I worked at the main factory where these were made, Flint Truck Assembly, from 1977 through the end of 1995, before being transferred to another plant. These were absolutely incredible vehicles, for the time. Extremely capable & long lasting. Many of these, from this generation, are still on the road today. They even earned the title of being called the “Texas Cadillac”.
@barrydraper IF you don't mind the asking, do you recall what the ratio was between Suburban & Full-size Blazer at the end of production(1991)? I read somewhere from another former employee that the ratio in the late 70s was roughly 2 or 3 Suburbans to 1 Blazer. Yet, in the late 70s was Blazer's highest production year, so at the end, with less than 7400 Blazers built, that ratio had to have spread really wide. Just curious: I have several Flint built trucks.
@@Perich29 It was truly a Great concept. You could haul ALL the kids, including neighborhood kids, groceries, etc. Work out of it, or drive the kids to practice. It was a Great All-Round vehicle.
I am from Saudi Arabia . I own a 1991 GMC Suburban, red and black. I still keep it from 1992 until today. It is the latest version of the square body. I made a wooden canopy for this vehicle. I have a 2007 Chevrolet Suburban. Use it for travel and transportation. But the square body is retired . But it stays in front of my eyes. love it♥
My 5ft tall grandma drove Suburbans her entire life! She was an interior decorator, furniture upholsterer, & also did drapes/curtains. She lived where they got little snow so she always bought 2wd, bench seat, barn door Suburbans replacing them after 10yrs of service. When she retired she bought a Acadia Denali & traded after a month on a new Suburban & drove it till she passed.
What can I say, I love these classic ‘Burbs. Back then, you wouldn’t get one unless you needed it for hauling or towing. There wasn’t anything as big back then, but it wasn’t about luxury or sport; these were true “utility” vehicles. For decades, these have been the off-road vehicle of choice for Art’s Dune Tours on the Cape Cod NS. As a kid, it was like seeing another planet, and riding in those ‘Burbs made an impression on me.
I’m proud to say our 1988 Chevrolet Suburban saved my life as a child. I got stung by something and went into anaphylactic shock. My lungs closed, I turned pale white and my lips turned blue. Had not been for the reliability and dependability of our family suburban, and no weekend traffic on the way to the hospital…I wouldn’t be here today.
I wish I was old enough to appreciate quality when I was a kid, my grandfather had a light blue Suburban from the 70s. Looking back, I'd happily rebuild that old thing if I had the opportunity.
I took my drivers test in a highly optioned 1989 burb back in 1994. I’ve owned 3 c20 versions in the last few years. All with the rare 4 speed manual. Such great trucks. Drive awesome. Rock solid. One of my favorite rigs ever. Road trip master, go anywhere, camping king of a truck.
I noticed you mentioned that all three of your Suburbans (C20) had 4-speed manual transmissions. I’m from Europe, and I really love manual gearboxes, especially paired with big engines. From what I’ve seen, American cars rarely offer manuals with the most powerful engine options. Do you know which engine versions the manual transmission was available with in the Suburban? I’d love to know more!
@ all the engines as far as I know. I’ve seen them in the small block trucks, big block trucks, and the 6.2 diesel. Not a common feature at all in the suburbans. Almost all of them came with an automatic. That’s was a large part of the deciding factor for myself buying the three I’ve had. I like a manual trans.
My father owned a '75 and then a '77. He loved the '77 and treated it like his baby. I'll never forget that vehicle. I don't think my dad would pay for a single option. It was a RWD, dropping tailgate and had nothing but an AM radio. We loved it, nonetheless... Keep up the great content. I'm always looking forward to new videos from your channel!
I had a 77. Gas monster. Great vehicle, could run indefinitely, easy to work on. Went 300,000. Replaced it with a 85 blazer. I loved that blazer. I so miss those good times, so much better than today
They were great, totally fixable. The 454 was a tire shredder. I remember they ate gas like nothing else , even at 89 cents a gallon they were expensive to fill up. And the 454 could just rip the tires apart. You could tow anything.
My childhood family hauler was an ‘89 gmc suburban. We kept that thing preserved for as long as possible, even after it rolled upside down on an icy day on the road. My parents refused to replace it with a generation 8 or 9. It was totally worn out by the end of its life, but the memories of it live on
I bought a 79 suburban back in the mid 80s, it had the blue and silver Cowboys colors, it had the stock 5.7 350 2 wheel drive package with the manual roll down tailgate window. Bought it from a TX. Farmer! Low miles clean blue / silver interior , never wrecked, for $2400 dollars! Built like an absolute tank! Loved it! Until a kid in an iroc z t- it as he ran a red light in the DALLAS area! No one hurt in the Suburban, but the man in the Iroc z did not servive unfortunately! But I loved that tank!
