GM A platform (1936)
The GM A platform was a rear wheel drive automobile platform designation used by General Motors from at least 1936 until 1959, and again from 1964 to 1981. In 1982, GM introduced a new front wheel drive A platform, and existing intermediate rear wheel drive products were redesignated as G-bodies.
1936-1959
The earliest GM A-bodied based cars shared a common platform with the Chevrolet Superior, with Pontiac replacing Oakland during the early 1930s. Oldsmobile also used the A-body for the 1936-39 Oldsmobile Series F and 1940-48 Series 60. All Chevrolets produced during this period, to include the Chevrolet Master and the Chevrolet Deluxe, and all 1936-39 Pontiacs, the 1940 Pontiac Special, the 1941 Pontiac Deluxe Torpedo and all Pontiac Torpedoes produced from 1942 through 1948 were A-bodies.From 1949 to 1957, only Chevrolets, Pontiacs, and Oldsmobile models 76 and 88 in 1949 and 1950 and Oldsmobile 88-A in 1951, were built on the A-body. These cars were moved to the new B Body shared with some Buicks and Oldsmobiles in 1958, and all truck conversions were replaced by the C/K series in 1960.
Trucks
This generation of the A platform also underpinned the following Chevrolet and GMC trucks:- Master series:
- * 1936 - 1940:
- ** CG - half ton
- ** miscellaneous third-party conversions
- A/K series:
- * 1941 - 1945 C-series:
- ** CC - conventional cab
- ** CF - cab forward
- * 1946 - 1947 E-series:
- ** EC - conventional cab
- ** EF - cab forward
- Advance Design series:
- * 1947 - 1949:
- ** Advance Design /New Design - half ton
- ** Thriftmaster - three quarter ton
- ** Loadmaster - one ton
- * 1949 - 1952:
- ** 3100 - half ton
- ** 3600 - three quarter ton
- ** 3800 - one ton
- * 1953 - 1955:
- ** H - half ton
- ** J - three quarter ton
- ** L - one ton
- Task Force/Blue Chip series:
- * 1955 - 1959:
- ** Apache - light duty
- ** Viking - medium duty
- ** Spartan - heavy duty
1964–1967
The Chevrolet A-body line included the El Camino coupe utility. Two station wagons based on the A-body used stretched wheelbases and raised rear roof sections with skylights: the 1964–1972 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser and the 1964–69 Buick Sport Wagon.
All A-body cars had a wheelbase except the stretched-wheelbase wagons, which had a wheelbase.
Some of GM's most successful products in the muscle car era were A-body models, including the Pontiac GTO, Chevrolet Malibu SS, Oldsmobile 442 and Buick GS. From 1964 to 1969, GM Canada produced a special-market version of the Chevelle called the Beaumont, which included Pontiac-type trim and unique front grilles as well as taillight assemblies.
When the A-body cars were introduced in 1964, GM had set a corporate policy prohibiting V8 engines larger than in these models. However, Pontiac fitted its V8 in the Lemans to create the GTO — commonly considered the first popular muscle car. Though this violated the 330 cu in limit, Pontiac got around the rules by designating the GTO as a low-volume option package rather than a specific model. The sales success of the 1964 GTO led the corporation to increase the cubic inch limit for 1965 A-body cars to, opening the door for the other three divisions to offer similar muscle cars. The 400 cu in limit for A-body cars, as well as for other GM cars that were smaller than full-sized, was continued through the 1969 model year.
- Beaumont
- Buick Sport Wagon
- Buick GS
- Buick Skylark
- Buick Special
- Chevrolet Chevelle
- Chevrolet El Camino
- Chevrolet Malibu SS
- Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser
- Oldsmobile 442
- Oldsmobile F-85
- Oldsmobile Cutlass
- Pontiac GTO
- Pontiac Tempest
1968-1972
The two-door had a wheelbase; four-door, station wagon, and the El Camino had a wheelbase; and the stretched-wheelbase wagon had a wheelbase. 1968 model year A-body 2-door hardtops and convertibles had a vent wing window assembly - 1969-72 models had a one piece door glass where GM's Astro Ventilation system was phased in.
Also using a variation of the A-body chassis and suspension were the 1969-1972 Pontiac Grand Prix and 1970-1972 Chevrolet Monte Carlo — both of which were marketed as intermediate-sized personal luxury cars and coded as G-body cars. The Grand Prix had a wheelbase and the Monte Carlo had a wheelbase. When the A- and G-body cars were restyled for 1973, the G-body design was renamed the A-special body.
