1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme Convertible with 442 Package �€"
Red over White Why This Car Is Special The 1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Supreme was the best-selling car in America that year, outselling
every other model from every other manufacturer. That fact alone
tells you something about where Oldsmobile stood in the early
1970s. But this particular 1972 Cutlass Supreme is not a standard
example. It is a convertible �€" the open-top body style that
accounted for a small fraction of total Cutlass production �€" and
it carries the 442 option package, which added performance-oriented
trim, badges, and a sport-tuned character that set it apart from
the base Cutlass lineup. Red exterior, white vinyl interior with
bucket seats and a center console, and a black convertible top.
This is the combination that made the A-body Oldsmobile desirable
in 1972, and it still makes it desirable today. The 442 designation
went through a meaningful transition between 1971 and 1972. What
had been a standalone model in 1968 through 1971 �€" with its own
body designation and distinct ordering process �€" became an option
package (RPO W29) available on the Cutlass Supreme in 1972. Some
purists see this as a demotion. Others see it as Oldsmobile finding
a way to keep the 442 name alive during a period when insurance
rates and emissions regulations were tightening the muscle car
market from both ends. Either way, a 1972 Cutlass Supreme with the
442 package is a factory-correct, documented performance variant
with the badging and visual presence to prove it. Features - 350ci
Oldsmobile Rocket V8 engine - 3-speed Turbo-Hydramatic automatic
transmission - 442 option package - Convertible body style with
power top - Black convertible top - White vinyl bucket seat
interior - Center console - Wood grain interior trim panels - AM/FM
radio - Chrome front and rear bumpers - Rally-style wheels -
Oldsmobile 442 badging front and rear Mechanical The engine under
the hood is the 350 cubic inch Oldsmobile Rocket V8, one of the
more underrated small-block engines of the era. Oldsmobile designed
and built this engine in-house, and it is not to be confused with
the Chevrolet 350 or any other GM division's unit. The Olds 350
earned a reputation for being a strong, durable engine with good
low-end torque �€" well suited to a full-size A-body convertible.
In 1972, GM switched to net horsepower ratings, which made the
numbers on paper look lower than prior years, but the engines
themselves were not dramatically different from late 1971
production. The 350 in this application is backed by a 3-speed
Turbo-Hydramatic automatic transmission, which was the correct and
expected pairing for a Cutlass Supreme of this era and keeps the
car practical and easy to drive today. The VIN on this car decodes
to confirm it was built at the Lansing, Michigan assembly plant,
which was Oldsmobile's home facility and the source of a
significant portion of A-body convertible production during this
period. The body code in the VIN confirms the convertible body
style, and the engine code confirms the 350 V8 �€" no guessing
required on either of those facts. Interior The cabin of this 1972
Cutlass Supreme is finished in white vinyl, which was a
period-correct and popular choice paired with a red exterior.
Bucket seats and a center console were part of the 442 package
presentation, giving the car a more driver-focused cockpit compared
to the standard bench-seat Cutlass layout. The console runs between
the front buckets and houses the shifter, which suits the overall
sporting character of the car. Wood grain trim panels run across
the dash and into the door panels, a detail visible clearly in the
photos. This was a finishing touch Oldsmobile used to reinforce the
Supreme's position above the base Cutlass �€" it was meant to
convey a level of refinement alongside the performance identity of
the 442 package. The combination of bucket seats, console, and wood
trim in a convertible is exac
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