Home » Living Rooms On Wheels: 1994 Buick Roadmaster vs 1994 Lincoln Town Car

Living Rooms On Wheels: 1994 Buick Roadmaster vs 1994 Lincoln Town Car

Sbsd 5 8 2025
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Good morning! For our mid-week Showdown, we’re taking it easy, and settling into the soft leather seats of a couple of good old American cruisers. Drop the big chrome column shifter into D, crank up the Tony Bennett, or maybe Operation Ivy if your tastes are more like mine, and just enjoy the ride. Sounds nice, doesn’t it?

Yesterday’s cars were both from my large fleet of former vehicles, and I gave you a rare “Both” option in the poll. I try to save that for cars that complement each other, rather than compete with one another. I always find it interesting when “Both” beats out one car; I guess that means you like it better as part of a set than on its own.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Regardless, the Nissan pickup won handily, and I think I have to agree. My 720 got me through a really rough time in my life, and in fact, the only reason I sold it was bad memories. That was a mistake, and my stalwart little navy blue companion deserved better treatment from me. Hopefully this one becomes someone’s four-wheeled best friend soon.

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The full-size American car archetype remained unchanged for a couple of decades, starting in the 1950s: soft suspension, comfortable seats, and a big V8 engine and automatic transmission. Handling was an afterthought, and fuel economy was only a consideration after governmental regulations made it one. It all started to change around the time these two were built. They were dinosaurs when new, and even though one of them lasted a couple more years, and the other somehow managed to stay in production for another decade and a half, buyers were already hard to come by.

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Today, cars like this are long gone from the marketplace. They were only really good at one thing, but for that one thing, they were excellent, and there’s nothing that quite fills the gap they left. Fortunately, they tend to be good reliable cars, as well as low mileage, and quite often cheap. Let’s see what you make of them.

1994 Buick Roadmaster Limited – $2,995

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 5.7-liter overhead valve V8, four-speed automatic, RWD

Location: Burlington, NJ

Odometer reading: 164,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

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In 1986, Buick’s full-size sedans – the Electra and LeSabre – did something unthinkable at the time: they switched from body-on-frame with rear-wheel-drive to a unibody design with front-wheel-drive. Only the Electra Estate wagon, now simply the Estate, remained on the old RWD platform. But in 1991, that platform was revised, and Buick brought a RWD sedan back to the lineup, this time called the Roadmaster. And in 1994, it received one hell of an engine upgrade, from Chevrolet’s LT1 small-block V8, adding an extra eighty horsepower and turning the big Buick into something of a factory hot rod.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The one drawback to all that extra power is that the LT1 uses GM’s dreaded “Optispark” ignition system, which has been causing headaches for GM horsepower freaks for decades. Luckily, by now, its foibles are well-documented and well-understood. And at the moment, this one runs just fine. It’s for sale at a dealership, so we don’t get any information about its past, though.

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Image: Craigslist seller

It’s the fancy Limited model, so it has power everything and leather seats. It looks like it has held up well over its 164,000 miles, except for the steering wheel. For some reason, Buick steering wheels of this era were painted, or something, with a coating that wears off after a few years, exposing the black plastic underneath. It doesn’t affect anything; it just looks like crap.

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Image: Craigslist seller

It looks pretty good outside, except that someone went a little nuts with the Pep Boys stick-on portholes. The Roadmaster never had any from the factory. A putty knife and a little Goo-Gone should take care of the problem.

1994 Lincoln Town Car – $3,000

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 4.6-liter overhead cam V8, four-speed automatic, RWD

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Location: Hamilton, NJ

Odometer reading: 85,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

Big rear-wheel-drive sedans were out of style in the mid-1980s, but that didn’t stop Ford from throwing a ton of money into an all-new Lincoln Town Car for 1990. It was way more aerodynamic than the outgoing model, but that’s not saying much; the older model had the same coefficient of drag as a small Victorian house.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The 1990 model carried over the same old 302 V8 from the old version, but in 1991, the Town Car became the first recipient of Ford’s new Modular V8. This engine is well-known for racking up the miles in Crown Vic taxicabs and police cars, so 85,000 miles of gentle use should have hardly broken it in. We don’t get much information about it; all the seller says is that it “drives smooth.”

