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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The New Mercedes S Class -- A Boardroom on Wheels


 

The new Mercedes-Benz S-Class: Refined in every detail Key Facts Most comprehensive update and 140 years of innovation: more than 50 per cent of the car is newly-developed, updated and refined, the new S-Class delivers the most comprehensive update within one S-Class generation. 140 years after Carl Benz’s 1886 invention of the automobile, it carries forward a legacy of engineering excellence, craftsmanship and the unmistakable “Welcome home.” feeling.

 New era of presence and status: for the first time, an optionally illuminated Mercedes-Benz star 1on the bonnet, a 0F 20 per cent larger illuminated grille and new twin-star next-generation DIGITAL LIGHT headlamps with innovative micro-LED technology delivering around a 40 per cent larger high-resolution illumination field – all combining to create a striking, unmistakable S-Class light signature. Intuitive and state-of-the-art MB.OS supercomputer: the purpose-built Mercedes-Benz Operating System (MB.OS) is the supercomputer behind the new S-Class, powering every domain and connecting all systems into one intelligent ecosystem. Linked to the Mercedes-Benz Intelligent Cloud, it enables over-the-air updates 2for numerous vehicle 1F functions, keeping the S-Class up to date and future-ready. MB.DRIVE driving and parking assistance systems: 3extensive sensor technology and a powerful new computer 2F architecture enable next-generation assistance. 

MB.DRIVE ASSIST PRO even supports seamless point-to-point driving in dense urban traffic – available in China at market start, in the U.S. later, and in further markets once regulations permit. MBUX Super screen and latest MBUX: the standard MBUX Super screen and latest-generation MBUX bring the AI-based “Hey Mercedes” MBUX Virtual Assistant with natural dialogue, an enhanced Zero Layer interface, MBUX Surround Navigation based on Google Maps to the S-Class, turning interaction into an intuitive, human-like experience Boardroom on wheels: first-class rear-seat business experience with the First-Class rear compartment, MBUX High-end Rear Seat Entertainment with dual 13.1-inch displays, two detachable MBUX remote controls and integrated video conferencing transforms the rear cabin into a fully connected workplace or serene personal retreat. Sublime driving: quiet strength, effortless power: a wide range of new and refined electrified powertrains – from V8 and six-cylinder petrol and diesel engines to a plug-in hybrid – delivers hallmark S-Class smoothness, while AIRMATIC or optional E-ACTIVE BODY CONTROL with intelligent damping for longer speed bumps and standard 4.5° rear-axle steering with up to optional 10° ensure exceptional comfort and agility.  

First-class comfort and wellbeing elevated: innovations such as the heated seat belt, Digital Vent Control and a new electric air filter with ENERGIZING AIR CONTROL enhance everyday comfort, wellbeing and the interior atmosphere. Safety as a hallmark, intelligent safety for every seat: the new S-Class continues Mercedes-Benz safety leadership with an enhanced adaptive restraint system including PRE-SAFE® Impulse belt pretensioners and up to 15 airbags MANUFAKTUR Made to Measure: with more than 150 exterior colors, over 400 interior colors and one-to-one expert consultation, MANUFAKTUR Made to Measure enables a truly unique, individually crafted S-Class. 

The New Mercedes-Benz GLB and Environmental Measures

 


  • CO₂-reduction in the supply chain of around 21 % – achieved through the use of renewable electricity and recycled materials in key components and materials such as batterie, aluminum, steel and thermoplastics – compared to production without these measures
  • Up to 2.8 tons of CO₂ savings in the battery cells through the use of renewable energy
  • More than 50% of the aluminum (163 kg) comes from CO₂-reduced production using renewable energy, resulting in savings of around 0.6 tons of CO₂

Mercedes-Benz is consistently advancing the decarbonization of its compact segment: the all-new electric GLB sets a benchmark for a more sustainable production and a CO₂-reduced supply chain with its 360° Environmental Check. The analysis, verified by independent auditors, highlights significant progress, particularly in manufacturing – one of the most important levers for reducing emissions.

The key result: CO₂-emissions can already be reduced by around 21 % during the production phase by taking specific reduction measures. This is made possible by close collaboration with suppliers, as well as the targeted use of renewable energy and CO₂-optimized materials.

Consistently engineered for CO₂ reduction across the entire value chain

The new GLB is based on the new Mercedes‑Benz Modular Architecture (MMA). Designed from scratch with a focus on decarbonization and circular economy principles, particular attention has been paid to especially emission-intensive components and materials such as the battery, aluminum, steel and thermoplastics, which are at the center of the reduction measures.