Thank you for the upload. I was just thinking about the suburban through the years. My first big SUV to take a ride in back in 1996 was GMC suburban. They called it the whale.
Excellent. Well stated. Well put together video information. The vehicle is indeed legendary to the point the GMC Yukon has taken off, Ford created three versions: Expedition and Excursion and Lincoln Navigator. Now Jeep has the Grand Wagoneer and Wagoneer. The car has owned the segment for a while. I liked the mention of the downsized cars and you showed the Oldsmobile Ninety Eight ad. I liked all the details brought up. This was a lot of work and effort. It is appreciated.
Mr. Oldcarmemories, I love you sir. For probably a half decade I've been watching your videos about all the cars I grew up with and have enjoyed ever since. Thank you. -Just a Tennessee mountain hillbilly
Thank you for creating these fantastic and very informative videos. As a huge fan of classic American cars it's always a treat to watch these treasures and I love your voice and style of speech. Greetings from the Netherlands.
Again another great video, very informative, & nice info on the suburban, they were a great vehicle but one small draw back …. Pollution was bad on those vehicles & had no power, all to blame is the government
I can’t wait for your presentation on the 8th generation. I am kind of fond of my 1997 GMC Yukon SLT, 4x4. My favorite thing about the truck is the barn doors. I love to be parked by the beach and have my back doors opened, facing the ocean. I lay in the back here with my dog and take in the beauty to behold.
We never had a Suburban but my older brother owned a 1977 K 5 Balzer with a 400 small block and full time 4wd. A great vehicle but also a drinker. My uncle had a Suburban that he towed his Airstream with equipped with a 454 he used to fly right pass those diesel equipped trucks pulling their travel trailers in the mountains. He always got a laugh out of it, because his friends always bragged about how good their diesels towed.
Thanks for this video! Already a super classic, the Square-Body Suburbans and Blazers are destined to take their place in the "hall of fame" so to speak. The early 70s "complete convertible" Blazers are my personal favorite. Thanks OldCarMemories!
I still have my dad's 1964 Chevy Carryall with two doors and lift hatch/drop tailgate. 283 V8 with two-barrel carb, three-on-the-tree with solenoid powered overdrive via pull lever under dash. This thing is so fun to drive. Started restoration due to rust in front fenders but had to stop because of (what else?) money. Some day........
This generation of Suburbans was the most beautiful, I believe. Personally I owned a '97 GMT400 (3500LT I think) with the 6.5l diesel, that was my most liked car by far in all the years.
@3:19 ‘widening the Suburban’s customer base’ as the camera is fixed on the wide driver seat 😂 These vehicles were/are awesome. Worthy of a permanent spot on the team for a family or single person.
I had a 91. Best vehicle I ever owned. Went through 2 transmissions 3 if you count the bs one I had rebuilt, but that truck wasa battle tank. It drove without major issues till 2010 when the engine locked up. I did a Lil time and it sat till 2015 when I got out. Wanted to restomod it with an updated drive train but had to sell it cause the family wanted it of the land😢😢😢
It's just my opinion, but it seems the Suburban is no longer a "middle America", working man's vehicle. They start at $60K+ msrp (probably much more with dealer markups), and quickly rise from there. Full size trucks and SUVs are luxury vehicles now. To be fair, I'm probably stuck a couple decades in the past in what I think vehicle pricing should be. Give me AC, power windows, and maybe even 4wd for my northern location, and I'm happy.
Your Old Car Memories certainly have brought back some great childhood memories for me. Please 🙏🏾 keep those great 👍🏾 😊 😌 videos coming. Sincerely Yours Truly Ivan I J🤵🏾♂️👨🏾🦱👨🏾🧔🏾♂️👦🏾👍🏾
My first car when I was 16 back in 1997 was my dads 1985 GMC Suburban 6.2 diesel 2WD 2500. It was an interesting car to have in high school. It was nicknamed the “SpermBurban”. It didn’t have a third row seat so the back was huge. Throw a blanket down and you had enough space to do all kinds of things. At parties friends would take my keys and go have fun with their GF parked in the driveway. I also had dark tinted windows. What made it so dangerous was parents were smart enough to not let their daughters sleep at someone else’s house but they didn’t realize that just going on a date I basically had a mobile bed in the back. I never put a mattress but I should have.