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Image: Craigslist seller

Town Cars were the vehicle of choice for limousine services for years. You’d expect them to be comfortable and roomy, and you’d be right. This one has leather seats instead of cloth, and they look like they’re in good shape. There is one little tear in the driver’s seat, but it’s hardly worth mentioning.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The outside is in good shape, and it’s a better color than most of these are. I’m partial to the dark green that Lincoln offered, but this pale blue looks good too. It makes a nice change from all the black livery fleet ones. And happily, it doesn’t have a landau or carriage top.

 

If you like to carve corners, these are not the cars for you. These cars handle, as I once read Jay Leno describe it, like a bowling ball on a waterbed. But they have an uncanny ability to make cracks, expansion joints, and potholes magically disappear, and with the windows up and the air conditioning on, not much noise is going to spoil the ride, either. Which one do you choose?

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Sid Bridge
Sid Bridge
6 hours ago

Been burned by an LT-1. Never again. Gotta go for the Town House.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
7 hours ago

I’ve owned several LT1s and am not the least bit scared by them, but I have never been overly fond of the Roadmaster styling aside from the wagon version so I went with the Lincoln. From memory the Lincoln doesn’t ride as nice, but I do enjoy the color and styling.

Dan Roth
Dan Roth
7 hours ago

Roadmaster. The B-Bodies are better cars than the Panthers.

I cared for and used the family heirloom ’99 Crown Vic for a couple years. Got that shout out of my system. They’re awful cars with awful build quality and awful to drive.

They’re not good highway cruisers because they’re uncomfortable and floaty.

If you have to fix one, you’ll find that the design and engineering is basically ’60s conventions updated each decaded afterward but in the most slap-dash fashion.

Nothing is easy to service. Stupid stuff breaks.

The Modular V8s are deeply inferior to the GM V8s.

I usually go on and on, but suffice it to say, the Roadmaster is the better choice here, while the best choice is to just save your $3K.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
7 hours ago

In theory, the Clown Car is a better deal in better condition. But as I am firmly of the opinion that nobody should have to drive a Panther unless they are wearing a uniform and getting paid, I will hold my nose and pick the Road Blaster.

Dan Roth
Dan Roth
7 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin B Rhodes

Can confirm. Most muni fleets have finally excised their Vics, too. Now they sit by the side of the road idling Explorer-based incterceptors all day, burning maybe a little less taxpayer gas, especially if they’ve got a hybrid and it’s not broken.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
6 hours ago
Reply to  Dan Roth

Ford really has that market sewn up at this point, given Chrysler has axed the Charger.

Dan Roth
Dan Roth
5 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin B Rhodes

GM is making inroads with the Tahoe because it’s been hard for local departments to get the vehicles they ordered, get them through upfitters, and keep them on the road.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
5 hours ago
Reply to  Dan Roth

I forgot that they still sell a cop Tahoe – very, very rarely see them in my neck of the woods. Exploders and Chargers as far as the eye can see…

The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
7 hours ago

The Roadmaster is a decent car, but I can’t get past the styling. I have always found it bulbous and awkward. It looks like they took a normal sedan and pressurized the interior to about 1,000 psi to create a rounded appearance. Ugly styling is a dealbreaker for me. I don’t want to own a vehicle I dislike looking at.

I like the more conservative styling of the Town Car. It helps that the town car appears to be in better condition. The Lincoln gets my vote today.

Last edited 7 hours ago by The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
NebraskaStig
NebraskaStig
7 hours ago

I was ready to vote Buick, but that TC is just so clean and 1/2 the miles for the same price. I’ll take the ‘Blue Panther’

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
7 hours ago

I love me a Roadmaster, and it’s wood paneled wagon stablemate would’ve sold me.

But I have to go Towncar. It’s just too clean with such low miles. I’d make it my daily.

