Did Oldsmobile revolutionize the car industry?

Oldsmobile's ads were more innovative than the cars

(EXPANDED 10/31/2022)

Did Oldsmobile revolutionize the car industry, as Mark J. McCourt (2020) has suggested? In a Hemmings article he described how Oldsmobile had been a leader in technological advancements such as high-compression V8s, turbocharged engines and front-wheel drive. In addition, Indie Auto commentator Kevin Faber pointed to Olds offering the first mass-produced car, the curved-dash Runabout (go here).

Fair enough, but the list was still rather modest for a century-old brand. Only a public-relations flack could argue with a straight face that Olds was Detroit’s answer to Mercedes-Benz, Citroen or Saab.

Oldsmobile’s biggest constraint was being part of General Motors. The brand was mostly stuck drawing from the auto giant’s parts bin. This resulted in cars that tended to be only slightly different from other GM brands.

1950 Oldsmobile 98
Oldsmobile’s fully automatic transmission and high-compression V-8 engines were meaningful innovations that helped define the post-war U.S. car. Unfortunately, the brand was less able to be a pioneer as GM’s divisions lost autonomy.

Olds Toronado fails to revolutionize industry

As a case in point, Oldsmobile could have revolutionized the U.S. car industry in 1966 when it came out with front-wheel drive. That technology would result in some of the biggest packaging advancements in the second half of the 20th Century.

Also see ‘1973 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme: Monument to a fading dream’

Alas, Olds only used the drivetrain on a big personal coupe called the Toronado. This wasted the most significant advantage of front-wheel drive — extra space efficiency. Personal coupes were sold mostly on their styling rather than roominess.

1966 Oldsmobile Toronado
The only good reason for putting front-wheel drive on Oldsmobile’s most expensive model was that the extra cost could be better recouped. Why wasn’t the technology instead used on a high-end family car (go here for further discussion)?

Imagine if Oldsmobile had instead given front-wheel drive to its mid-sized or big family cars. The top-of-line Ninety-Eight should have been pricey enough to cover the additional cost of front-wheel drive, particularly if it was shared with one of its corporate siblings such as the Buick Electra.

Also see ‘1965-68 GM big cars: The end of different strokes’

Alas, GM’s top management apparently assumed that most people didn’t care about practical considerations such as space efficiency. Even John Z. DeLorean failed in his quest to downsize Pontiac’s big cars in the early-1970s (go here for further discussion).

1970 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser

For Oldsmobile gave up on 'revolutionizing' wagons in early-70s
The mid-sized Vista Cruiser could have revolutionized wagons if it was given front-wheel drive. Even with rear-wheel drive the car was noteworthy, but it was eclipsed by a rather generic full-sized wagon in 1971 (Old Car Brochures).

Imports were more technologically advanced

McCourt (2020) all but gushed that Olds “epitomized technological advances that defined the automobile industry when they first occurred.” I assume he was referring only to U.S. automakers, who fell behind imports in the post-war era.

Oldsmobile's 1969 marketing for the 442 was more 'revolutionary' than its cars
Oldsmobile’s marketing of its “muscle cars” in the late-60s and early-70s stood out from the crowd more than the technical caliber of its products. The image is from a 1969 brochure for the 442 (Old Car Brochures).

The 1966 Toronado is a good example. The car couldn’t compete with the roadworthiness of a Mercedes-Benz (e.g., the Toronado’s brakes were notoriously weak). Nor did the Oldsmobile’s finest possess the advanced suspension of a Citroen DS or the aerodynamics of a Saab 96. Indeed, front-wheel drive had been used by the latter two automakers for years before it showed up on the Toronado.

Also see ‘What if GM and Ford were broken up in the 1960s?’

If Oldsmobile was constrained by Detroit’s focus on styling in the 1960s, that became an even bigger problem in later decades. Olds ultimately died because it had become just another cereal with somewhat different packaging.

1969 Cadillac Eldorado
Oldsmobile’s innovations were less meaningful when they were shared with other GM divisions. For example, the Toronado’s front-wheel drive was also offered on Cadillac’s Eldorado in order to gain better economies of scale.

Oldsmobile illustrates GM’s long, slow decline

With trumpets blaring, McCourt (2020) grandly concluded, “Oldsmobile is gone but will be venerated forever. Its legacy is too long, deep and fascinating to allow any other outcome.”

That’s one way to look at it. Another way is to suggest that the brand’s mostly unremarkable history reflects the long, slow decline of GM.

The 1977 Oldsmobile Toronado XSR shows how the brand innovated in only superficial and glitzy ways
The 1977 Toronado XSR had a wrap-around back window and removable roof sections. This is an example of how Oldsmobile’s innovations were mostly superficial and rather glitzy (Old Car Brochures).