Something else to consider here is the same kind of thing Jeep had going with the Grand Wagoneer, profitability margin. Both makers had long figured out how to get the production costs down to a minimum, but GM was able to far & away marketize greater thru the Full-size Blazer, GMC counterparts, & the growing crewcab/dualie market. I honestly believe that's one of the biggest reasons the Suburban didn't update until 1992; cross line capitalization thru other products. Towards the end, it must have been interesting to see how few base model vehicles were built(would love some hints from former employees here).
In '76, my boss had a '70 Chevy Surburban. With bench seats it carried 9pass. It had a big 454 4bbl, turbo400, posi rear & temp 4whl drive. It was in remarkable condition. I could spin da rear tires forever. But, it was slow. My '76 Buick Electra Landau coupe with 455 would blow it away. Dat 'burb was BULLETPROOF. Gr8 for off road with 9ppl,& supplies.
Love this gen. of Sub and Blazer over every other else SUV from all times, brands and sizes... Esp. with twotone paint, chrome, whitewalls, hood-ornament(!) and colored interior...
People attribute the Blazer and Bronco to the SUV movement of today but neglect the fact the Suburban has been the Suburban we think about today since the late 60's.
Great show ! This is one of my favorite SUV'S and i like the older versions over the brand new style. I don't like the newer ones because it's become too complex and have major problems with the electronics and transmission issues.
I had a '79 Surburban. This was the first year for the automatic with lockup overdrive. A bad idea. They failed a lo. I, instead, got the three speed floor shift with lo gear, also called a "granny gear". I chose the 305 cui. engine. Got ~ 14 mpg. on the road but not so much in the city, 9 mpg. The rear was geared @ 307 to 1. The sticker price for this model with the premier interior and A/C was just under $10K. Color? Two tone. Desert tan with white. A camel interior. I added my won interior lights switches on the other 3 doors, and my own radio with four speakers. Very good grade Pioneer with Jensen speakers. Manual windows and manual rear glass in the tailgate. I added running boards. The rear blew out, so I got a 273 to 1 rear end from the junk yard and also installed new heavy duty leaf springs while at it. Sold in 1990 for $50,. 82K on the clock.
I still see a couple of these rolling around here in Canada, although less are surviving here in the rust belt. The ones I do see aren’t the clapped out used cars I used to see as a kid they’re almost always restored now.
I was a sales manager at a Chevrolet dealership for a lot of that time those Vehicles were hard to get and they sold it list price. They definitely had rust issues. Whenever I think of these I think of them pulling a beautiful Airstream. It's just the Perfect Blend
my biological father still has his 1991 gmc suburban, had it since i was a toddler. even after he rolled it he still has it and it's being restored. idk how many miles it has but likely over 200k at this point.
One of my cousins had seven kids. He would either fire up the his old 1979 suburban or the motor home to take the tribe to church or a family get together. All other times he would be driving his VW Rabbit diesel.
My uncle has owned nothing but suburbans since 1988. I recall in the summer of 1992, I had just got my drivers permit. He and I were on route to town, Mauston Wisconsin. We were on Turtlehead road, which wasn't wide enough for 2 cars to pass by, much less a suburban. He stopped the truck and told me to drive the rest of the way into town! I was so nervous! But actually, I got used to the size of the truck quickly and it was effortless to drive, even at posted speed limits. That particular truck was an 86 2wd with the 350 4bbl and 700r4. He has a '19 today, and though he loves the fuel economy of the cylinder deactivation, he admits that there are way too many 'gadgets' on the truck, 3/4 of which he doesn't use..
I drove dozens of those square bodies and I couldn't stand them. They rode so rough and the weird faults they had was maddening. The 8th generation was in my opinion the best. They were a leap in engineering and refinement. The ride improvement alone was amazing.
@@danielulz1640 1953 to be exact but I was addressing the Traveler the model mention in that post. But still the Suburban predates the Travelall by 17 years.
Once the '73 debut, it was the beginning of the end of the big car-based wagon with car-like features, it's 4x4 and more cargo carrying capacity then a car based wagon...
my parents bought one in 1970. 2 wheel drive white on Green it was the three door with tailgate simple truck, with the 307. My first Suburban was a three-quarter ton 2 wheel drive 1979 bench seat tailgate. My last one was a 1988 four-wheel drive half ton barn doors it had the third seat, 350 with the throttle body injection. Bought it early 2000, got rid of it early 2020. Is Dre for driving out on the beach at Fort Fisher.
