In 1986 something happened that no gearhead could have predicted. A six cylinder box shaped Grandpa Buick arrived at the local drag strips across this great country. The folks that drove them there really didn't know the potential of what they were driving, because this was the early days and mods were scarce. They did know one thing, "This Buick halls ass."
I was one of those guys. I drove off the lot with my GN in Feb 1986. I had just read the Autoweek review of the GN titled "Sideways at any speed". I had to have one.
For you younger guys rememmber, This was the Dark Ages of muscle cars. For the last 9 or 10 years everything that came out of Detroit was so smogged out and underpowered from the days of the 70's gas crisis and EPA laws, that they couldn't get out of their own way.
Enter the 1986 Buick GN/TType.
As a kid I had owned a 1961 Ford Starliner with a 406 Tripower 405 HP. I never forgot the way that car could pull like a freight train.
When I read the the HYPE on the new '86 GN/TTYPE., it made me long for that power again. I almost didn't qualify for the loan. I was at the dealer for 8 hours on that Febuary day in '86 looking for a way to buy that car. Finaly a deal was stuck and my wife and I were driving a 1986 Buick Grand National home.
It wasn't long before I went to the drag strip. There were meger mods available then and I installed a " Primitive Hyper-Tech" chip, and a homemade cold/ram air system.
There were no Scanmasters, but the word among the knowledegeable few was, "No Knock" tuning (by ear). The boost levels we ran, you would laugh at today but, stock turbo, IC, no Alky, 16-17 # was max, and that was with 100oct Avaiation fuel mixed in.
I was looking at my log book from 1986/87 today and I logged 77 1/8 mile runs @ Piedmont Dragway in about one year. Not to mention the hundred's of WOT test runs preparing for the dragstrip.
In those days I was running 16-17# boost, stock everything except the HT chip. I ran on stock tires too.
This is how the GN got it's reputation:
A list of clean kills in the 1/8 mile from my log book from 1986/1987 against respectable "Muscle cars"
1985 Mustang 5.0 (nonstock)
1969 Chevlle SS 396
1987 Silver Buick TType
1968 Ford Torino 390-335 hp
1986 Mustang 302 (non stock)
1971 351 GT Mustang
1970 something 340 'Cuda
1970 something Firebird 400
Many many Camaros and Firebirds form the midlle and early 80's
fell to the Dark Side every weekend.
In fact the only time slip I have that is a loser form those early years is to a 1975 Ford Pinto with a built small block in it. What hurt is that it was a girl driving. I raced her 5X's and lost by less than .2 each time.
Here is what my stocker was running.
Weight 3580 less driver(always carried a spare and jack) 3750 with Me.
I ran consistent 8.82 (1.9-2.0 60ft) @ 83.4MPH in the 1/8 mile. (320 RWHP!)
I have to tell you that EVERYBODY I raced used to walk over and ask me to pop the hood. The were shocked after seeing only 6 CYL. Most asked where was the NO2 bottle.
Each and everyone of them saw their muscle cars get owned by a six. That happened in big and small dragstrips around the US. These Cars inspred fear. That was back then.
Now you crazy speed freaks have these shoeboxes running 10's, 9's, and even 8 second 1/4 miles.
My hat is off to all of you that have carried the reputation and honor of these cars forward.
See you at the dragstrip!!
Rich
I was one of those guys. I drove off the lot with my GN in Feb 1986. I had just read the Autoweek review of the GN titled "Sideways at any speed". I had to have one.
For you younger guys rememmber, This was the Dark Ages of muscle cars. For the last 9 or 10 years everything that came out of Detroit was so smogged out and underpowered from the days of the 70's gas crisis and EPA laws, that they couldn't get out of their own way.
Enter the 1986 Buick GN/TType.
As a kid I had owned a 1961 Ford Starliner with a 406 Tripower 405 HP. I never forgot the way that car could pull like a freight train.
When I read the the HYPE on the new '86 GN/TTYPE., it made me long for that power again. I almost didn't qualify for the loan. I was at the dealer for 8 hours on that Febuary day in '86 looking for a way to buy that car. Finaly a deal was stuck and my wife and I were driving a 1986 Buick Grand National home.
It wasn't long before I went to the drag strip. There were meger mods available then and I installed a " Primitive Hyper-Tech" chip, and a homemade cold/ram air system.
There were no Scanmasters, but the word among the knowledegeable few was, "No Knock" tuning (by ear). The boost levels we ran, you would laugh at today but, stock turbo, IC, no Alky, 16-17 # was max, and that was with 100oct Avaiation fuel mixed in.
I was looking at my log book from 1986/87 today and I logged 77 1/8 mile runs @ Piedmont Dragway in about one year. Not to mention the hundred's of WOT test runs preparing for the dragstrip.
In those days I was running 16-17# boost, stock everything except the HT chip. I ran on stock tires too.
This is how the GN got it's reputation:
A list of clean kills in the 1/8 mile from my log book from 1986/1987 against respectable "Muscle cars"
1985 Mustang 5.0 (nonstock)
1969 Chevlle SS 396
1987 Silver Buick TType
1968 Ford Torino 390-335 hp
1986 Mustang 302 (non stock)
1971 351 GT Mustang
1970 something 340 'Cuda
1970 something Firebird 400
Many many Camaros and Firebirds form the midlle and early 80's
fell to the Dark Side every weekend.
In fact the only time slip I have that is a loser form those early years is to a 1975 Ford Pinto with a built small block in it. What hurt is that it was a girl driving. I raced her 5X's and lost by less than .2 each time.
Here is what my stocker was running.
Weight 3580 less driver(always carried a spare and jack) 3750 with Me.
I ran consistent 8.82 (1.9-2.0 60ft) @ 83.4MPH in the 1/8 mile. (320 RWHP!)
I have to tell you that EVERYBODY I raced used to walk over and ask me to pop the hood. The were shocked after seeing only 6 CYL. Most asked where was the NO2 bottle.
Each and everyone of them saw their muscle cars get owned by a six. That happened in big and small dragstrips around the US. These Cars inspred fear. That was back then.
Now you crazy speed freaks have these shoeboxes running 10's, 9's, and even 8 second 1/4 miles.
My hat is off to all of you that have carried the reputation and honor of these cars forward.
See you at the dragstrip!!
Rich