I would suggest that Oldsmobile did not revolutionize the car industry in more than fairly short-term ways. The key reason why is that the brand did not deviate more sharply from GM’s standard approach to making cars.

The automaker’s basic structure would not allow that to happen, particularly as divisional autonomy decreased beginning in the 1960s. By the time of Oldsmobile’s death in 2004, the brand’s offerings had little to distinguish themselves from their GM siblings.

1996 Oldsmobile Aurora
The 1995-99 Aurora mainly stood out from the crowd because of its unusually rounded styling. That didn’t prove to be enough to generate strong sales for the car, which replaced the Toronado and later the Ninety-Eight (Wikipedia, 2022).

NOTES:

This story was originally posted on June 19, 2020 and updated on Oct. 31, 2022.

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9 Comments

  1. “Oldsmobile did not revolutionize the car industry.” Being the first truly mass-produced car counts, IMO, & the Runabout (commonly the Curved-Dash) did that, before Ford perfected it with the T. (You might argue for Duryea doing it, too, so you might ultimately be right.)

    • “Fair enough, but the list was rather modest for a century-old brand. Only a public-relations flack could argue with a straight face that Olds was Detroit’s answer to Mercedes-Benz, Citroen or Saab.”

  2. Steve… I beg your pardon for deviating from the topic of this article (which I mostly agree with, BTW), but could you please specify what did Saab do to earn this “honorable mention” as, presumably, an innovative car brand ? Other than – you know – getting its hands on German Auto Union / DKW technology, like front-wheel drive, two stroke engines and streamlining right after the war, that is ?..
    I assume Saab has put some serious effort into establishing an image of a “forward-thinking” company in the US market, which apparently affects your judgement about it; but, objectively speaking, in 1950s & 1960s it was roughly on the same technological level as the much-derided East German cars – namely the IFA Wartburg and, to a lesser extent, the Sachsenring Trabant – which were the more direct descendants of the DKW.
    It may be just my opinion, but it seems that the rest of Saab story was mostly about decent PR & US market’s lack of familiarity with European cars, giving almost anything that was not some bog-standard front-engine, rear-drive econobox some kind of futuristic vibe.
    And when two-stroke finally became passe, West Germany’s Ford was there to help with its four-stroke V4, because apparently Saab couldn’t even develop a modern engine in-house. Just as IFA couldn’t make one without some help from another West German car maker, the VW – what a profound coincidence. Nevertheless, just as you’ve established in one of your articles – Saab ultimately failed in creating a worthy successor for its aging 96.
    Mind you, I an not a Saab hater; you can count me as a fan of the 96, which are cool cars with funky styling & quite decent road manners. But, then again – just as DKWs & Wartburgs 311/312/313/353 are cool cars in their own right; and probably better than the 2-stroke Saabs from the practical point of view.

    • I suppose it comes down to how you view automotive innovation. For starters, I’m assessing Saab through the lens of the American car market (e.g., I don’t have enough background to weigh in on Saab’s standing in Europe). I’m also not necessarily focused on who introduced what first, but rather who made a more lasting impression. In addition, I don’t just look at individual features but also the basic worldview of an automaker.

      My sense is that Saab in its better days was one of the quirkiest automakers selling cars in the United States. If in the late-60s you took a typical GM designer, engineer or pretty much any other type of staff member, you couldn’t plop them into Saab’s operations without their heads exploding. The context would be too different.

  3. I would say that Oldsmobile set the template for the standard American car from 1949 through roughly 1984 when it rolled out the fully automatic transmission (Hydramatic) in 1940, followed by the high-compression ohv V-8 in 1949. Mainstream American cars followed that basic formula for several decades.

    By the mid-1980s, the Accord and Taurus had moved to the forefront, and as the rear-wheel-drive, body-on-frame passenger cars powered by a V-8 faded, Oldsmobile faded with them.

    In the car business, revolutionary moves aren’t limited technological advancements. Marketing and divisional structure also count. Ford changed the industry by bringing out the four-seat Thunderbird in 1958, and not because it was the first personal luxury car. That Thunderbird was fairly expensive for its time, and based on the principles of the Sloan Brand Ladder, it should have been either a top-of-the-line Mercury or smaller Lincoln. Instead, it was successfully sold as a Ford…which, in retrospect, signaled the beginning of the end of the then-dominant Sloan model. The 1965 LTD was another milestone in that regard.

    Today, buyers can visit their Ford, Toyota, Chevrolet, Mercedes-Benz or VW dealer and choose from a wide variety of vehicles in different price classes. A Maverick XLT, Mustang GT and F-150 Platinum are Fords, but they each send very different messages regarding the buyer’s income level and aspirations. Fords tended not to be very technically adventurous, but the company did change the way we looked at brands and what line-up a mainstream brand needs to offer to stay competitive. Which ultimately spelled the end of the old medium-price marques.