My grandma owned a baby blue and white toned suburban she used it to haul a coachman 26 or 24 foot trailer when they went camping when my mom was younger and then when I was younger, we would go camping at NASCAR and then eventually got sold even though I really wanted to keep it
One other major factor for the suburban popularity was its towing capacity. In 73 most full size cars could tow a boat or moderate size camper, but by 85 most cars lost almost all their towing capacity. So for people who had to tow and carry people the suburban was a great choice. The mid 80s to 91 suburban looks 1000 percent nicer than the bulbous malformed things they make today. Look how classy that blue and white one shown looks.
My dad had a 1979, 1989, and its replacement, a 1999. He passed away last year, and my mom let his Suburban go last fall. My siblings and I loved that 79. Huge, open cargo area, and for family road trips we'd lay down back there, then we'd do little comedy shows for people in other cars while we were going 60mph down the interstates. Great memories in that one.
Unfortunately, the early ones of this generation Suburban had terrible rust problems. My Dad factory ordered a '73 Suburban C10 Cheyenne Super....It started rusting at 3 years old and the rocker panels were gone at 4 years old. The roof had rust holes in it as well after a few years They had used some sort of reprocessed metal on the early squarebody Suburbans. My Dad's Suburban literally rusted apart.
I was raised in this and it’s my definition of a car. Cant find anything close being made today. Might have to just do overtime and get a degree in mechanical engineering and just buy a old one 💀. Still have dreams about driving it around. But my dad says the engine was not fixable so probably would be in this situation even if I had sunk my claws into it. Of course he is a software engineer so I’m not sure I trust his evaluation.
The best part of these vehicles, suberbans and other larger vehicles was third row seating was an OPTION to have third row seating . You can't get two row seating in them anymore or be able to remove them easily.
Some may disagree, but this was a golden era of GM.
For the trucks... not so much the cars
@@tommy35ss The cars? O god no!
@@towgod7985 Exceptions. Buick Grand National/GNX for example
It was when it comes to the Suburban.
They made money hand over fist with lack of changes/retooling
I worked at the main factory where these were made, Flint Truck Assembly, from 1977 through the end of 1995, before being transferred to another plant. These were absolutely incredible vehicles, for the time. Extremely capable & long lasting. Many of these, from this generation, are still on the road today. They even earned the title of being called the “Texas Cadillac”.
It's too bad Cadillac didn't make a model back then. That sure would have been something.
@@steveniksid5874 Cadillac wanted to create the Escalade from the 7th Generation Suburban, back in the 1970s. However that fell through
Thank You for your service to America.
@@charlesbakston7414 that would have been one heck of a ride to own today.
@barrydraper IF you don't mind the asking, do you recall what the ratio was between Suburban & Full-size Blazer at the end of production(1991)? I read somewhere from another former employee that the ratio in the late 70s was roughly 2 or 3 Suburbans to 1 Blazer. Yet, in the late 70s was Blazer's highest production year, so at the end, with less than 7400 Blazers built, that ratio had to have spread really wide.
Just curious: I have several Flint built trucks.
Ahhh...the old Family school bus! Many big families wouldn't have survived without it! 👍🏼
Suburban in these days were truly a magic school bus.
@@Perich29 It was truly a Great concept. You could haul ALL the kids, including neighborhood kids, groceries, etc. Work out of it, or drive the kids to practice. It was a Great All-Round vehicle.
I am from Saudi Arabia . I own a 1991 GMC Suburban, red and black. I still keep it from 1992 until today. It is the latest version of the square body. I made a wooden canopy for this vehicle. I have a 2007 Chevrolet Suburban. Use it for travel and transportation. But the square body is retired . But it stays in front of my eyes. love it♥
Mine is a 1990 and it is a pleasure to drive in tiny italian roads
My 5ft tall grandma drove Suburbans her entire life! She was an interior decorator, furniture upholsterer, & also did drapes/curtains. She lived where they got little snow so she always bought 2wd, bench seat, barn door Suburbans replacing them after 10yrs of service. When she retired she bought a Acadia Denali & traded after a month on a new Suburban & drove it till she passed.
What can I say, I love these classic ‘Burbs. Back then, you wouldn’t get one unless you needed it for hauling or towing. There wasn’t anything as big back then, but it wasn’t about luxury or sport; these were true “utility” vehicles. For decades, these have been the off-road vehicle of choice for Art’s Dune Tours on the Cape Cod NS. As a kid, it was like seeing another planet, and riding in those ‘Burbs made an impression on me.
Our family truckster was a '76 GMC Suburban with the 454. Rubber mats, manual windows and locks, what a sweet reliable machine!