Key contributors to the environmental performance at a glance:

  • CO₂-reduced high-voltage battery: The use of electricity from renewable sources in cell production reduces the carbon footprint of the battery cells by around 40 %. Across the entire battery, this corresponds to a saving of approximately 2.8 tons of CO₂.
  • Sustainable aluminum: More than half of the aluminum used (163 kg) comes from smelters powered by renewable energy. This reduces the carbon footprint of these components by around 30 % – amounting to a total saving of approximately 0.6 tons of CO₂.
  • Transformation of steel production: Steel and ferrous materials account for around 46 % of the materials used. The GLB already incorporates approximately 20 kg of CO₂-reduced steel produced in electric arc furnaces powered by renewable energy. Looking ahead, the combination of direct reduction with green hydrogen usage and electric steelmaking processes has the potential to enable virtually CO₂-free steel production.
  • More recycled materials for lower emissions: A total of 45 kg of thermoplastic recyclates are used. Examples include:
    – Frunk tub: 50 % recycled content
    – Jacking points: 100 % made from recycled material
    – Longitudinal member claddings and bumper substructures: up to 30 %
    These measures alone result in savings of around 71 kg of CO₂ compared with the use of primary materials while promoting a circular economy at the same time.

Net carbon-neutral1 production at the Kecskemét plant

Since 2022, Mercedes-Benz’s own vehicle production sites have been net carbon-neutral¹. By 2030, more than 70 % of energy requirements in production are set to be covered by renewable energy. The goal for all Mercedes-Benz production plants worldwide is to operate entirely on renewable energy without CO₂ emissions by 2039. As part of ongoing construction measures, Mercedes-Benz is investing in the expansion of photovoltaic systems across the entire KecskemĂ©t site. In addition, there is a strong focus on the continuous reduction of water consumption and waste volumes.

Click here for the 360° Environmental Check of the all-new electric GLB.


Monday, May 4, 2026

Mercedes-Benz Results in the F1, Miami, May 3

 




Four in-a-row as F1 returns in Miami

  • Kimi Antonelli took victory in Sunday’s Miami Grand Prix with George Russell battling hard to P4.
  • After a four-week hiatus, F1 returned to action in Florida with the race start time shifting forward by three hours due to the threat of thunderstorms.
  • While there were the occasional drops of rain, the Grand Prix ran in dry conditions with Kimi starting on pole position and George P5.
  • Kimi lost position on the opening lap to the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc and, as the pair battled in the early stages, the Italian was also challenged by the McLaren of Lando Norris.
  • The Safety Car was deployed due to accidents for Hadjar and Gasly, with Kimi in P3 and George P4, having gained position on the McLaren of Oscar Piastri.
  • Unfortunately, George lost that position on the restart but a successful undercut on lap 20 saw him move ahead of Leclerc who had dropped back, leaving Kimi and Norris fighting it out at the front.
  • A similar undercut opportunity presented itself to Kimi meanwhile and he took it to pass Norris for the lead. From there, he worked hard to keep the McLaren at bay and managed it successfully.
  • George battled hard too and passed the early stopping Verstappen in the closing stages before taking P4 from Charles Leclerc on the final lap.
  • The team now holds a 70-point lead over Ferrari in the Constructors’ Championship with Kimi continuing to lead the Drivers’ standings.

Driver

Grid

Result

Fastest Lap

Start Tyre

Stop One

Kimi Antonelli

P1

P1

1:31.968

Medium

 Hard (L23)

George Russell

P5

P4

1:32.446

Medium

 Hard (L20)

Kimi Antonelli

That was not an easy race at all but I’m so happy we were able to bring the victory home. My start wasn’t as bad as in the Sprint, but we still lost a position. I then lost a place to Lando (Norris) before the Safety Car, but we were able to fight back. Our pace was strong, I was able to stay close, and then the team did a brilliant job with the strategy. The undercut worked out just about perfectly and, despite the McLaren coming out just ahead, we were able to get past with our tyres being up to temperature.

Despite our great start to the season, we are not getting ahead of ourselves. This is just the beginning of the season and there is a long year ahead. We are working super hard and the team is doing an incredible job at the moment. Without all the men and women at Brackley and Brixworth we wouldn’t be in this position. We’re going to continue to work hard, bring performance to the track, and aim for another good weekend in Canada.

