Home » Saturn Would Have Been The Best Launch Brand For The Controversial GM ‘Dustbuster’ Vans

Saturn Would Have Been The Best Launch Brand For The Controversial GM ‘Dustbuster’ Vans

Saturn Van Ts3
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In the eighties, Ford and General Motors reluctantly ceded the minivan crown to the revived Chrysler corporation. To their credit, the Aerostar and Astro, Ford and GM’s body-on-frame, rear-drive variations on the minivan formula, could tow more. But the vast majority of families never, ever hook up a trailer of any kind to their minivans, and Chrysler was simply running away with the category. With the popularity of the car-based Dodge Caravan taking a big bite out GM’s bottom line, The General finally decided to finally strike back with a new and dramatic front-drive design.

GM’s would-be Caravan-killer arrived in 1990 as Pontiac, Chevrolet, and Oldsmobile dealers took delivery of minivans that looked like nothing else on the market. Styling details varied to suit each brand, but all featured the same sleek profile, a futuristic shape that would look just as appropriate delivering James T. Kirk and his crew to the Enterprise in the 23rd century as it would delivering Jane Kirk and her family to an amusement park in the 20th. Or so GM hoped; it turned out the Van Of Tomorrow resonated more as the Handheld Vacuum Of Today, and GM’s great hope was quickly saddled with the nickname Dustbuster. Because it looked like a Dustbuster.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Recently, reader CalLook67 asked what it might be like if a “Different Kind of Car Company” had sold this van instead; could Saturn have had more success with a “different kind of buyer”?

A Van-Detta On The Voyager

I was told that when one of my creative director bosses saw his first Pontiac Trans Sport van parked outside of our office window, his immediate response was, “Well, there’s a battle that the design department won.” He was sort of right, but not entirely.

Trans Port Overhead 7 10
GM

The first manifestation of GM’s minivan vision was the 1986 Pontiac Trans Sport show vehicle. With a gullwing rear side door and wraparound glass and an interior loaded with state-of-the-art technology (for the time) including a digital rear view mirror, heads-up display, and a primitive version of what would eventually become OnStar. There was even a Nintendo game system for the rear seats.

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Trans Port Concept 2 7 10
GM
Trans Port Interior Concept 7 10
GM

The Trans Sport show car was reportedly based on the A-Body Pontiac 6000 chassis, yet the long wheelbase and short overhangs were nothing like that car; indeed, they were closer to the proportions of the later, famously mid-engined Toyota Previa. Had the Trans Sport reached showrooms, it would have immediately made all the other minivans on the market look at least a decade old.

Trasn Port Concept 1 7 10
GM

Four years later, the production Pontiac Trans Sport was traffic-stopping; you didn’t need a wind tunnel to tell you that it was the most aerodynamic minivan available at the time.

Transport Ad 1 7 10
GM

Despite the slick looks, a Trans Sport was a highly practical, spacious minivan with reconfigurable seating inside for up to seven.

Trans Sport Rear 7 10
GM

This radical van was joined with the more basic Chevrolet Lumina Van variant and the luxury-oriented Oldsmobile Silhouette version.

Lumina Apv 7 10
GM
Silhouette 7 10
GM

A few years later, the Olds version was the first minivan with an electric sliding door, a feature memorably immortalized on film in Get Shorty.

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Why didn’t the production van have quite the same feel as that concept? Well, we all know what happens with concept cars; once they reach production, a drastic number of things change for the sake of cost, complexity, and practicality, and often for the worse. Like the Trans Sport show car, the production edition was based on that Pontiac 6000 wagon platform, but the proportions were far, far closer to the donor car than what was displayed years before at the Chicago Auto Show.

Trans Sport Side View 1 7 10
GM
Pontiac 6000 Wagon 7 10
GM

Front and rear overhangs were longer, and the driver and front passenger sat almost in the same location as the normal 6000. That car obviously sported a rather normal windshield and traditional hood, so to replicate the show car’s styling, the production Trans Sport had deeply raked front glass, necessitating an incredibly deep dashboard. The extra dash area came at the expense of the hood, and the short lid that remained left far less space for engine access than the 6000’s “regular” proportions. And then there’s the view from behind the wheel; if you can imagine driving a normal sedan or wagon with two-by-fours going from the top of the windshield sides down to the ends of the front fenders, that’s essentially what you saw from the Trans Sport’s driver’s seat.