I’m proud to say our 1988 Chevrolet Suburban saved my life as a child. I got stung by something and went into anaphylactic shock. My lungs closed, I turned pale white and my lips turned blue. Had not been for the reliability and dependability of our family suburban, and no weekend traffic on the way to the hospital…I wouldn’t be here today.
I wish I was old enough to appreciate quality when I was a kid, my grandfather had a light blue Suburban from the 70s. Looking back, I'd happily rebuild that old thing if I had the opportunity.
Vehicles from that era can be restored in your garage with basic hand tools.
I took my drivers test in a highly optioned 1989 burb back in 1994.
I’ve owned 3 c20 versions in the last few years.
All with the rare 4 speed manual.
Such great trucks.
Drive awesome. Rock solid.
One of my favorite rigs ever.
Road trip master, go anywhere, camping king of a truck.
I noticed you mentioned that all three of your Suburbans (C20) had 4-speed manual transmissions. I’m from Europe, and I really love manual gearboxes, especially paired with big engines. From what I’ve seen, American cars rarely offer manuals with the most powerful engine options. Do you know which engine versions the manual transmission was available with in the Suburban? I’d love to know more!
@
all the engines as far as I know.
I’ve seen them in the small block trucks, big block trucks, and the 6.2 diesel.
Not a common feature at all in the suburbans.
Almost all of them came with an automatic.
That’s was a large part of the deciding factor for myself buying the three I’ve had.
I like a manual trans.
My father owned a '75 and then a '77. He loved the '77 and treated it like his baby. I'll never forget that vehicle. I don't think my dad would pay for a single option. It was a RWD, dropping tailgate and had nothing but an AM radio. We loved it, nonetheless... Keep up the great content. I'm always looking forward to new videos from your channel!
I had a 77. Gas monster. Great vehicle, could run indefinitely, easy to work on. Went 300,000. Replaced it with a 85 blazer. I loved that blazer. I so miss those good times, so much better than today
The double rear doors are called barn doors
They were great, totally fixable. The 454 was a tire shredder. I remember they ate gas like nothing else , even at 89 cents a gallon they were expensive to fill up. And the 454 could just rip the tires apart. You could tow anything.
My childhood family hauler was an ‘89 gmc suburban. We kept that thing preserved for as long as possible, even after it rolled upside down on an icy day on the road. My parents refused to replace it with a generation 8 or 9. It was totally worn out by the end of its life, but the memories of it live on
My dad has a 97 454 k2500 that has 276k miles on the odometer just had the AC redone and the front seats bottoms redone
I bought a 79 suburban back in the mid 80s, it had the blue and silver Cowboys colors, it had the stock 5.7 350 2 wheel drive package with the manual roll down tailgate window. Bought it from a TX. Farmer! Low miles clean blue / silver interior , never wrecked, for $2400 dollars! Built like an absolute tank! Loved it! Until a kid in an iroc z t- it as he ran a red light in the DALLAS area! No one hurt in the Suburban, but the man in the Iroc z did not servive unfortunately! But I loved that tank!
It's always a nice surprise because full video uploads are rare.
I miss my 1990.
Thank you for the upload. I was just thinking about the suburban through the years. My first big SUV to take a ride in back in 1996 was GMC suburban. They called it the whale.
Love the 2 tone paint schemes on these Suburbans
Excellent. Well stated. Well put together video information. The vehicle is indeed legendary to the point the GMC Yukon has taken off, Ford created three versions: Expedition and Excursion and Lincoln Navigator. Now Jeep has the Grand Wagoneer and Wagoneer. The car has owned the segment for a while. I liked the mention of the downsized cars and you showed the Oldsmobile Ninety Eight ad. I liked all the details brought up. This was a lot of work and effort. It is appreciated.
These Suburbans are legendary.😇
Mr. Oldcarmemories, I love you sir. For probably a half decade I've been watching your videos about all the cars I grew up with and have enjoyed ever since. Thank you.
-Just a Tennessee mountain hillbilly
Thank you for creating these fantastic and very informative videos. As a huge fan of classic American cars it's always a treat to watch these treasures and I love your voice and style of speech.
Greetings from the Netherlands.
Again another great video, very informative, & nice info on the suburban, they were a great vehicle but one small draw back …. Pollution was bad on those vehicles & had no power, all to blame is the government
@@YS-fr6nu Yeah, while the government ignores stuff that are really pollutant, such as large cargo/container ships, etc. The selective outrage is real
I can’t wait for your presentation on the 8th generation. I am kind of fond of my 1997 GMC Yukon SLT, 4x4. My favorite thing about the truck is the barn doors. I love to be parked by the beach and have my back doors opened, facing the ocean. I lay in the back here with my dog and take in the beauty to behold.