George Russell

That was a tough afternoon for us out there. The early laps felt OK and I thought that we were in the fight, but my pace wasn’t strong on the Hard compound. We did make some changes near the end of the final stint which helped but this place has never been my favourite, and it showed. We gained a couple of positions at the end at least so the result was potentially better than it could have been. Kimi did a great job and showed that the car could challenge for victory. Congratulations to him; it’s more great points for the team.

I am looking forward to going to Canada for the next race. It’s a circuit I like and have gone well at in the past. From Montreal onwards, we have seven races in a short period of time up until the summer break. Those will be really important for us so I’m looking forward to getting back in the groove.

Toto Wolff, CEO & Team Principal

That was a fascinating and exciting race in Miami today. We knew coming into this weekend that our competitors were bringing large upgrade packages. We therefore knew we were likely to be a little on the back foot and face a real fight if we wanted to be in with a chance of winning. It wasn’t easy for us at all this weekend, but we made some great strategic decisions, and that helped Kimi take the victory.

It was a tougher race on George’s side of the garage. He’s not a big fan of this circuit and hasn’t been as happy as Kimi in the car this weekend. He’s a real fighter though and that showed as he still managed to get good points by coming home in P4. I am sure he will bounce back strongly next time out in Canada.

We have seen this weekend that the season will be a true development race. We need to work hard as a team to continue to progress, not stand still, and bring performance to the track. We’ve had a solid start to the year but that can change very quickly. We won’t be easing up, and we’re excited for the challenge ahead.

Andrew Shovlin, Trackside Engineering Director

Congratulations to Kimi on his third win of the season and the whole team on our fourth to start this campaign. After a tough Friday, everyone has rallied together to bounce back, and it is testament to those efforts that we come away from Miami with another P1 trophy. It was certainly a hard-fought win; strategically, the team made the right decisions and with some swift work in the pit lane, that helped Kimi get ahead of Norris and George ahead of Leclerc. Kimi showed good pace to keep the McLaren at bay and take a well-deserved win.

For George, whilst he has said that he underperformed this weekend, we will work hard in the coming days to understand why we weren’t able to get his car into a better window for him. We know that George has much more pace than he was able to show here in Miami and he will come back stronger in Canada.

Coming into this weekend, we knew that our competitors would close the gap to us, but it has been eye-opening to see just how much performance they were able to bring. We now have two weeks before we head to Canada, and we will be redoubling our efforts to head there with a chance of making it five wins in-a-row to start 2026.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Preview, 19 Lap Sprint at F2 Miami, May 2

 



Challenging Friday ends in P2 and P6 for Saturday Sprint

  • Kimi Antonelli will line up second with George Russell sixth for tomorrow’s Sprint in Miami.
  • After an unexpected four-week hiatus, F1 resumes this weekend in Florida for the fourth round of the season.
  • Teams were given an extra 30 minutes of practice time to build their understanding of the recent regulation tweaks before heading into Sprint Qualifying.
  • Owing to a battery issue, Kimi was unable to complete any Soft tyre running in FP1 but showed little sign of that affecting him as he put his car P2 come SQ3.
  • That was a boost after a tricky session and a day where neither driver felt completely at one with the W17.
  • George will line up P6 for tomorrow’s 19-lap Sprint after suffering with tyre overheating and a tricky car balance.
  • Kimi Antonelli

    We knew coming into this weekend that we would be in for a battle. Most teams have brought significant upgrades here and we knew that they would close the gap to us. With that said, I think we did a great job to recover from a difficult day to secure P2 for tomorrow’s Sprint.  I was struggling with the car on the Medium tyre but it felt better on the Soft compound. That gives me confidence that we have more performance to bring over the rest of the weekend.

    We will need to work hard though to unlock that speed. The Sprint gives us the chance to score some points and understand our long run pace better. We will need to take that into account when making changes for Qualifying and hopefully set ourselves up for a good Sunday.

    George Russell

    Whilst today was Sprint Qualifying and therefore not the most critical session of the weekend, we are disappointed with how our Friday turned out. We were overheating the tyres in the middle sector and struggled to find the right balance with the car. We need to work hard overnight to understand why that was. The meat of the weekend is still ahead of us, but we will need to improve if we are to be in the fight at the front.

