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1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass

General Motors’ push to get into the compact market was spearheaded by Chevrolet with the Corvair Z-body in 1960. In 1961, Oldsmobile got their own compact with the Y-body, which shared similar tooling to the Z-body. Olds shared the Y-body with both Pontiac (Tempest, LeMans) and Buick (Special, Skylark), with some major differences. While the Corvair was a rear-engine platform, and the Pontiac Tempest was a front engine/rear transaxle configuration with a rubber composite driveshaft, the Oldsmobile Cutlass was a conventional layout with a V8 engine up front and live axle rear end. For 1961 there were only two models, a 4-door sedan and station wagon. Late in the model year a 2-door sedan and 2-door coupe were added to the Cutlass line. Then in 1962 a 2-door hardtop and convertible joined the line. Moderately restyled for 1963, an all-new Cutlass based on the GM 115-inch wheelbase intermediate A-body platform was the big news for 1964. While the first gen Cutlass was unibody construction, the 1964 had a separate frame. The “442” high performance version of the Cutlass also debuted this year in response to Pontiac’s GTO. The numbers stood for “4-barrel carburetor/4-speed transmission/dual (2) exhaust.”

Modest Cutlass facelifts marked the remainder of the 2nd gen’s life, before the all-new corporate A-body platform was released in 1968. Larger engines and a general performance image were pushed by Olds, while still maintaining the high style luxury of the standard Cutlass line. The Hurst/Olds (H/O) 442 performance package was also introduced this year.

For 1973 a new larger, corporate A-body eliminated hardtops in anticipation of federal roll-over safety mandates. The new “Colonnade” body featured a semi-fastback top that rolled into a sloping trunk. Federally mandated five-mph front bumpers looked a bit like afterthoughts as GM struggled to keep up with the fast moving government requirements. Only three bodies were available, a 4-door sedan, 2-door coupe, and station wagon. The Colonnade bodies ran from 1973-1977. It was also during this period that as the muscle car market shriveled, Olds cranked up the Cutlass’ luxury features, which saw production numbers continue to climb. In 1976 it was the bestselling car in America, outselling the bread-and-butter Chevrolet. It would continue this distinction into the 1980s

A major downsize occurred for 1978 on all GM A-bodies which besides the Cutlass included the Chevy Malibu, Buick Century and Regal, and Pontiac LeMans. Besides the more traditional three-box sedans, a “Salon” fastback 2- and 4-door sedan were offered exclusively to both Olds and sister division Buick. Both body styles were sales disasters. The 4-door Salon was dropped after 1979 and the 2-door Salon met the same fate in 1980. By 1982 the Cutlass line became an umbrella for a series of distinctly different lines. A Cutlass Ciera, Cutlass Supreme, and Cutlass Calais were all marketed as distinctly different coupes and sedans in a confusing array of different front-wheel and rear-wheel drive platforms. The Ciera ran from 1982-1996, the Cutlass Supreme A-body from 1980-1988, and front-wheel drive replacement from 1988-1997, and the Cutlass Calais from 1985-1991

1972 F-85 Cutlass

The F-85 identification was used only on the base 4-door sedan, and would be eliminated mid-year, ending the use of the F-85 name until it was revised a few years later for an Omega option package. This was the last year for this A-body, with a new, larger A-body coming out in 1973. Minor grille and detail changes were the extent of the styling differences from 1971. The Hurst/Olds this year was a notchback and convertible. An H/O convertible was the Indy 500 pace car, and Olds made 630 replicas for the public. Total Cutlass production reached almost 335,000 units.

AVAILABLE MODELS:

1972 F-85 Cutlass

  • Body Style
    • 2-Door Hardtop Coupe
    • 2-Door Plain Back Pillar Coupe
    • 2-Door Plain Back Hardtop Coupe
    • 4-Door Pillar (4-window)
    • 4-Door Hardtop (4-window)
    • 4-Door Station Wagon
    • 2-Door Convertible
  • Engine Options
    • 350-2bbl cubic inch V8, 160hp
    • 350-2bbl cubic inch V8 175hp
    • 350-4bbl cubic inch V8, 180hp
    • 350-4bbl cubic inch V8, 200hp
    • 455-4bbl cubic inch V8, 250hp
    • 455-4bbl cubic inch V8 225hp
    • 455-4bbl cubic inch V8 265hp
    • 455-4bbl cubic inch V8 300hp

1972 F-85 Cutlass VIN Decoder:

First Character: Manufacturer

  • 3 ~ Oldsmobile

Second Character: Series

  • D ~ F-85
  • F ~ Standard Cutlass
  • G ~ Cutlass
  • J ~ Cutlass Supreme
  • K ~ Vista Cruiser

Third and Fourth Characters: Body Style

  • 35 ~ 4-Door Station Wagon
  • 37 ~ 2-Door Hardtop Coupe
  • 39 ~ 4-Door Hardtop Sedan
  • 57 ~ 2-Door Hardtop Coupe
  • 67 ~ 2-Door Convertible
  • 69 ~ Town Sedan
  • 77 ~ Sports Coupe
  • 87 ~ Hardtop Coupe

Fifth Character: Identifies Engine

  • H ~ 350 V8-2bbl
  • J ~ 350 V8-2bbl
  • K ~ 350 V8-2bbl-Dual Exhaust
  • K ~ 350 V8-4bbl
  • M ~ 350 V8-4bbl Dual Exhaust
  • T ~ 455 V8-4bbl
  • U ~ 455 V8-4bbl Dual Exhaust
  • V ~ 455 V8-4bbl Dual Exhaust
  • W ~ 455 V8-4bbl
  • X ~ 455 V8-4bbl

Sixth Character: Year

  • 2 ~ 1972

Seventh Character: Assembly Plant

  • M ~ Lansing, Michigan
  • X ~ Fairfax, Kansas
  • E ~ Linden, New Jersey
  • G ~ Framingham, Massachusetts
  • R ~ Arlington, Texas
  • Z ~ Fremont, California

Eighth-Thirteenth Characters: Basic Production Numbers

Represent basic production numbers for the 1972 F-85/Cutlass.