1968-1972 A-bodies
- Buick GS
- Buick Skylark
- Buick Sport Wagon
- Chevrolet Chevelle
- Chevrolet El Camino
- Chevrolet Malibu SS
- GMC Sprint
- Oldsmobile 442
- Oldsmobile F-85
- Oldsmobile Cutlass
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme
- Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser
- Pontiac GTO
- Pontiac Tempest
- Pontiac LeMans
- Chevrolet Monte Carlo
- Pontiac Grand Prix
1973–1977
By this time, the American performance car was considered extinct, but these "forgotten years" had some performance left.
- 1973 Pontiac LeMans with the GTO option and the Pontiac Grand Am — Available with a 400 cid V8 which was available with a 3-speed or 4-speed manual transmission or an automatic, or a 455 with an automatic transmission only. Also announced for the '73 GTO and Grand Am was the Super Duty 455 V8, which was rated at. Cars magazine tested an SD-455-equipped 1973 Pontiac GTO and chose it as Car Of The Year, yet that engine never made it to production in a GTO or other Pontiac A-body, but would be limited to the Firebird Formula and Trans Am.
- 1973 Chevrolet Chevelle SS and 1974-1976 Chevelle Laguna S-3 — Offered with a 350 small block or 454 big block V8 with up to and mated to manual or automatic transmissions. The SS was replaced for 1974 by the Laguna Type S-3 which offered the same engine/transmission offerings as the '73 SS plus the addition of a 400 small block V8, along with a urethane front end surrounding the grillework. The 1975-76 Laguna S-3 featured a more aerodynamic slanted front end but engines were further detuned due to emission requirements and the advent of the catalytic converter, leaving the big 454 V8 unavailable for California cars in 1975 and discontinued altogether for 1976, when the small block 400 V8 was the top engine.
- 1973-1974 Buick Century GS — Still available with the Stage 1 455 cid V8 rated at 270 net horsepower, mated to either a Turbo 400 or four-speed manual transmission, the latter transmission reportedly only installed in seven cars that year. The '74 Stage 1 455 was only available with the Turbo 400 automatic and detuned to. This engine was also offered on other Buicks in 1974 including the Riviera, LeSabre and Electra.
- 1973-1975 Oldsmobile Cutlass Hurst/Olds W-30 — These were built using 455 cid V8 engines in the W-30 trim. This engine was also available as an option on the Olds 442 of those years along with other Cutlass models.
- 1976 Buick Century Turbo — These were originally built as Indianapolis Pace Car replicas with a turbocharged and carbureted 3.8 L V6, and were faster than the 455 V8 version of that year. There were only a little over 1,200 built.
- 1977 Pontiac Can-Am — This car was basically a LeMans Sport Coupe with a Grand Prix interior and a Trans Am "Shaker" hood, a one-off wing and a 400 cid V8 rated at with federal emissions, or an Oldsmobile 403 with California emissions. Only 1,100 or so of these were made and are getting quite collectible.
- Buick GS
- Buick Century
- Buick Regal
- Chevrolet Chevelle
- Chevrolet El Camino
- Chevrolet Malibu SS
- Chevrolet Monte Carlo
- GMC Sprint
- Oldsmobile 442
- Oldsmobile Cutlass
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme
- Pontiac Grand Am
- Pontiac Grand Prix
- Pontiac Can-Am
- Pontiac LeMans
1978–1981
The Buick and Oldsmobile were introduced with fastback coupe styles, while the Chevrolet and Pontiac received notchbacks. Four-door fastback sedan models were also available. An interesting design compromise was non-lowering rear door windows on four-door sedans and wagons, which also reverted to full window frames while two-door models including the El Camino retained frameless glass. Performance applications included the Chevrolet Malibu F41 and M80, Pontiac LeMans GT, Oldsmobile 442 and Oldsmobile Hurst/Olds.
In 1982, with the introduction of the new front-wheel drive A-body, existing rear-wheel drive models were given the G-body designation.
Models of this generation include:
- Buick Century
- Buick Regal
- Chevrolet El Camino
- Chevrolet Malibu
- Chevrolet Monte Carlo
- GMC Caballero
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Cruiser
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Salon
- Pontiac Grand Prix
- Pontiac LeMans
- Pontiac Grand Am