    We knew our rivals would close the gap with their upgrades, but it was both surprising and impressive to see the size of the jump McLaren and Ferrari have made. I don’t expect the Sprint to offer us many opportunities and we’re not starting in a great place; let’s see what tomorrow brings though and hopefully we can put in a better performance come Qualifying on Saturday afternoon.

    Andrew Shovlin, Trackside Engineering Director

    It's always important to hit the ground running on a Sprint weekend and we unfortunately didn’t manage that today. We didn’t have the car in the right place in FP1, and the drivers were struggling to put laps together from the off. Our long run pace was more encouraging but still not where we'd like it to be. Added to that, we had an issue that interrupted George's early running and another that brought an early end to Kimi's session, costing him laps on the Soft tyre.

    Our difficulties carried into Sprint Qualifying. Kimi faired better than George but it's clear that we have time to find overnight on our energy management and overall car set-up. It seems our competitors have brought a bit more performance to this event than we have, but the W17 has been a well-balanced car at all the circuits we've been to this year and today it has been a handful. We will work hard to improve that for Grand Prix Qualifying and into Sunday’s race.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Preview, Miami Grand Prix F1, 2026

 



Toto Talks Miami

After a month without racing, we are ready to get back on track. We’ve used this break to analyse the opening races honestly, address our weaknesses and continue to raise our level. We’ve started the season well, but that counts for very little if you stand still.

We also know that our competitors will have used this time effectively to improve their packages and build a deeper understanding of their cars, so we expect the field to be closer in Miami. That’s the reality of F1; it’s a challenge we not only welcome but must rise to.

As a sport, we have also used this time to engage in constructive and open dialogue with all stakeholders. The regulatory tweaks are an evolution rather than a revolution, designed to build on the quality of racing we’ve seen so far while allowing the drivers to push to the limit. These changes respect the DNA of our sport and I’m confident they will contribute to an even stronger spectacle going forward.

Third Driver Insights

The Miami Grand Prix is an incredible event. There’s such a strong sense of excitement around F1 in the United States, and you really feel the passion from the fans throughout the weekend. The atmosphere is unique, especially with the paddock being located inside the stadium, which makes it a really cool and interesting place to be. It’s an event that not only stands out on the calendar but has made itself a home in F1.

From a driving perspective, the circuit offers a great combination of a street track and a permanent race track, with very close walls that demand precision. Sector 1 is incredibly high‑speed, while sector 2 has a tighter, more technical feel. On top of that, there’s an extremely long back straight, which will make battery management especially important. Preparing for Miami will be crucial in terms of energy deployment and car setup, along with adapting to the adjustments to the regulations since Japan, and it adds another interesting challenge for the drivers. We’re really excited to get back to racing there.

Did you know?

  • This will be the fifth Miami Grand Prix, with the race first appearing on the calendar in 2022.
  • This year, Free Practice 1 will run for 90 minutes to account for the long gap since the last Grand Prix, recent regulatory and technical changes, and the reduced practice time under the Miami Sprint format.
  • The 5.412 km Miami International Autodrome became the 11th track based in the USA to host a Grand Prix . Las Vegas became the 12th when it debuted on the calendar in 2023.
  • The Miami International Autodrome is one of nine on the 2026 F1 calendar to run in an anti-clockwise direction.
  • Miami hosted the F1 Sprint format for the first time in 2024 and, like last season too, will do so again in 2026.
  • 75 different circuit patterns were designed, and 36 simulated, before the final track layout was decided on before the first race in 2022.
  • The circuit races around the grounds of the Hard Rock Stadium, home to the Miami Dolphins NFL team and the Miami Open ATP and WTA tennis tournaments.
  • In his first Miami Grannd Prix, Kimi became Formula 1’s youngest polesitter last year after setting the fastest non‑race lap in the circuit’s history during Sprint Qualifying, aged just 18 years, 8 months and 7 days.
  • Last year, George’s third-place finish on Sunday secured Mercedes’ first Miami podium and meant the team had recorded a top‑three Grand Prix finish at every circuit on the 2025 calendar.
  • Mercedes-Benz Power (HPP) has won the past two Grands Prix in the Sunshine State, with Lando Norris (2024) and Oscar Piastri (2025) both triumphing for McLaren in recent seasons.

Monday, April 27, 2026

Car Spotter -- Oldsmobile Toronado

 





From Ed -- Olds Toronado spotted his morning on South Dixie Drive in Moraine.  Parked in front of a small car repair shop.  Looked almost in show condition.  These were bad news on front tires given the weight of the vehicle.

