As a huge Oldsmobile fan for the last few (five) decades, this one caught my eye. Being a two-door model, it’s even more unique and it appears to be in nice shape, despite its Utah sun patina. This 1969 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Royale Holiday coupe is listed here on Facebook Marketplace in Ivins, Utah and the seller is asking $11,000. Here is the original listing, and thanks to T.J. for the tip!
Gorgeous. Oldsmobile made the sixth-generation 88s from 1965 through 1970 and then they underwent a radical design change, as did the Olds 98 series. They didn’t come in a station wagon, otherwise, buyers could get a variety of body styles, from hardtops, no tops, the number of doors, etc. The seller has some great photos here in the super beautiful Utah area, very well done, seller!
There’s no reason for anyone to remember this, and I can barely remember if I have pants on anymore, but, my dad had a (used as always) 1970 Oldsmobile 98 four-door sedan in this color with a somewhat similar interior and it was my favorite car that our family had. This is one long, low, sleek car, especially in a two-door hardtop. The seller says the paint is original and there appears to be some rust, or at least surface rust, in areas, but I can’t imagine it’s too bad if it’s a Utah car. Hagerty is at $11,200 for a #3 good-condition car and $6,000 for a #4 fair-condition car, just for the record.
The first thing I notice, unfortunately, is the driver’s side armrest, but that should be able to be brought back with interior “paint”, maybe? Do any of you have experience with that? The seats are fantastico in what Oldsmobile referred to as “Excella, a rich, coarse-woven body cloth with metallic-yarn highlights. Trim is in supple, saddle-grain Morocceen vinyl.” Does it get any better? I think not. As expected, the back seat looks like new and the trunk is BIG.
Speaking of big, the engine is Oldsmobile’s 455-cu.in. OHV V8, which had between 310 and 390 horsepower in the 88 line. This one has a rebuilt two-barrel, so it has to be the 310-horsepower version with 490 lb-ft of torque. It looks clean and even though it isn’t a great engine photo, at least there is one, unlike a lot of other listings. It sends power through a three-speed THM-400 automatic to the rear wheels and the seller says it runs really good, but add an AC compressor to the to-do list. What’s your guess as to how much this car is worth, or what it’ll sell for?
Dr Olds bringing the torque 👍
This brings back memories!!! I know I’ve mentioned we had a reef turquoise 70 Ninety Eight 4 door hardtop. I always thought it was interesting how for ’69 the steering wheel was flipped upside-down with no emblem, just Oldsmobile script, and for ’70 it was 180 degrees the other way ( looked better to me, the other way just looks upside down) and they had the Olds emblem too. Another neat feature you rarely see is the bucket seat and console option on these 88 2 doors. This one looks solid, way better than ours looked in the 80’s. Nice find T.J. and thanks for the memories Scotty!!! You even have a picture of the biggest gas pedal in the business too!!!
I just remembered, I still have the brochure from when my Dad bought our ’70. Olds Escape machine. Complete with his handwriting, and notes all over the cover about the deal.
Its stuff like that you tend to hold onto.
Nice to see the factory front floor mats in a rare color. Did the rear mats survive?
Its hard to tell, they may be under that large mat the covers the whole rear floor. I havent seen one of those mats in decades!!!
Olds did make an 88 wagon back in ’69. My neighbor bought one brand new, metallic blue with the fake wood grain sides. He kept it for years.
Not until ’71. Professional cars like ambulance and hearse, yes. They were cowl and chassis.
Nope, only the Vista Cruiser which was based on the Cutlass A-body platform.
For the Love of OLDS! My first cars were a 66 Dynamic 88 convert followed by a 69 Delta Royale four door sedan in metallic gold with black vinyl roof and damask interior. Unfortunately, *YOUNGMOBILE * and *Not your father’s Oldsmobile * were no help saving Ransom Eli*s baby in an increasingly youth oriented market. I hope someone can find a Lucille 🎵 to ride 🎶In this 🎵Merry Oldsmobile 🎵. Guess I’m the one who just put OLD in Oldsmobile! 😅 🤣 😲
Hi Rick,
I’m guessing your Metallic Gold was probably Chevrolet’s Champagne Gold which my Dad had on his ’70 Impala of which the identical twin can be found in the centerfold of the dealer brochure.
First comment didn’t post so here it is again.
Hi Rick, your Metallic Gold is probably Chevrolet’s Champagne Gold that was the color of Dad’s ’70 Impala and a twin in & out to the one in Chevrolet’s dealer brochure.
That’s a beauty for sure…..love the big 88’s and the body integrity on this generation is superior to the one that followed in 1971. Maybe that’s the reason I own a ’70 Delta 88 Royale with the mentioned rare buckets and console option, along with about everything else Olds offered in 1970. GLWTS!
Your Eighty Eight sounds like a keeper @ Chris. Ive never seen one with buckets and a console in person, only in the brochure that was my Dads and pictures.
Beautiful style, somewhat like the same year Eldorado in the rear, and the Toronado in side profile.
A young business man’s car, someone who wanted something a little more special than a full sized Chevy. His boss would have been the Eldorado owner.
“Excella, a rich, coarse-woven body cloth with metallic-yarn highlights”. Yeah, those metallic yarn highlights were very scratchy on bare skin.
Great article Scotty I too have a soft spot for Oldsmobiles having grown up in an Olds family. One of the more memorable cars was our brand new 70 Delta 88 Custom town sedan, Sherwood Green with black vinyl roof and gorgeous black cloth interior. Best of all 455/2V 310hp. The 15” tires didn’t stand a chance against the massive torque. I think the 69/70 Olds 88/98 had one of the better looking instrument panels of all times. This 69 Royale looks like a great find!
My ex father in law had a 68 Delmont 88 back in the eighties and it had the 455. Man that thing would burn the tires near off the car, filled the inside with smoke. It seemed like it laid a patch that was a quarter mile long!
I had a 72 olds 98 in college bought it for 600.00 no rust and 42k on the clock, the spare tire still has the plastic wrapper on it. I did the points etc and overhauled the quadra jet and it was one of my all time favorite cars ever!
Ours was an Olds family,too.Ma got a new 68 vista cruiser to haul my minibike in,traded it for a 73 Delta 88,black with burgundy int.Pimp car. Man,my 16 year old,newly licensed ponytail looked good blowing around in that car . I always bought Olds after that .Lot of Cutlasses.Like I say when my physician writes me a good script,THANK YOU,DOC
To Scotty, as someone who’s had experience in upholstery repair, I’d say that armrest can be painted.
When I did it back in the 80s, I had a small compressor in the back of a Dodge Aspen and squeeze bottles of colors to mix into a Binks 150 gun.
For vinyl seat repair, I’d pour a molded mix onto the seat to get the grain, repair the seat with warm paste material, and put the grain mold on that to form the grain, then shoot the dye. If you did it right, it turned out good.
These days colors are available in aerosol spray.
Malco brand works well, dries soft on carpet, not like a Brillo pad back in the day. Duplicolor is available in a few colors, too
Find a replacement for those chalky armrests, if at all possible, and clean and paint those. When the plastic is dried out like that from the sun, there is no real way to bring it back. It’s a Band-Aid on a bullet wound.