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1967 Buick Riviera – One for the Road

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If we asked for a show of hands from everyone we talk to about how many of them regret having to sell a certain car, we’d see more hands than when the teacher asked which of us wanted to be excused to recess early. We’ve all had that one car that stuck with us above all others, for some reason. Many of us only have memories to remind us what it was like, but there are others who are determined to shell out the dough to relive the experience. Carlos Leos’ love affair with his ’67 Riviera had persisted long after he sold it. Then he was able to snap up another and it was deja vu all over again.

1967 buick riviera center console 007

After Carlos’ neighbor located a rough but running ’67, Carlos took it home and began the teardown. Since this is one car that came from the factory looking good, Carlos opted not to deviate too much from stock configuration. Underneath, the hydraulic setup consists of two Homies pumps, four Delta dumps, six solenoids, and four batteries with 8-inch cylinders at all four corners. The original Wildcat motor and automatic trans were rebuilt. It’s all riding on 14×7 Truespoke wheels with 5.20 Premium Sportway rubber.

1967 buick riviera achilles last stand 001

As an auto painter by trade, Carlos and his two buddies Rudy, aka “Burrito,” and Fabian took the car down to bare metal, shaved the emblems, painted it in a brilliant House of Kolor Candy Tangerine, added ghost patterns, and metalflaked the roof, which was also given a 42-inch moonroof by Carlos’ friend Juan. Danny D did up the car with his custom pinstriping, and the finished product definitely does the old Rivi justice.

1967 buick riviera truespoke wheel 010

Inside the interior was kept true to original with tan tweed with upholstery on the seats by Francisco, aka “Pancho” (RIP), and Carlos took care of the door panels, headliner, and dashpad. A Pioneer head unit and speakers, along with a Sony Xplod subwoofer brings the sounds into the modern age and installed by Little George.

1967 buick riviera steering wheel 011

When going into the build, Carlos wanted to prove to himself that he had one more in him. Since he believes this may be the last car he ever builds, he gave it the name “Achilles Last Stand.” If it is in fact his last build, the effort truly speaks for itself. He’d like to send thanks to his wife and kids for putting up with his build and Burrito and Fabian for their help (and headaches) throughout the process. We hope to see all 430 ci of it tearing up the road until he has an epiphany and decides he isn’t quite done yet and it’s time to build another car.

1967 buick riviera trunk lid 038 1967 buick riviera passenger side profile 044 1967 buick riviera headlight 050

1967 Buick Riviera

Vehicle Nickname
Achilles Last Stand

Owner
Carlos Leos

1967 buick riviera carlos leos 051

City/State
Los Angeles, CA

Club
Groupe

1967 buick riviera groupe club plaque 004

Engine
Stock 430 V-8 and automatic trans

Body/Paint
Bodywork and House of Kolor Candy Tangerine paint by owner, Burrito, and Fabian; pinstriping by Danny D; shaved emblems; 42-inch sunroof

1967 buick riviera tan tweed interior 008

Suspension
Two Homies pumps, four Delta dumps, six solenoids, four batteries, and 8-inch cylinders

Sound System
Pioneer 6x9s in the back, 5-inch front, Sony Xplod 10-inch subwoofer

1967 buick riviera steering wheel 014

Interior
Tan tweed by Pancho

Wheels/Tires
14×7 Truespokes / Premium Sportway 5.20s

1967 buick riviera roof 039 1967 buick riviera front grill 042 1967 buick riviera door handle 033

Pillar of Style

Buick originally began giving existing car models the Riviera name to designate a pillarless hardtop. It began with the Roadmaster and also encompassed the Super and Electra models until the Riviera became its own model in 1963. They were introduced with one of Buick’s famed Nailhead motors until 1967 when the Nailhead was discontinued and the 430 was introduced, which only had a three-year production run. The ’67 version had a monstrous 211-inch wheelbase and weighed approximately 4,200 pounds. A bevy of safety features were thrown onto the ’67 version, including an energy-absorbing steering column, non-protruding control knobs, four-way hazard lights, locking seatbacks, shoulder belt anchors, and a dual circuit hydraulic braking system. The Riviera was finally discontinued in 1999 and although concept cars to revitalize interest in the model have been debuted, Buick has not made definitive plans to bring the model back into production.

1967 buick riviera front bumper 049

The post 1967 Buick Riviera – One for the Road appeared first on Lowrider.


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