We never had a Suburban but my older brother owned a 1977 K 5 Balzer with a 400 small block and full time 4wd. A great vehicle but also a drinker. My uncle had a Suburban that he towed his Airstream with equipped with a 454 he used to fly right pass those diesel equipped trucks pulling their travel trailers in the mountains. He always got a laugh out of it, because his friends always bragged about how good their diesels towed.
Man, I wish I had ine of these!
Luv them!
Gotta love the Square Body Chevy and GMC Suburbans.
I have a 1991 4wheel drive suburban I love it it's got 350000 miles on it and still runs like a new truck
Thanks for this video! Already a super classic, the Square-Body Suburbans and Blazers are destined to take their place in the "hall of fame" so to speak. The early 70s "complete convertible" Blazers are my personal favorite. Thanks OldCarMemories!
I owned one . 1985 4×4. Loved it. Many a trip off road fishing and hunting. Sold it in 1997. Had 75,000 km. On odometer. 😅
I still have my dad's 1964 Chevy Carryall with two doors and lift hatch/drop tailgate. 283 V8 with two-barrel carb, three-on-the-tree with solenoid powered overdrive via pull lever under dash. This thing is so fun to drive. Started restoration due to rust in front fenders but had to stop because of (what else?) money. Some day........
I’ve had four of these in the family all of them the 73-91 Gen. They taken the family on many vacations and ski trips.
This generation of Suburbans was the most beautiful, I believe. Personally I owned a '97 GMT400 (3500LT I think) with the 6.5l diesel, that was my most liked car by far in all the years.
@3:19 ‘widening the Suburban’s customer base’ as the camera is fixed on the wide driver seat 😂
These vehicles were/are awesome. Worthy of a permanent spot on the team for a family or single person.
Wow, what an amazing video. Thank you sir. I learned tons from your video. I own a 1989 Chevy Suburban, & love it! Thanks again
I had a 91. Best vehicle I ever owned. Went through 2 transmissions 3 if you count the bs one I had rebuilt, but that truck wasa battle tank. It drove without major issues till 2010 when the engine locked up. I did a Lil time and it sat till 2015 when I got out. Wanted to restomod it with an updated drive train but had to sell it cause the family wanted it of the land😢😢😢
I Like 1973 To 1993 Chevrolet Suburban Iconic Wagon Thanks For Uploading
It's just my opinion, but it seems the Suburban is no longer a "middle America", working man's vehicle. They start at $60K+ msrp (probably much more with dealer markups), and quickly rise from there. Full size trucks and SUVs are luxury vehicles now.
To be fair, I'm probably stuck a couple decades in the past in what I think vehicle pricing should be. Give me AC, power windows, and maybe even 4wd for my northern location, and I'm happy.
Your Old Car Memories certainly have brought back some great childhood memories for me. Please 🙏🏾 keep those great 👍🏾 😊 😌 videos coming.
Sincerely Yours Truly
Ivan I J🤵🏾♂️👨🏾🦱👨🏾🧔🏾♂️👦🏾👍🏾
My dad had a '65 and a '71 Chevy Carryall. The 71 had a rear door on the right side but not the left.
My father had a ‘78 half ton and then an ‘82 3/4 ton Suburban, both with 350’s. If fuel mileage wasn’t a concern I’d like to drive one today.
Sweet rides,and the big block would tow a camper like a champ,of course gas prices weren't an issue back then.
These and the GMT-400 are my favorite Suburban of all time
The older the better-what a looker!
I love that look and those models...I wish I could have one
Had a 87 C10 and 88 K10 .I sure miss those vehicles 😢
I love these. I had a ‘99 and ‘04. My 2012 is still with me with 210,000 miles it does it all!
best vehicle ever made.
من افضل السيارات الأمريكية gmc suburban من موديل 77 حتى 91 سيارة قوية سريعة ولها ذكريات جميلة مع كل عائلة
My first car when I was 16 back in 1997 was my dads 1985 GMC Suburban 6.2 diesel 2WD 2500. It was an interesting car to have in high school. It was nicknamed the “SpermBurban”. It didn’t have a third row seat so the back was huge. Throw a blanket down and you had enough space to do all kinds of things. At parties friends would take my keys and go have fun with their GF parked in the driveway. I also had dark tinted windows. What made it so dangerous was parents were smart enough to not let their daughters sleep at someone else’s house but they didn’t realize that just going on a date I basically had a mobile bed in the back. I never put a mattress but I should have.