As a further aside, two homes down from my home in Kenmore New York, a modest barber bought a Tornado around 1968 and kept up for quite a long time. I was quite a car in a neighborhood of small one car garages -- now that I think if it, I don't know if it actually fit in the man's garage!


More on the Toronado --

The Oldsmobile Toronado was Oldsmobile’s flagship personal-luxury coupe and one of the most technically significant American cars of the postwar era. Its history runs from the mid‑1960s through the early 1990s, and it’s best understood as a sequence of design and engineering “chapters” that track broader shifts in U.S. tastes, regulations, and fuel economy.

Origins (early 1960s → 1966)

Oldsmobile created the Toronado to stand out in the booming “personal luxury” market (big, stylish two-door cars with premium features) while also proving GM could still innovate mechanically.

Its defining breakthrough was that it launched in 1966 as a large, powerful American front‑wheel‑drive car—something that had been extremely rare in the U.S. since the Cord era of the 1930s. Front-wheel drive was not chosen for economy; it was chosen to deliver a distinctive combination of:

  • strong straight-line traction,
  • a flat floor and roomy cabin packaging for a big coupe,
  • and a “technical halo” that differentiated Oldsmobile from Pontiac, Buick, and even Cadillac.

First generation (1966–1970): the landmark Toronado

The original Toronado (often associated with the “Coke-bottle” era of styling) was a dramatic, low-slung coupe with hidden headlamps and a long-hood/short-deck profile.

Engineering highlight: GM paired a big V8 with a heavy-duty automatic adapted for front-wheel drive (the famous TH425 transaxle family). This was a major engineering feat for the time because it had to handle very high torque in a front-drive layout.

 The “front axle assembly” people refer to is really the whole front-drive transaxle + differential + half shafts/CV joints system packaged around the TH425 transaxle, introduced for the 1966 Toronado (and later used in related applications).

Development goals and constraints

GM/Oldsmobile’s problem statement in the early 1960s was unusually hard:

  1. Torque capacity: The Toronado launched with a very large V8. A conventional small FWD transaxle (like those used in compact European cars) would not survive the torque and vehicle mass.

  2. Packaging: They wanted a dramatic, low hoodline and a roomy cabin. A longitudinal RWD layout with a driveshaft tunnel and rear axle would compromise the “special” proportions and interior packaging they wanted.

  3. Manufacturability and service: This couldn’t be an exotic hand-built solution. It had to be buildable on GM lines and repairable by ordinary Oldsmobile dealers.

  4. Ride/handling and NVH: A big FWD car risks steering corruption (torque steer), vibration, and harshness if the halfshafts and joints aren’t engineered carefully.

What the TH425 actually is (architecture)



The TH425 is best understood as a heavy-duty automatic transaxle derived from GM’s proven rear-drive automatics, but rearranged to drive the front wheels.

Key architectural choices that made it work:

1) “Proven core” automatic transmission, adapted

Rather than inventing an all-new transmission, GM leveraged the design logic of its robust automatics and created a transaxle that could handle high torque. Using a familiar hydraulic automatic “core” reduced development risk and improved durability.

2) Power turn: chain drive to the differential

The Toronado’s engine sat longitudinally, but the front wheels needed lateral drive to a differential. GM solved the geometry with a hybrid layout:

  • the transmission output drove a large, heavy-duty chain (inside the case),
  • the chain transferred power to a differential/final drive unit oriented to feed the left/right half shafts.

This was a big deal because the chain had to be:

  • strong enough for big-block torque,
  • quiet enough for a luxury coupe,
  • durable over long service life,
  • and packaged in a way that didn’t create heat or lubrication problems.

3) Integrated differential and equalized half

shaft strategy

A major source of nasty FWD behavior is unequal halfshaft lengths and compliance differences, which can amplify torque steer. GM’s packaging and axle layout aimed to keep the system stable under power, using robust halfshafts and jointing appropriate for the steering angles and suspension travel of a full-size coupe.

4) Constant-velocity (CV) jointing and “front axle” robustness

For a powerful FWD car, the halfshafts and joints are not just “axles”—they are highly stressed driveline components that must:

  • transmit high torque at varying angles (steering + suspension motion),
  • avoid vibration (NVH),
  • survive potholes and curb strikes,
  • and tolerate imperfect maintenance.

Engineering a CV-jointed front drive system that could live behind a large V8 in a heavy car—without constant failures—was a genuine leap for mid‑1960s American mass production.

