Junkyard Find: 1993 Buick Roadmaster Limited Sedan

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

In 1931, Buick introduced the world to its first big sedan with an eight-cylinder engine (which wasn't a V8 but did have overhead valves) driving the rear wheels. It seemed that such cars would always be available in Buick showrooms, but it turned out that the very last ones were the 1992-1996 Roadmasters. Here's one of those cars, found near Pikes Peak last winter.

Buick sold new cars with V8s and front-wheel-drive and trucks with V8s and rear-wheel-drive after 1996, of course, but today's Junkyard Find is one of the last of the proper 1931-style eight-cylinder Buick sedans.

The Roadmaster name goes back almost as far as the eight-cylinder Buick itself. The 1936 Series Eighty Roadmaster sedan weighed more than two tons, had 248 cubes of straight-eight power under the hood, and sold for the 2023 equivalent of $27,747.

Buick continued to use the Roadmaster name through 1958. Twenty-nine years later, Buick ceased building new eight-cylinder/rear-wheel-drive sedans ( the 1987 Regal could be had with an optional Olds 307).

The three-model-year period of 1988 through 1991 caused great suffering among Buick shoppers who believed in two things above all else: that a man should drive a big eight-cylinder/rear-wheel-drive Buick sedan and that Herbert Hoover had been far too soft on the Bonus Army in 1932.

For 1991, Chevrolet finally ditched the mid-1970s-vintage design for its full-size sedan, replacing the Box Caprice with the rounded Whale Caprice. Oldsmobile and Buick got their own versions of the Caprice wagon that year: the Custom Cruiser and the Roadmaster Estate.

The Roadmaster name was back, but Buick buyers had to wait until the 1992 model year to get a Roadmaster sedan. Yes, you could get an optional padded landau roof, and this car has one.

Buick and Oldsmobile buyers had long been resigned to getting engines from lesser GM divisions under their hoods by the time this car was new, and it has the same Chevy 350 aka 5.7-liter small-block V8 that went into the Caprice.

This engine made 180 horsepower and 300 pound-feet. The final model year for the Buick V8 in new US-market vehicles was 1980, though you could make the case that the Rover V8 was always a Buick (and that the Buick V6 should be considered a member of the Buick V8 family).

This car's body got thoroughly banged up during its 30 years on the road. The interior is faded but not too nasty for its age.

Just over 100,000 miles on the odometer. Maybe just the last 16,781 were the punishing ones.

The Colorado Springs Police Department found this car parked with expired plates for more than 72 hours in the same spot (probably after a neighbor became incensed by its general hooptiness) and that was the end of the road for this Roadmaster.

The MSRP on a '92 Roadmaster Limited Sedan was $24,920, or about $53,319 in 2023 dollars.

The landau roof added $695 to that cost (about $1,487 after inflation). Because it's a Limited, this AM/FM/cassette radio was included in the sticker price. If you wanted a CD player, the cost was $394 ($843 now).

The 1993 Chevy Caprice LS Sedan had a list price of $19,995 ($42,782 today), but what self-respecting Buick man could downgrade to a proletarait-grade Chevrolet? The Lexus LS400 cost $46,600 ($99,706) that year, making the Roadmaster a lot more rear-wheel-drive luxury sedan per dollar (at least by weight). The $22,609 ($48,375) Mercury Grand Marquis was a more realistic sales rival to the Roadmaster, and its modern SOHC V8 had either 10 or 30 more horses than the Buick's pushrod small-block.

A glorious name for a glorious new automobile.

Luxury on a grand scale. Power increased by 80 horses for 1994.

[Images: The Author]

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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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  • Dusterdude Dusterdude on Aug 01, 2023

    Agree with comments that styling was not the best on these cars ! … However , I remember visiting a supplier in Chelsea Michigan area around 1994 or 1995 . We went golfing with supplier , and went in his new Roadmaster.

    I found the ride to be very impressive. We were on a rough 2 lane road , went over railway tracks etc but the ride was still very smooth !

  • Anthony Caracausa Anthony Caracausa on Aug 03, 2023

    I always liked the Roadmaster's looks. Although it did look like it could have used a diet, it wore its body fat far, far better than its siblings (Caprice-Impala and Cadillac Fleetwood) ever did. If anything, it had looks which could rival the contemporary Lincolns! Being a fan of Electras myself (and once driver of one, a '79 Limited 2-door), I thought it a very nice nod to the Electra days. Probably the one issue I read about, which I did learn about in the day, was a possibility that some cars of some years would suffer latch failure, causing their hoods to fly up, blind the drivers, shatter windshields, cause crashes, etc. It looks like the dead one here may possibly have been through that during its tumultuous life, among other abuses.


    That said, I have noticed far more still-active Roadmasters on the roads than contemporary Caprices and Fleetwoods combined, which ought to speak volumes about this model from GM's last big-car hurrah. I still like the look of the Roadmaster; and, if improved latches were developed, I would have no reservations adding one to my dream-collection of cars.


  • Tassos OK Corey. I went and saw the photos again. Besides the fins, one thing I did not like on one of the models (I bet it was the 59) was the windshield, which looked bent (although I would bet its designer thought it was so cool at the time). Besides the too loud fins. The 58 was better.
  • Spectator Lawfare in action, let’s see where this goes.
  • Zerocred I highly recommend a Mini Cooper. They are fun to drive, very reliable, get great gas mileage, and everyone likes the way they look.Just as an aside I have one that I’d be willing to part with just as soon as I get the engine back in after its annual rebuild.
  • NJRide Any new Infinitis in these plans? I feel like they might as well replace the QX50 with a Murano upgrade
  • CaddyDaddy Start with a good vehicle (avoid anything FCA / European and most GM, they are all Junk). Buy from a private party which allows you to know the former owner. Have the vehicle checked out by a reputable mechanic. Go into the situation with the upper hand of the trade in value of the car. Have the ability to pay on the spot or at you bank immediately with cash or ability to draw on a loan. Millions of cars are out there, the one you are looking at is not a limited commodity. Dealers are a government protected monopoly that only add an unnecessary cost to those too intellectually lazy to do research for a good used car.
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