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
7 hours ago

I had a nearly identical Roadmaster, and I LOVED it.

But I voted Town Car. That Optispark is a true Achilles Heel. It’s an obsolete part now, so your options are cheap knock-offs that have a high failure rate, a pricey but reliable version from MSD, or and even MORE expensive coil-on-plug LS style conversion.

Panther for me!

My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
7 hours ago

Hard choice.

The Buick looks kind of ragged and I know how GM products feel when they’re ragged. Yeah, the LT1 is good and has way more aftermarket, (or LS all the things if it breaks) but the rest of the car will feel like a loose assemblage of parts moving in a general direction at those high miles.

The Lincoln looks better and has half the miles. Use it as a highway cruiser with the Meh-motor while I have visions of Godzilla swap. Does that happen? Maybe? Perhaps I do a cross country trip with it or something in the meantime. At least I get more comfy miles thinking about it.

Last edited 7 hours ago by My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
Shop-Teacher
Shop-Teacher
6 hours ago

The LT-1 really doesn’t have that much aftermarket support. They only made it for 6-7 years, and why would you bother swapping it into something anymore when you can get a cheaper, more widely available, more reliable, and more powerful LS engine?

DialMforMiata
DialMforMiata
7 hours ago

Somebody is waaay behind the curve on Town Car pricing. Down here that would be a $7k car all day long, especially with that little tear in the leather repaired properly.

The Mark
The Mark
7 hours ago

The Buick just looks grungy all over. Town Car for me.

V10omous
V10omous
7 hours ago

The LT1 is twice the engine of the early Modular.

Buick is the easy pick.

Goose
Goose
7 hours ago
Reply to  V10omous

100% agree. I don’t really know why, but I’ve always had a huge softspot for those Roadmasters, and somewhat similar Fleetwood. Everyone rages over the Panther platform, but I’m picking GM early to mid 90s GM B and D body stuff every time over a Panther. Maybe it’s me dreaming about towing 5k+ pounds in my super cushy land yacht (7k in the Caddy)?

It is easy to pick any of the GM options over the equivalent Ford in the early-mid 90s.
Caprice>Crown Vic
Roadmaster>Grand Marquis
Fleetwood>Town Car

Last edited 7 hours ago by Goose
V10omous
V10omous
7 hours ago
Reply to  Goose

Yep, entirely agree.

Panther cars are one of those enthusiast favorites that I’ve never really “gotten”.

These GM entries have always seemed better to me.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
7 hours ago
Reply to  V10omous

I’d normally agree, but half the miles in Grandpa spec, I’m betting that town car goes the distance. She’s a mighty fine Goin’ to Town rig.

Dan Roth
Dan Roth
7 hours ago
Reply to  V10omous

Panthers are bad and I suspect most of the people who think they’re so great have either never owned one or have no idea what they’re talking about, or, as is so often the case, both.

V10omous
V10omous
6 hours ago
Reply to  Dan Roth

When they were the only game in town and last of a dying breed at the end of their run, I sort of get it, but I wouldn’t choose one over any actual competitor.

Goose
Goose
6 hours ago
Reply to  V10omous

I think it’s a combo of a couple things as to why people latched onto the Panther. Ford just continued making Panthers for quite a bit longer where GM transitioned out of the B, C (RWD), D bodies 20-30 years earlier. This means Panthers stayed in peoples minds and were in media much more commonly (and still are). Panthers were the only game in town for a good 20 years and people started to like it; almost like Stockholm Syndrome in my mind. Also, because they were around much more recently, its usually easier and cheaper to find a Panther than it is to find a B, C, or D body and parts are generally more available which admittedly is a big positive for the Panther. Still, I’m taking GM on this one.

Last edited 6 hours ago by Goose
TOSSABL
TOSSABL
7 hours ago

I’ve only had a GM V8 in the economy 260 inch size. Voted Roadmaster so I can look like I’m going either to Cracker Barrel or the Golden Coral buffet depending on time of day

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
8 hours ago

Front and rear bench seats with zero bolstering on my rolling couch? Sold.

