The Saturn Division spent the first half of the 1990s printing money for The General with its no-haggle pricing policy and plastic-bodied cars that only rusted in areas you couldn’t see easily, and all those cars were based on a single platform: the S Series. Today’s Junkyard Find is an example of the sporty coupe version of the first-generation Saturn S, found in a Denver-area boneyard recently.
The sedan and wagon versions of the S Series, the SL and SW, had been facelifted for the 1996 model year, but the first-generation SC with its pop-up headlights and smooth sides held on for one last year.
As we all know, the 2000s didn’t work out so well for Saturn, with the aging S Series replaced by the Opel Vectra-derived L Series and then by a bunch of machinery few were able to distinguish from other GM products. After 2010, Saturn was dead, its demise overshadowed by Pontiac’s death and its legacy not even as strong as Geo’s.
But we’re not here to mourn Saturn. We’re here to praise this SC2 for staying on the road for close to three decades and well over 250,000 miles.
This being a top-trim-level SC2, it has a twin-cam engine and a nicer interior than the SC1.
The defective hood-latch mechanism prevented me from shooting engine photos, a common problem on GM cars of this era, but we can assume that the original 1.9-liter DOHC engine and its 124 horsepower/122 pound-foot engine was still there. The transmission is the base five-speed manual; the optional automatic added $830 to the price (about $1,658 in 2024 dollars).
The (no-haggle) MSRP for this car was $13,295, or about $25,557 after inflation. That year, American car shoppers could buy a new 1996 Honda Civic DX coupe with five-speed manual for just $11,720 ($23,411 now), but that car had a mere 98 horsepower.
The Civic’s Integra sibling had three more horses than the SC2, but its price tag started at a daunting $15,460 ($30,882 today).
Of course, the ’96 Integra came with air conditioning and power windows as standard equipment. This car has neither. The $14,200 ($26,365 now) Chevy Cavalier Z24 coupe and its 150hp Quad 4 probably stole more sales from the SC2 than any Honda product ever did, anyway.
When the left-side mirror got broken off, this car’s owner fixed it with fiberglass.
The drawback to the plastic body panels was their tendency to break, especially after a decade or two of service.
Oldsmobile was gone after 2004, not long after Geo had to endure having its final two models torn away and handed to Chevrolet in 1997 and 1998. Pontiac production continued a bit longer than Saturn production, but both were dead and buried by the end of 2010. At least they outlived Isuzu by a bit here, though Saab held on for a bit longer. And, hey, Opel and Vauxhall remained in the GM Empire until fairly recently.
You couldn’t even find used Saturns in 1996, because nobody wanted to sell them (some suspension of disbelief required, though the Cult of Saturn was still in effect at that time).
Jet pilots prefer the SC2 flight simulator.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
1996 Saturn SC2 in Colorado wrecking yard.
[Images: The author]
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