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World's Largest Collection of Grand National Pictures

From the earliest Grand nationals to the latest renderings for the 2007 totally redesigned Buick Grand National.

Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
 

T-Type Regal coupes, aimed at the performance market, appeared at this time, but the real news came in 1982, when the Regal Grand National appeared. Named for the NASCAR Grand National racing series, this car incorporated a 4.1 litre V6 with 125 hp or an optional 180 hp turbocharged 3.8 V6. It also featured T-tops, front and rear spoilers, a striking gray and silver paint job with a matching interior. There was no Grand National in 1983, but it returned in 1984 wrapped in its familiar all black paint. The turbocharged 3.8 became standard and would continue to be refined with fuel injection and intercooling. In 1987 it reached 245 hp.

       
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
GNX Burnout
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Flamed GNX
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
 

1987 also offered a lightweight WE4 (Turbo T) option which is extremely rare today. Only 1,547 of this variant were produced. The only differences between a WE4 and the base Grand National were interior trim package, rims, exterior badging, and aluminum bumper mounts. The rear spoiler was only available as a dealer installed option.

       
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Grand National
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Turbocharged
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
GNX Interior
 

By 1985, the Grand National was acquiring a reputation as modern muscle car, but the days of the G-body were numbered. For the final year, 1987, Buick introduced the GNX at a US$11,000 premium. Produced by McLaren/ASC, Buick boasted 275 hp and a very substantial 360 lb-ft of torque. This was created so as to be "Grand National to end all Grand Nationals," as the next model year converted the chassis to front wheel drive, which, Buick engineers admitted, simply wouldn't be able to put down that much power. Changes made included a special Garrett ceramic-impeller turbocharger connected by a ceramic-coated pipe to a better intercooler. A special computer chip, low-restriction exhaust, and reprogrammed Turbo Hydramatic 200-4R transmission with a custom torque converter and transmission fluid cooler completed the drivetrain modifications. Exterior styling changes include vents located on each front fender, 16 in black mesh style wheels with VR speed rated tires, and deletion of the hood and fender emblems. The interior changes of the GNX included a serial number on the dash plaque and a revised instrument cluster providing analog Stewart-Warner gages including an analog turbo boost gauge.

       
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Smoke Show
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
Turbocharged
       
Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today.
 

The acceleration performance of the GNX outpaced the factory's power claims: 0-60 mph took just 4.7sec with a 13.4sec/104 mph quarter-mile. According to contemporary sources, these numbers made the GNX the fastest production sedan ever built. This claim is somewhat controversial—the car had two doors but its interior volume and structure made it a sedan rather than a coupé, and just 547 examples were built. GNX #001 is currently owned by Buick and sometimes makes appearances at car shows around the US. Although many quicker cars have been built, including a number of quicker modern sedans, its performance was truly impressive for the time. A contemporary Porsche 930 hit 60 mph in 5.0 seconds and ran the quarter mile in 13.6, roughly equivalent to the GNX, which cost much less and could out-accelerate the naturally-aspirated 911 of the day. The muscle cars of the 1960s had the power to beat the GNX, but the tires of the time could not transform this into speed, not to mention the numerous techniques employed in the GNX allowed the car to transfer all the power to the ground, such as a ladder bar that ran from the mid-section of the car to the rear axle, so as to increase traction. This is also the reason why a GNX will actually lift the rear end up when the car is about to launch heavily. The GNX never made much of a road-track competitor to cars like the 911, but it could certainly hold its own on a drag strip.

Famously painted in all black, the Grand National and GNX were ferocious drag strip competitors and are highly collectible today. The sinister, stealthy appearance coupled with the fact that the Grand National was initially released during the height of Star Wars fever earned it the title Darth Vader Car. The Grand National returned briefly to the headlines in 2003, when actor Sean Penn's car was stolen with several guns inside.

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