Trans Sport Dash 7 11
Brochures rarely if ever showed the view above. Look at those pillars and dash! It’s like the hood is inside the car, because it basically was. Bid Cars . com

Note also the deeply raked shut line at the back of the front doors. It created a dangerously sharp point at the back top corner, so concerning that a warning label urged you not to spike yourself on it – which you probably read only after discovering on your own why GM put a sticker on there, as you rubbed a hot welt on your forehead.

1990 Pontiac Trans Sport Se V0 Tp84ih3leb3a1 2a
GM/ Doug Demuro (video still)

Despite these idiosyncrasies, the Trans Sport’s futuristic “Dustbuster” wedge did manage to break out of the typical minivan mold; it was deserving of a brand that did that same thing.

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Cybertruck Fans Don’t Even Get Hootie

Enthusiast cults exist around scores of cars, from two-cylinder air-cooled French sedans that look like ducks, all the way up to stainless steel-clad electric pickup trucks. While virtually all of these cults spring up from admirers who can spend hours boring you with the unique traits of the product they connect over, the cult of GM’s Saturn was very different. In many cases, these Saturn faithfuls were there for the purchase and ownership experience, and they didn’t really care nearly as much about their car itself.

As Thomas has written about before, the clean-sheet-of-paper manufacturing process of developed for early Saturns resulted in a happy workforce that created much higher quality cars than GM had been known for at the time of the brand’s launch in 1990. It was almost a standalone product where the lineup of sedans, coupes, and wagons didn’t play the typical GM game of sharing ninety percent of the car’s parts with other nameplates.

Photos Saturn S Series 1990 3 1280x960 7
GM
Saturn S Series 1990 Photos 2 B 7 11
GM

Certainly, these Saturns were much better built than a Cavalier of the same vintage, but they were still somewhat lacking when compared to concurrent offerings from Japan. When revved, the engines (particularly the twin-cam version) didn’t create the symphonic sounds of a refined Civic. The chassis couldn’t match the BMW 2002-like Nissan Sentra, and the build quality was well behind a Corolla like the ’91 model that drove past me on the road today (the windows were up in 95-degree heat, so the 34-year-old air conditioning was likely still working).

1990 Saturn Sc Sc2 001 7 11
GM

Sure, but could Toyota give you a pioneering purchase experience? No pushy salespeople, plus there was zero haggling, so everyone got ripped off equally. Here’s a commercial I’ve shown before that really sums up the whole gestalt of Saturness:

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I bet Julie was going to airports and handing out Saturn leaflets with other cult members in a week or two. It’s almost certain that she would have attended the Saturn Homecoming event to hear Winona Judd perform to 22,000 other owners.

1993 Saturn S Series Wagon Sw2 Fq Oem 1 1600x1067
GM

Such different thinking of the assembly and sales process didn’t really extend to the brand’s vehicles, though. Other than the dent-resistant Fiero-style plastic body panels, initial Saturn cars were painfully conventional in design and appearance. With such an unorthodox brand identity, it’s a shame that GM didn’t take advantage of using it to launch one of their equally game-changing, cutting-edge products. Let’s follow CalLook67’s suggestion that they actually did.

Bustin’ The Dustusbter

What’s to hate about a wedge? Nothing, if you ask me. However, slap a bunch of late eighties Pontiac wings and bumpy side trim, and anything is gonna look like, well, you in those parachute pants back in the day (we have photos, so don’t deny it). If we remove much of this cladding from the Pontiac or the standard black striping of the Silhouette and keep the purity of the GM “Dustbuster” shape, I bet it wouldn’t be an object of quite as much derision.

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GM

Here’s another thing: when we overlay the sharply raked nose design of the early Saturn models onto the front of the GM WedgeVan, the look is rather appealing. Honestly, it makes the front-end options of the other brands with Pontiac nostrils or the rather upright wraparound headlamps seem out of place.

