W-body | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | General Motors |
Also called | GM10 |
Production | 1987–2016 |
Body and chassis | |
Class | |
Layout | FF layout |
Body style(s) |
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Vehicles | Buick Century Buick LaCrosse Buick Regal Chevrolet Impala Chevrolet Impala Limited Chevrolet Lumina Chevrolet Monte Carlo Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme Oldsmobile Intrigue Pontiac Grand Prix |
Powertrain | |
Engine(s) | 122 I4 Iron Duke I4 Quad-4 I4 60° V6 Shortstar V6 High Value V6 High Feature V6 Buick V6 LS4 V8 |
Transmission(s) | 3-speed 3T40 automatic 4-speed 4T60 automatic 4-speed 4T60-HD automatic 4-speed 4T65 automatic 4-speed 4T60-E automatic 4-speed 4T65-E automatic 4-speed 4T65E-HD automatic 5-speed Getrag 282 manual 5-speed Getrag 284 Manual 6-speed 6T70 automatic |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase |
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Chronology | |
Predecessor | |
Successor |
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The W-platform (also known as the W-body) was a General Motors automotive platform underpinning both mid size and full-size front-wheel drive cars — across the platform's three generations from 1987-2016.
Code named GM10, the program began development in 1982 under Chairman Roger B. Smith and debuted in 1987 with the Pontiac Grand Prix, Buick Regal, and Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme coupés — with the four-door sedan body style introduced for 1990.
The 1997–2005 2nd Generation, or W2 Platform, used both a 110.5 in full-size wheelbase as well as a 109 in mid-size wheelbase.
From 2005-2016, the W3 Platform used a 110.5 in, full-size wheelbase in sedan and coupe configurations, including for the Pontiac Grand Prix (2004-2008), Buick LaCrosse/Allure (2005-2009), Chevrolet Impala/Impala Limited (2005-2016) and Chevrolet Monte Carlo (2000-2007) — each with high performance V8 variants.