Something else to consider here is the same kind of thing Jeep had going with the Grand Wagoneer, profitability margin.
Both makers had long figured out how to get the production costs down to a minimum, but GM was able to far & away marketize greater thru the Full-size Blazer, GMC counterparts, & the growing crewcab/dualie market. I honestly believe that's one of the biggest reasons the Suburban didn't update until 1992; cross line capitalization thru other products.
Towards the end, it must have been interesting to see how few base model vehicles were built(would love some hints from former employees here).
In '76, my boss had a '70 Chevy Surburban. With bench seats it carried 9pass. It had a big 454 4bbl, turbo400, posi rear & temp 4whl drive. It was in remarkable condition. I could spin da rear tires forever. But, it was slow. My '76 Buick Electra Landau coupe with 455 would blow it away. Dat 'burb was BULLETPROOF. Gr8 for off road with 9ppl,& supplies.
Love this gen. of Sub and Blazer over every other else SUV from all times, brands and sizes... Esp. with twotone paint, chrome, whitewalls, hood-ornament(!) and colored interior...
People attribute the Blazer and Bronco to the SUV movement of today but neglect the fact the Suburban has been the Suburban we think about today since the late 60's.
Great show ! This is one of my favorite SUV'S and i like the older versions over the brand new style. I don't like the newer ones because it's become too complex and have major problems with the electronics and transmission issues.
I had a '79 Surburban. This was the first year for the automatic with lockup overdrive. A bad idea. They failed a lo. I, instead, got the three speed floor shift with lo gear, also called a "granny gear". I chose the 305 cui. engine. Got ~ 14 mpg. on the road but not so much in the city, 9 mpg. The rear was geared @ 307 to 1. The sticker price for this model with the premier interior and A/C was just under $10K. Color? Two tone. Desert tan with white. A camel interior. I added my won interior lights switches on the other 3 doors, and my own radio with four speakers. Very good grade Pioneer with Jensen speakers. Manual windows and manual rear glass in the tailgate. I added running boards. The rear blew out, so I got a 273 to 1 rear end from the junk yard and also installed new heavy duty leaf springs while at it. Sold in 1990 for $50,. 82K on the clock.
I had a 1990 GMC Suburban 2500 with the 454 engine. Massive fuel consumption of course, but real road presence.
I always like the Panel doors just for the way they looked even though the tailgate is more practical the Panel doors just is a cooler look
It may not fit into the standard garage but many of them fit perfectly into the standard driveway. 😉🇺🇲
I still see a couple of these rolling around here in Canada, although less are surviving here in the rust belt. The ones I do see aren’t the clapped out used cars I used to see as a kid they’re almost always restored now.
I was a sales manager at a Chevrolet dealership for a lot of that time those Vehicles were hard to get and they sold it list price.
They definitely had rust issues.
Whenever I think of these I think of them pulling a beautiful Airstream. It's just the Perfect Blend
💕👍
those were some !! days...🙋♀️
my biological father still has his 1991 gmc suburban, had it since i was a toddler. even after he rolled it he still has it and it's being restored. idk how many miles it has but likely over 200k at this point.
One of my cousins had seven kids. He would either fire up the his old 1979 suburban or the motor home to take the tribe to church or a family get together. All other times he would be driving his VW Rabbit diesel.
I used to see these pulling big trailers in Northern Minnesota in the summer with 454s.
I lived with a 88 and I take the old one out any day.Its a real truck !
Owned a 1985 Suburban for almost 16 years.
My uncle has owned nothing but suburbans since 1988. I recall in the summer of 1992, I had just got my drivers permit. He and I were on route to town, Mauston Wisconsin. We were on Turtlehead road, which wasn't wide enough for 2 cars to pass by, much less a suburban. He stopped the truck and told me to drive the rest of the way into town! I was so nervous! But actually, I got used to the size of the truck quickly and it was effortless to drive, even at posted speed limits. That particular truck was an 86 2wd with the 350 4bbl and 700r4. He has a '19 today, and though he loves the fuel economy of the cylinder deactivation, he admits that there are way too many 'gadgets' on the truck, 3/4 of which he doesn't use..
Cool, in the 1980's a family in my neighborhood had a red and white one. 🥰
I have 78 Scottsdale burb with 4 speed factory manual love it.
If you live in the higher elevation mountains these are the perfect vehicles.
Beautiful trucks ❤❤❤❤
Just called them trucks back in the day. Their heavy weight was a big plus for slippery Iowa winters....