Pneumatic Tool
Pneumatic Tool
8 hours ago

The Lincoln won’t be as powerful as the Buick, but that’s just about the only place where it will fall short, as far as I’m concerned. It just looks better to me…a little less bloated. Agreed on the color, this blue/silver thing looks good, and I’m a sucker for those aluminum spoke wheels. This would be a really good, comfy, reliable highway cruiser.

Surprise me……
Surprise me……
8 hours ago

The town car just because the mileage. Half of the Roadmaster

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
8 hours ago

I can’t believe I’m picking a Ford over a GM, but in this case, I am.

Frank Wrench
Frank Wrench
8 hours ago

Real hard time choosing here. Maybe pick the one that smells less like cigar smoke?

It would be fun to add a big Chrysler to the mix, maybe an Imperial?

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
7 hours ago
Reply to  Frank Wrench

I don’t think Chrysler was making anything good during this time period, in the RWD sedan wheelhouse.

Frank Wrench
Frank Wrench
6 hours ago

I just looked and you’re right. They were onto their cab forward platform by then, FWD and V6. Those were nice cars. Girlfriend at the time had an Eagle Vision but it’s not in the same class as these RWD V8s.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
8 hours ago

There are somethings I won’t waste even imaginary internet bucks on. These cars are two of them. Nothing but black smoke from the chimney today.

The Pigeon
The Pigeon
7 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

maybe from the tailpipe on these.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
7 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Oh man, Large Car life is good.

Even my buddy admitted he couldn’t understand why I bought my w126. But riding in it time and again on road trips and to car shows, he gets it and now casually shops old 7 series and the like.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
5 hours ago

I respect your choices, though I don’t share them. My first two cars were Dodge B-body rides from the 60s, so not small, but once I moved down in size to more compact rides, I never went back. Anyway, I think my living room corners better than either of today’s choices.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
5 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Different tastes? At The Autopian?! How DARE we not all want brown, RWD stick shift diesel wagons!

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
4 hours ago

Sorry, I’m a freak.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
4 hours ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Do you feel like you’re on a leash?

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
4 hours ago

Korn fan, eh?

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
8 hours ago

Lower mileage, a better color and a sunroof?
I would have chosen the Lincoln anyway – but these make it a must-have.

Last edited 8 hours ago by Urban Runabout
Doughnaut
Doughnaut
8 hours ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

80,000 mile difference is likely negligible when it comes to what maintenance and repairs a 30 year old car will need.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
7 hours ago
Reply to  Doughnaut

Even if you had to put another $3000 into the Lincoln for new hoses, gaskets, tires, etc – it would be worth it. Parts are plentiful and cheap, and there’s tons of mileage left in that car.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
8 hours ago

I’ve owned a couple of Town Cars and a few other Panthers, and had that Buick’s platform mate Fleetwood, the GM B-Bodies have noticeably smoother and more comfortable rides than the Town Car, along with roomier interiors, they’re just better designed from the start. That said, Ford’s build quality and just general durability is significantly better, the GM cars had lots of weird minor electrical failures and also transmissions that were basically made out of glass

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
8 hours ago

I don’t mind the portholes on the Buick since the original Roadmasters had them. Ventiports, I think that was the name for them. I remember readingt that they were originally added by a designer and hooked up to the distributer to flash and made it look custom

I’ve driven one of these, and remember it as being like driving a fairly quick cloud

RoRoTheGreat
RoRoTheGreat
8 hours ago

I believe this one will end up as a 50/50 tie today. You can’t go wrong with either of them and it comes down to preference.

I went with the LT1.

4jim
4jim
8 hours ago

The town car looks like it is in better shape and it would run forever and already has 100,000 less miles on it than the Buick. That is a hell of a lot of car for $3000.

Last edited 8 hours ago by 4jim
Griznant
Griznant
8 hours ago

I like the looks of the Town Car better, but the LT1 will handily blow the doors off of it. Roadmasher FTW.

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