Saturn Sv2 Roof
GM

Here you can see what we’d call the Saturn SV2 animated between the standard Pontiac Trans Sport. Note that I’ve also added taillights (or at least reflectors) that continue the taillights down to the bumper in a style later done by Volvo and current Cadillac SUVs:

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Saturn Van Animation 7 12

How about we push it a bit more? Like, make a van that you’d buy because you want it, not because you’re forced to? Let’s make an open van to let the sun in. Fabric sunroofs are always a disaster, and sliding multi-panel affairs as on some later Pontiacs aren’t much better, so I propose that American Sunroof Corporation (ASC) could have offered retractable roof panels for an SV2 Sky. There would be one over the front seats and a second over the center row.

Saturn Sv2 Roof 7 12
GM

The signature “basket handle” of the Trans Sport would stay to keep rigidity. Mechanical arms would lift the panels, fold them over on themselves, and angle the collapsed roof to act as a big rear spoiler of sorts. The rear side windows can roll down as well.

Roof Animation 7 12

We’ll take advantage of these years before the final round of safety regulations to put seatbelts onto the center row captains’ chairs, allowing them to rotate around 180 degrees as on our famous Autopian Rodius. Now you’ve got a nice conversation area, or can tend to kids strapped in the third row; I am hesitant to put a motorhome-style table in between the seats for safety but we could offer a fold-down table to go between the captains chairs that might be able to also act as a central third seat to give eight passenger capacity.

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Seating Layout 7 12 2
GM
Seating Layout 7 12
GM

Also, between the front seats could be a drinks cooler that takes in air from a floor-mounted A/C vent. You could also carry it Aztek-style or put it onto a wheeled base with a telescopic handle. What a great way to enjoy the Saturn Reunion! Think about it; retract the roof panels, face the rear seats at each other, and chill out with cold beverages in the parking area with other Saturn lovers.

Cooler Caddy Cart 7 12

Then, when the Hootie and the Blowfish concert is about to start (they performed at the 1999 Saturn Homecoming event), just pull the drinks cooler along, and even let your youngest kid ride on top. That’s some family fun there!

A Different Kind Of Van

But wait! Saturn did propose a sort-of-minivan concept in 2000. The CV-1 was a crossover-looking subcompact people mover with twin sunroofs and rear-facing “center row” jump seats.

Saturn Cv1 A 7 12
GM

The bizarre bi-fold doors on the side allowed access to either the jump seat second row or the rearmost third row, but not at the same time.

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Saturn Cv1 B 7 12
GM
Saturn Cv1 C 7 12
GM

There’s definitely some unique thinking there, but the tiny size seems more suited to countries where they don’t sell Big Gulps and Baconaters. I certainly think that our Saturn SV2 “Dustbuster” concept might be far better suited for Saturn and people who knew they needed a van but wanted something cool.

General Motors eventually gave up on its futuristic vans after the 1996 model year, replacing them with far more traditional-looking boxy models. Even stranger is that when minivans started to fall out of favor, GM took this second-generation model and added a long nose in an attempt to pass as a sort-of SUV. When Saturn finally got a minivan, it was sadly a strange concoction named the Relay. Talk about a case of too little, too late to save the General’s attempt at a popular minivan and the Saturn brand itself from its untimely demise in 2010.

Saturn Relay 2005 7 12
GM

This “Different Kind of Car Company” just didn’t offer products that were different enough in the right kinds of ways, but maybe they could have been the right home for the Dustbuster: a truly unique and underappreciated vision of a family hauler.

Saturn owners of the time probably would have accepted almost anything that the brand released; why couldn’t GM have rewarded such loyalty and acceptance of new automotive ideas with a product many buyers missed out on because they were too closed-minded? At the same time, it might have brought some new people to the Saturn family who just liked the van and then discovered how a car ownership experience could be something far better than they ever imagined.

We’ll never know. Thanks for the suggestion, CalLook67!

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Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
9 minutes ago

That red rendering of the front end looks great. Never mind the Saturn branding, it looks much better than the production car. And I rather like the look of the Oldsmobile.
I’d rather have a Espace or a Previa but a mint condition silhouette would be kind of a treat. In Mayan Gold Metallic I could get a matching Stratocaster!

