you imagine what the phone call cost.
Every time I leave there my a(r)sshole hurts!
Hardigree! We need that shirt!
I really dug these, especially the redesign later on.
This brings back memories. Back in the late 90s I got a call from my mom asking if I could pick up the son of one of her friends, as his car had just died and he needed a ride home. I don’t know the guy, just his mom, so when I roll up I see a guy in his mid-30s standing next to an absolutely beat red ASC/McLaren Turbo Grand Prix. The guy climbs into my 4th gen Trans Am and then proceeds to point out every single thing on the interior that is reminiscent of his “Grand Pricks”. I think I told him that you don’t pronounce the X about ten times to no effect. It was a long twenty five minutes drive.
Also, I will never forgive Britain for creating James Corden and then foisting him on us while holding onto gems like Sean Lock and Joe Wilkinson.
Hey, I paid for all the letters so I’m using all the letters.
I should have known I was in for an unfortunate ride when he told me I had a “nice transom”, not realizing there was a space between “Trans” and “Am”.
Definitely with you on Sean Lock (RIP) but would happily trade Jon Richardson for Joe Wilkinson.
I’d be happy with Jon or Joe, as both are great.
How about we agree to give James Corden to Australia?
For a kangaroo?
Koala bears are at least cute. One seems a fair trade.
Hey, if they didn’t make the power seat controls shared, there would be EVEN MORE buttons.
Also, all I can think about now is Kevin Klien tearing around London in a bigass Cannon Lincoln.
https://car-images.bauersecure.com/wp-images/11731/1040×0/car_09.jpg?scale=down
Assholllllllllle!
OK I actually predicted that someone would say that.
“How very interesting. You’re a true vulgarian, aren’t you?”
😀
Didn’t predict that one.
I could write a book about the ill-fated GM10/W-body program. GM thought it could capture 21% of the US passenger market with various intermediate sedans, coupes (and even a convertible), built at 7 different plants. Between that aspirational goal and the fact that GM was mired in corporate inefficiencies, unfavorable supplier contacts and union obligations…yes, this platform did end up costing them $7B.
On top of that, they really fumbled by getting rid of the G-body coupes first and launching the W-body coupes, then waiting two years to do the W-body sedans.
For our subject car, there’s something charming about a well-sorted, even highly-competitive, version of a soggy car. But that’s just it: this genuinely stunning version of a W-body does not reflect the other 99% of them, which were just soggy, mediocre-to-subpar intermediate cars that fell apart around their owners. I’m sure these were a lot of the reason many GM owners defected to Toyota, Honda, Nissan and even crosstown rivals Ford and Chrysler.
If you can indeed write a book on the subject, can I suggest that you reach out to the Autopian and perhaps at least write an article about it? I would read that. OEM histories are really interesting to me.
I might well do that! Here are a couple I wrote last year
https://www.curbsideclassic.com/curbside-classics-european/curbside-classic-the-2004-2009-x350-jaguar-xj-a-lightweight-last-hurrah-for-tradition/
And
https://www.curbsideclassic.com/curbside-classics-european/curbside-classic-the-2003-2012-l322-range-rover-new-heights-horizons/
Cool! I will have to check those out. Thanks for the links.
I’m gonna except the ’97-’03 Grand Prix here. Even with a bulgy dash and over-the-top lower body cladding, it was a stunner.
I agree; I liked that one’s design. Though I thought the oddly shaped trunk opening, with its high liftover height, was a poor choice.
I have a feeling that’s a leftover from the first generation that they couldn’t fix.
I got my license in 2001 and I wanted a Grand Prix soooo bad.
Turns out I only had $850 so I got an early 80s Mercury Tracer. ⊙﹏⊙
I got my license in ’94 and got a Grand Prix as my first car! It was an ’83 though, still of the land barge generation, bought off the old lady who lived across the street. Definitely not the cool kind of Grand Prix that we see here, but it was my first car so I loved it all the same.
I hated these W bodies so much! Not only did they fall apart in short order (It’s amazing that this one looks the way it did. I don’t think they usually looked that good at only 3 years old.) and were FWD (I was a snob about that back then, but credit where it’s due, these shitty FWDs were a good reason why), but they replaced the G bodies, which I really liked.
Man, middle-school me lusted SO HARD after the refreshed GTPs of the mid-90s. I still think they look great, although it’s been years since I’ve seen one on the road.
This guy right here is actually close enough to me that if it were a GTP and a few grand cheaper, I’d totally go for it as my winter beater this year. It even has the 90’s paint-matched wheels!
I love this car, I’ve always wanted one. The only other car from this era I’ve coveted is a 94-99 Bonneville SSEI. It somehow had more buttons!
I *adore* the generation of Grand Prix as a coupe. I’ve never been sure if I prefer this one or the later one with the Camaro-like inset headlights. Just the perfect encapsulation of that decade as a coupe design, with gimmicky stuff that somehow all comes together. Probably as close as Pontiac ever got to making a car that would plausibly actually be BMW yuppie kind of desirable.
Only in top spec though because as soon as you lose any aspect of the upper trim levels it all falls apart.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen the combo lock glove box, how ridiculous.
Agreed, but I also love it for no logical reason.
