1970 Oldsmobile Cutlass Convertible �€" 442 Tribute, V8, Loaded
with Options Why This Car Is Special The 1970 Oldsmobile Cutlass is
widely regarded as one of the best-looking A-body cars General
Motors ever produced. That model year marked the second season of
the third-generation Cutlass, which rode on a redesigned chassis
introduced in 1968 and wore some of the sharpest sheetmetal of the
entire muscle car era. The 1970 Cutlass convertible is the rarest
body style in the lineup �€" open-top A-body production numbers
dropped significantly as the decade turned, making surviving
examples increasingly hard to find in this condition. This
particular car is presented as a 442 Tribute, which is an important
distinction worth understanding. The 442 was Oldsmobile's factory
performance package �€" named for its four-barrel carburetor,
four-speed transmission availability, and dual exhausts. In 1970,
the 442 was at its peak, available with the W-30 forced-air
induction system and Oldsmobile's 455 cubic inch big block. This
Cutlass is not a numbers-matching 442, but it has been built to
reflect that look and spirit, with hood scoops, dual exhaust, a V8
under the hood, and the kind of presence the 442 convertible
carried in period. Buyers who want a usable, driver-quality
convertible with 442 visual appeal �€" without paying the premium
attached to a documented 442 �€" will find this car occupies a
practical and appealing middle ground. Decoding the VIN confirms
this is a 1970 Oldsmobile Cutlass (series 342) built at the
Lansing, Michigan assembly plant, which was the primary home of
Cutlass production throughout this era. The 'M' in the VIN
designates Lansing, a detail that matters to Oldsmobile enthusiasts
who track plant-specific production. Features List - 350 V8 engine
with chrome air cleaner - Floor-shift automatic transmission - Dual
exhaust with rectangular tips - Power steering - Power front disc
brakes - Air conditioning - Power convertible top with black vinyl
top - Bucket seats with center console - Wood grain dash trim -
Sport steering wheel - Hood scoops - Aftermarket multi-spoke wheels
with red accents - Uniroyal Tiger Paw GTS tires - Kenwood
aftermarket stereo - Power door locks - 12-bolt rear end - Chrome
front and rear bumpers - Red exterior - White/parchment vinyl
interior Mechanical The V8 under the hood is dressed to perform,
wearing a chrome air cleaner that sits prominently in the engine
bay. The engine is painted red, matching the exterior, and the
overall presentation under the hood is clean and deliberate. Dual
exhaust exits through a pair of rectangular tips tucked under the
rear bumper �€" visible in the undercarriage photos and a good
indicator of how the car was put together throughout. Power front
disc brakes are a significant upgrade over the drum setups that
were still common on A-body cars in 1970. Combined with power
steering, the car drives with the kind of ease you expect from a
well-sorted cruiser. The 12-bolt rear end is a stout unit �€"
General Motors used this axle across its performance lineup in this
era, and its presence here suggests the drivetrain was built with
some durability in mind. The floor-shift automatic feeds power
through cleanly, and the power convertible top operates as it
should. The undercarriage photos show a solid structure with no
visible rot or patchwork �€" meaningful for a Florida car being
sold in Sarasota, where buyers rightly scrutinize anything that
might have lived near salt air for decades. Interior The cabin is
trimmed in white and parchment vinyl �€" a pairing that works well
against the red exterior and black top. Bucket seats and a center
console give the cockpit a purposeful layout, and the
console-mounted floor shifter puts the driver in contact with the
car the way a bench-seat column-shift setup simply does not. The
wood grain trim running across the dash and door panels was a
signature Cutlass interior detail in this era, giving the car a
slightl
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