Cars? I've owned a few
Cars? I've owned a few
4 hours ago

I didn’t remember those looking that sleek. My wife’s company had an Olds Silhouette they called the Silver Bullet. Like a Coors can.

I’ve never personally owned a van, but a place I worked at in Cleveland had an all-wheel drive Aerostar and it was actually decently impressive. Not particularly attractive, but it road great over some pretty messed up pavement and was virtually unstoppable when it snowed. And it had a lot of miles on it without any stories of maintenance issues. I’m sure it got terrible fuel economy, but that wasn’t my problem.

Please and Thank You
Please and Thank You
3 hours ago

We looked at an Olds Silhouette in 2002 when buying our first minivan (we are on #4, 2020 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid) and the Olds outperformed the 2002 Town and Country Limited on all driving metrics except one: utility. At that time, Olds was offering fire sale incentives to get ANY new rocket badge on the road, so the Silhouette Premier Edition and 5000 lb towing capacity, Series 2 3800 V6, stacked up pretty well against the T&C, even with my father-in-law’s generous employee discount. Stow-and-go, dual sliding doors, and a cheap extended warranty put us into the T&C, and we haven’t looked back. I wanted the Silhouette to be better, and I was disappointed that it ended up in second place. It would not have been a choice I would have regretted, but it would have only delayed the inevitable defection to Chrysler. As for the Aerostar, at work we had a late 90’s AstroVan with all wheel drive, and it was like a mountain goat, if mountain goats got 13 mpg.

Cars? I've owned a few
Cars? I've owned a few
2 hours ago

I rented a Chrysler minivan back in 2019 or so and drove it with my wife and another couple from MIA down to Key West and back and it was wonderful. I don’t remember the exact MPG, but I do remember it was surprisingly good.

Sofonda Wagons
Sofonda Wagons
5 hours ago

The original Trans Sport concept ended up being a Toyota Previa! I actually found a 1/64 Saturn CV1 for my model collection years ago. Still haven’t found any dustbuster models, though.

Shooting Brake
Shooting Brake
7 hours ago

Excellent what if scenario

William Domer
William Domer
7 hours ago

I rented one of these for a daily trip to Florida. Luckily I got it a day early as there was no way 6 of us could fit in it comfortably And no room for luggage. The dashboard was wide enough for shuffleboard It was truly shit I took it back and rented a long Astro which was also garbage but we all fit in it. When the previa came out I test drove it. Looked like a Star Trek invention it was amazing. Also way pricey. We snagged a used mercury/nissan something or other all fancied up. It was ok. To this day I think minivans are way cooler than the covered station wagons called SUV’s Usually Super Ugly Vehicles. My 2 cents worth

Jetta
Jetta
8 hours ago

the idea reminds me of a van from drive buy, a short-lived game i once played!! will link to igcd for a photo

Last edited 8 hours ago by Jetta
1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
8 hours ago

Bishop I am surprised you fell for the marketing hype. First no auto manufacturers ceded the minivan to Chrysler Ford refused to build it and they fired Iacocca who went to Chrysler. He actually kept Ford alive but inbred Ford family members couldn’t accept they sucked and Iacocca was a genius. So the Caravan came out and it kicked the crap out of the station wagon. The manufacturer never wants to go away from their old cheap money maker. Then GM comes out with the dust buster. Terrible front visibility as bad as pickup and half the van was engine and front row seats so much lost space that kids couldn’t fit in the other seats.

Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
10 hours ago

I remember travelling to The island of Hawaii for work back in the early 2000s. When we got to the Avis counter in Kona, the young woman behind the counter informed me that our rental vehicle would be an Oldsmobile Silhouette.

I said, “So it’s not really a mini-van, it’s just in the shape of one.”

The look on her face (once she ‘got it’) was priceless.