In those days, it was more likely that some people would park with windows down.
I think its sort of genius. Going hiking or running? Lock your keys in the glovebox! Sort of like the passcode on my Grand Marquis, but without the possibility of window smashing
For real! This was before women’s athletic clothing had pockets. Running with a carkey in your sports bra is NOT. COMFORTABLE.
But then you can’t lock the car itself?
Depending on the area, that can be advisable. Don’t keep anything valuable in the car, and if the doors are unlocked an opportunistic thief is likely to just open the doors and rifle through stuff, rather than smashing a window to look. It’s like the advice convertible owners used to give when parked in the city. A new top is a lot more expensive than the spare change in the ashtray.
No one explained that to the genius who smashed the passenger window and trim on my 240z to steal about 5 bucks in coin and rip my alpine car stereo out of the dash. Both doors were unlocked and the stereo was useless without the faceplate. I’da killed him slowly with a hammer, razorblades and vinegar if I could have caught him.
Similar thing happened to an ex’s Monte Carlo SS. The doors were locked, but there was no window frame and the huge glass could have been pulled back by hand and the lock plunger popped up with even a decently flexible twig. Instead, they jammed a screwdriver or something into the lock to jerk it around, damaging the door skin, before destroying the console for a mediocre stereo they couldn’t have possibly gotten much for. I could have fed that guy pieces of himself and gone to sleep easy.
That sux. Happened twice to my Z. Datsun didn’t carry the parts for the door skin or window frame locally so I had to wait a couple of months for shipping from I am assuming, Japan. Similar thing happened to my TR7. They punched out the small door window and bent the frame for it. It took the dealer six months to get the glass and frame in. I cannot imagine the grief of owning something rare or exotic and trying to source parts for it.
Someone jammed something in between the door frame and roof on my 1st winter beater, 87 Celebrity (Eurosport Coupe no less). They got a couple of cassettes and about 89 cents in change. Messed up the weather stripping so bad it was windy inside the car after that. But, who the Fuck locks a rusted out 87 Celebrity? You could have just tried the door dumbass!
When my friend was living in NYC, his wife’s Neon got broken into twice, once they took the cassette to CD adaptor (if you remember those) and smashed it on the sidewalk in apparent frustration at not finding anything else and the second time they got nothing at all, but caused plenty of damage smashing the window each time. I believe she just started leaving it unlocked after that. At least in Roxbury or Detroit, I’ve found that leaving nothing visible is good enough, though that might have just been luck. One guy I worked with had his truck broken into in Roxbury, losing a hidden laptop and GPS (this was a while ago), he thinks they targeted him by spotting a suction cup mark on the windshield from where he’d stick the GPS when driving. They didn’t touch my car right behind him, so he might have been right. Someone once stole a briefcase-like cassette holder out of my car, but the wagon tailgate didn’t lock, so they didn’t damage anything getting it. Of course, knowing it didn’t lock pointed my suspicion toward someone I knew. Used that as an excuse to convert my collection to CDs (oi, all my stories are ancient).
How in the year of our lord 1989 did that not have an airbag???
Because you don’t want all the buttons hitting you in the face when you have an accident. SAFETY!
I don’t think hardly anything had airbags in 89 did they? I don’t think they were mandatory until like 93 and thought most didn’t start putting them on until at least 91 or so.
Passive restraints weren’t required until 1990, and even then I don’t think it was airbags specifically until 1993.
Yeah, GM leaned into the door-mounted seatbelts as their passive restraint solution to put off engineering in airbags as long as they could.
The higher-end GM cars would have airbags: the Riviera, the DeVille, the Allante, stuff like that. The other stuff got passive restraints until 1992 or even 1994 in some instances.
What are you some kind of communist?
This really does represent the zenith/nadir of the We Build Excitement (Pontiac!) era. The relatively lithe, graceful lines of cars like the Fiero were a memory, nostrils were becoming gaping, and cladding was rapidly getting more and more convoluted, metaphorically and literally. People thought the lines on the Firebird were getting to be bit much, but just wait until the ’00s.
For lack of a better term, the model line was very American again, for the final time!
It’s a horrible overwrought piece of late Reagan-era crap screwed together with utter indifference and purchased by people who should have known better. Oh wait, we weren’t talking about the Mondial?
THAT’S IT. ON THE LIST YOU GO.
*golf clap*
I especially appreciate Billy Bob’s use of the Oxford comma.
Walmart BMW is pretty funny. It sort of is giving “We have E31 8 Series at home” energy.
I don’t think Pontiac genuinely had another car that got compared to a Bimmer until the G8, which was touted as “The Poor Man’s 5 Series,” but that thing was Australian.
Ah yes, the Holden Commodore… GV? Something like that
The G8 was the Commodore VE, the SS was the Commodore VF.
Excellent – thank you
My dad had one of these, brand new, same color and everything. For the time it was pretty spicy. The first gen ABS really fought you – you could feel it pulsing the pedal and not really wanting to stop.
He dragged it for a while, but after wringing about as much as he could out of it, traded up to an actual drag car he still uses today. Its still out there too – could not even begin to attest to whether or not all the buttons work – they did when parked. 🙂