I drove dozens of those square bodies and I couldn't stand them. They rode so rough and the weird faults they had was maddening.
The 8th generation was in my opinion the best. They were a leap in engineering and refinement. The ride improvement alone was amazing.
Suburban the SUV before there were SUVs.
International had the traveler. Long forgotten but loved all the same.
@@a.j.s.8049 GM introduced Suburban in 1935. International Harvester introduced Traveler 1976. Suburban the SUV before there were SUVs.
@@electric8668International had the Travelall since, at least, the 1950's.
@@danielulz1640 1953 to be exact but I was addressing the Traveler the model mention in that post. But still the Suburban predates the Travelall by 17 years.
@@electric8668 thanks. I did not realize that the Travelall came out that early. By Traveler, do you mean the Scout based vehicle?
Clint...I just found your car once again!
Once the '73 debut, it was the beginning of the end of the big car-based wagon with car-like features, it's 4x4 and more cargo carrying capacity then a car based wagon...
Own an 89 v1500 and never plan on getting rid of it
@brettcanon With you there, just that mine is a 91 V1500 Blazer - grateful to have a last year model.
my parents bought one in 1970. 2 wheel drive white on Green it was the three door with tailgate simple truck, with the 307. My first Suburban was a three-quarter ton 2 wheel drive 1979 bench seat tailgate. My last one was a 1988 four-wheel drive half ton barn doors it had the third seat, 350 with the throttle body injection. Bought it early 2000, got rid of it early 2020. Is Dre for driving out on the beach at Fort Fisher.
My grandma owned a baby blue and white toned suburban she used it to haul a coachman 26 or 24 foot trailer when they went camping when my mom was younger and then when I was younger, we would go camping at NASCAR and then eventually got sold even though I really wanted to keep it
That was a long run. The problem was they rusted almost as fast as the Vega. Far worse than an average car or truck of the day.
One other major factor for the suburban popularity was its towing capacity. In 73 most full size cars could tow a boat or moderate size camper, but by 85 most cars lost almost all their towing capacity. So for people who had to tow and carry people the suburban was a great choice.
The mid 80s to 91 suburban looks 1000 percent nicer than the bulbous malformed things they make today. Look how classy that blue and white one shown looks.
So glad to see another video!!!
Love them have had 3
I have seen many of these in salvage yards in restorable condition.
The 1973 to 1991 where the best truck
Not today's plastic fantastic SUV.....
Body on frame
Also not to mention that some ambulance services used these carryalls as their fleet of rescue vehicles.
Yep. And yep.
And also for Funeral Services
Plus Law Enforcement has/had these vehicles on the fleet.
Love your videos
These are pretty nice vehicles. But I love the '92-'05 Suburbans a lot more.
My dad had a 1979, 1989, and its replacement, a 1999. He passed away last year, and my mom let his Suburban go last fall.
My siblings and I loved that 79. Huge, open cargo area, and for family road trips we'd lay down back there, then we'd do little comedy shows for people in other cars while we were going 60mph down the interstates. Great memories in that one.
That era of GM were a LOT more reliable than they are today.
Parents bought a new 1988 GMC, ran it until the wheels fell off for over 25 years.
Unfortunately, the early ones of this generation Suburban had terrible rust problems.
My Dad factory ordered a '73 Suburban C10 Cheyenne Super....It started rusting at 3 years old and the rocker panels were gone at 4 years old.
The roof had rust holes in it as well after a few years
They had used some sort of reprocessed metal on the early squarebody Suburbans.
My Dad's Suburban literally rusted apart.
I was raised in this and it’s my definition of a car. Cant find anything close being made today. Might have to just do overtime and get a degree in mechanical engineering and just buy a old one 💀. Still have dreams about driving it around. But my dad says the engine was not fixable so probably would be in this situation even if I had sunk my claws into it. Of course he is a software engineer so I’m not sure I trust his evaluation.
As I recall, the Suburban was sized such that it used the same frame as a long bed single cab C-10 of C-20
No,your wrong,the frame drops down on the truck over the cab and all the way on the sun.
At the NYASHOW in 1990. These dubs were almost 20k. Loaded and everybody wondered who wood pay so much for a truck.....now they are almost 100k
This narrator has the strangest cadence.
he sounds like a robot about to die
Closest thing you could get in a car at the time would’ve been the AMC Eagle wagon. Which was quite a bit smaller.
The best part of these vehicles, suberbans and other larger vehicles was third row seating was an OPTION to have third row seating . You can't get two row seating in them anymore or be able to remove them easily.
I only like the round headlights version.