Why it was such an achievement (the “so what”)

A) It made big-torque FWD practical at scale

Before the Toronado, FWD existed, but not commonly in high-volume, high-torque American applications. The TH425 showed that FWD could be engineered for strength and longevity, not just clever packaging.

B) It solved multiple problems at once: packaging, traction, and product identity

  • Packaging: No long driveshaft, no rear differential packaging needs, and typically a flatter floor.
  • Traction: With the engine’s weight over the drive wheels, the Toronado delivered strong straight-line traction in poor weather relative to many RWD contemporaries.
  • Brand/halo: Oldsmobile could credibly claim advanced engineering, not just styling and options.

C) It required systems engineering, not a single clever part

The TH425 “front axle assembly” wasn’t one invention; it was a coordinated solution across:

  • transmission hydraulics and geartrain durability,
  • chain drive strength and lubrication,
  • differential design,
  • halfshaft/CV joint selection and geometry,
  • suspension/steering tuning to manage torque steer and NVH,
  • cooling and sealing,
  • and service procedures for dealers.

Getting all of those to work together—quietly, reliably, and in volume—was the real accomplishment.

D) It became a reusable GM building block

A hallmark of an engineering achievement is reuse. The TH425 architecture didn’t remain a one-off curiosity; it informed and supported later GM front-drive heavy-duty applications (including other luxury/performance uses), proving it was not just a “concept car in production clothing,” but a durable drivetrain family.

What “front axle assembly” typically includes on the Toronado/TH425 setup

When enthusiasts or service literature talk about the “front axle assembly” in this context, they’re usually referring to:

  • the transaxle case with the chain drive and final drive,
  • the differential and its bearings/seals,
  • the left/right halfshafts,
  • inner and outer CV joints (or equivalent high-angle joints),
  • and the hub interfaces at the steering knuckles.

Market role: It was positioned above mainstream Oldsmobiles—more exclusive, more feature-rich, and more image-driven—competing in spirit with cars like the Ford Thunderbird and Buick Riviera, but with the unique selling point of FWD.

Second generation (1971–1978): bigger, softer, more “luxury”

In the early 1970s, the Toronado grew in size and became more formal and comfort-oriented. This reflected the broader American trend toward larger, more isolated luxury coupes.

This period also overlaps with major external pressures:

  • emissions regulations that reduced power and changed engine tuning,
  • safety regulations (including bumper standards),
  • and the 1973–74 fuel crisis, which began shifting consumer expectations even for luxury cars.

The Toronado remained front-wheel drive and remained a technological statement, but the emphasis moved from sporty innovation to plush, effortless cruising.

Third generation (1979–1985): downsizing and efficiency pressures

For 1979, GM “downsized” many large cars, and the Toronado followed the industry trend toward smaller exterior dimensions and lighter weight (relative to the 1970s cars). The goal was to improve fuel economy and maneuverability without abandoning the personal-luxury mission.

Styling in this era became more squared-off and formal, and the Toronado increasingly competed on comfort, features, and brand identity rather than raw displacement and dramatic proportions.

This generation sits in the middle of a difficult era for American automakers: balancing luxury expectations with tightening fuel economy rules and changing buyer preferences.

Fourth generation (1986–1992): a new formula, modern FWD coupe

In 1986 the Toronado was reinvented again, now as a more modern, aerodynamic front-drive coupe. It still aimed at the personal-luxury buyer, but the market itself was changing: buyers were moving toward smaller luxury cars, and later toward SUVs.

This era is often remembered for:

  • more contemporary styling and interior design,
  • a stronger focus on electronics and convenience features,
  • and a continued attempt to keep Oldsmobile’s “technology” image alive.

However, by the late 1980s and early 1990s, the traditional American personal-luxury coupe segment was shrinking fast.

End of the line and legacy (1992 and after)

The Toronado ended after the 1992 model year. Its decline wasn’t because the nameplate failed at its original mission—rather, the market moved on:

  • personal-luxury coupes lost ground to luxury sedans, imports, and later SUVs,
  • and Oldsmobile’s brand strategy shifted repeatedly in the 1990s.

Legacy: The Toronado’s lasting importance is that it proved a big, high-torque front-wheel-drive American car could be engineered and sold at scale. Its drivetrain architecture influenced other GM front-drive applications (including some Cadillac and Buick uses of the heavy-duty FWD transaxle concept), and the Toronado remains a milestone in 1960s U.S. automotive engineering and design.