  4. The problem began with the 1957 Ford Fairlane 500 / 1959 Galaxie and the 1958 Chevrolet Impala. Had each of those cars stayed on a 115-inch wheelbase, then the deluxe interior would have likely been paired with a 300-h.p. top engine and the Sloan brand-hierarchy preserved. By extending the wheelbases and horsepower into the middle-price range cars (Pontiac-Oldsmobile-Buick Special-Edsel-Mercury-Dodge), everybody’s brands overlapped. Never thought about the Thunderbird being a Mercury, which might have driven more people into Mercury dealerships, especially when in 1958 it became a four-seater. I think the Corvette could stay a Chevrolet, but only if it remained an evolved Chevrolet like a C-7. The C-8 Corvette is its own brand of car, in my opinion. Every major automotive brand has diluted its image and identity, except for Bentley, Rolls-Royce and Porsche (sports cars only). (I exclude Ferrari and Lamborghini, because they are essentially hand-built specialty cars that are limited to specific low production.) The end of the line for General Motors’ Sloan hierarchy of brands was when the Oldsmobile Cutlass outsold the Chevrolet division (except for trucks) for the # 1 Car in 1986, then it all fell apart quickly.

  5. The curved dash (Runabout) model, the introduction of the assembly line, the high compression V8 engine and the development of the fully automatic transmission are the touchstones of Oldsmobile’s innovations. However, after about 1950, what happened? Had GM engineering and marketing tied the brand so closely to it’s position on the Sloan ladder that it became fat and morose?

    Oldsmobile had largely conventional body-on-frame, front-engine, rear wheel-drive cars that fit within the orthodoxy of the US market throughout most of the mid-20th Century. However, engineering and efficiency had dramatically improved starting in the 70’s and 80’s and these old-formula cars sold well until they didn’t.

    Pre-WWII, Oldsmobile was an innovator. The intervening years and the GM corporate changes and missteps blunted that reputation and turned the division into a zombie of it’s once-innovative former self. The cars introduced since about the mid-1960’s did nothing to really enhance it’s reputation. I felt it was a shame to lose a nameplate that had been in continuous production since 1897, but the damage had been done.

  6. Well-stated, George. GM was so flush with post-war profit and market dominance that they felt they could rest on their laurels forever. The Detroit bean counters have never cared about innovation, historical significance or anything that wasn’t about paying shareholders healthy dividends. They still don’t.

  7. No, Oldsmobile – the brand – did not revolutionize the car industry. Such an accomplishment tended to be attributed to a company – Ford, GM, Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and specific cars such as the Model T and VW Beetle.

    GM on several occasions did use Oldsmobile to launch new technologies such as Hydramatic and (for GM) front-wheel drive, which the company then gave to Cadillac the following year. IN that sense, Oldsmobile served to work out bugs so that Cadillac’s image would not be tarnished. The high-compression OHV V8 for both brands launched at the same time, so perhaps GM was confident enough in those engines to let Cadillac have it from the get-go.

    I think Oldsmobile’s biggest contributions were as an affordable, non-ostentatious entry point into the luxury space, and in styling – typically restrained, occasionally advanced as with 1935 cars and the Aurora. Throughout most of the 1950s, Oldsmobile was the most restrained of GM’s cars and therefore imho, the most enduring.

    Regarding GM coasting in the Sixties and particularly the Seventies, I think it is important to keep in mind the many attributes that buyers attach importance to. Here’s a list that GM mostly tracks today, excluding those uniquely pertaining to EVs.

    Price
    Warranty/Cost of Repair/Serviceability
    Quality/Reliability/Durability
    Safety
    Exterior Appearance
    Interior Appearance
    Visibility (including exterior lighting)
    Fuel Capacity
    Driving Range
    Interior Quietness
    Ride Comfort
    Power and Acceleration
    Overall Handling
    Brake Effectiveness
    Brake Feel
    Gauges & Controls
    Infotainment
    Climate Control/HVAC
    Cargo Capacity
    Cargo Flexibility
    Front Seat Comfort
    Front Seat Spaciousness
    Front Seat Ingress/Egress
    Rear Seat Comfort
    Rear Seat Spaciousness
    Rear Seat Ingress/Egress
    Third Row Comfort
    Third Row Spaciousness
    Third Row Ingress/Egress
    All-Weather Traction
    Off-Road Capability
    Spare Tire Availability/Convenience

    In the Sixties and Seventies the Big 3 were most focused on ride comfort, quietness and interior comfort, and GM’s 1977 large cars were the most quiet that I have ever experienced even to this day. The Big 3’s HVAC systems were also best-in-industry.

    One can see from the list that the Europeans and Japanese companies in the Sixties and Seventies focused on other attributes. Today the entire industry must seriously addresses all the attributes, each company and brand balancing the many competing imperatives to create its own unique voice.

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