G. K.
G. K.
11 hours ago

I can think of several reasons there wasn’t a Saturn U-body:

  1. Hurt feelings from other GM brands — The Saturn Corporation famously cost $5B to launch (and lost a further $2B over its lifespan). That money came at the expense of the existing GM divisions, and it shows in how weak and unoriginal those brands’ offerings were through most or all of the nineties. The original U-body was one of the few exciting, groundbreaking offerings GM had during that timespan, and it promised to bring traffic and sales to the showroom. Making the other divisions compete with Saturn in that segment, on top of everything else, would have been, perhaps, a bridge too far.
  2. Not enough differentiation — Part of the allure of Saturn was that its cars were visibly different from anything else at GM, or at all. (Never mind that the Saturn SL1 ended up looking a lot like the W-body Oldsmobile Cutlass Sedan; that was an accident). Apart from grafting a different front end onto the U-body structure and giving it some nifty features–which is precisely what you’ve suggested here–I’m not sure Saturn could have made a suitably differentiated product there. And a U-body so afflicted would’ve undermined GM’s efforts to create a whole new brand, and would’ve had everyone rolling their eyes at the fact that Saturn was doing “Yet Another GM Rebadge”
  3. Union obligations and relations — When The Saturn Corporation set up its $3.5B complex in Spring Hill, TN, it did so with its own UAW contract fully separate from those of other GM plants. I’m not sure what specifically was in that contract, but I’m sure a big part of it was that Spring Hill would get the honor of assembling Saturn products, at least for the time being. Yet…the U-bodies were manufactured in GM’s corporate North Tarrytown Assembly in New York (and were, incidentally, that plant’s last run of products before it was shuttered in 1996). So, GM would have either had to waste tens or hundreds of millions setting up shop for an identical line at the Saturn plant, or would have had to undermine its Saturn UAW efforts by building a Saturn-badged car outside that plant. (That eventually happened with the Opel-based L-Series, circa 2000, but that was much later).
  4. Not enough parts commonality — Part of what made Saturn remotely viable at all was that at least its early products were versions of the same thing: a coupe, a sedan, a wagon, all on the same platform, and using the same running gear, suspensions, etc. Apart from a similar plastic-over-spaceframe construction, the U-bodies shared nothing with Saturn models. Never mind the aforementioned manufacturing logistics–for the U-body and the Saturn would not have been able to be made on the same line–even the servicing and parts distribution side would suffer from offering the U-body and interrupting all that commonality.
Mercedes Streeter
Mercedes Streeter
10 hours ago
Reply to  G. K.

If I recall, CalLook67 ‘s prompt for this was an alternate reality where the dustbuster vans were originally a Saturn creation, rather than what actually happened. Technically, in this scenario, the other versions didn’t exist, and thus, this wouldn’t have been a rebadge. 🙂

G. K.
G. K.
10 hours ago

I see. If that had happened, the Dustbuster itself might have been more successful. Or at least more celebrated. Saturn customers were exactly the sort of quirky people who would have taken to this design like flies to honey. That it was constructed similarly to the Saturn cars would have made it more endearing.

GM might have even decided, riding on a wave of success with the Saturn Dustbuster, to expand Saturn into a fuller line of cars before it did. What killed Saturn was that GM denied it funding when it needed to expand to make more models, because it was hemorrhaging money on low-profit-margin, inexpensive cars. So when Saturn needed larger models, it was told it would have to use existing GM engineering, and facilities. Cue platform-sharing cars like the L-Series, ION and VUE, and eventually wholly undifferentiated ones like the Relay, Outlook, Aura, Astra, and gen. 2 VUE.

Would Saturn having more models in, say, 1995, have saved the brand? Probably not. But it would have given us some more interesting cars to look back upon.

Alexander Moore
Alexander Moore
11 hours ago

Not to mention the Dustbusters were already plastic panels over a space frame which was basically like Saturn’s entire MO.

Sofonda Wagons
Sofonda Wagons
5 hours ago

agree. That was my first thought, too.

Church
Church
12 hours ago

As a reminder: yes, they absolutely did gather the whole dealership to cheer for your first new car.

Sofonda Wagons
Sofonda Wagons
5 hours ago
Reply to  Church

They took a picture of you standing next to it with the keys in your hand, too. One of my cousins still has the pic of her first new car, an SC1, amongst her kids drawings/artwork on the fridge door. She was so proud of her first new car

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