5 Cruise-Worthy Cars We’d Take on a Road Trip Before Winter

Eddy Eckart

If you follow this site, you won’t be surprised to learn that our staffers have their hands in many different automotive projects—some glamorous, some not, and certainly more than we have time to write about in a given week! We always keep each other up to date on Slack, and one of the most recent events we celebrated was the return of a rather magnificent Buick to the garage of our managing editor, Eddy Eckart. He recently inherited the car from a family member, has been working on it himself, and enlisted the help of a shop to help get it over the finish line. Stay tuned for a more detailed story on the Centurion, but here’s what makes the car special in his own words:

“I think the Centurion showed up at the right time—I’m not sure I’d have been ready for it earlier in my life. Until now, I liked the idea of personal luxury coupes and convertibles—for others. Maybe it’s the family ties, or that I’m more open to the fact that steering feel and a crisp chassis aren’t the be-all end-all. There’s no rush in this car, and that’s the joy—look out over that long hood, crank the tunes, and just be in the moment.”

It didn’t take long for the rest of us to start imagining the road trips we would take if we had something as magnificently comfortable as Eddy’s Buick, so we decided to make our musings the subject of this week’s staff list. Our discussion started with ’70s personal luxury and meandered into many different approaches to the general theme of luxurious motoring. Take a gander at our choices, and feel free to add your favorite personal luxury coupe (or convertible) in the comments below!

1970 Chevrolet Impala

Chevrolet

There is something about the Impalas of the late 1960s and early 1970s that has always captured me and it’s forever been on the top of my list for a trip with three friends. Just start somewhere warm and go somewhere else warm and never put the top up. Cruise back roads, switch out drivers, and do our best to move at 55mph or slower whenever possible. If there was a car for the journey and not the destination, to me that’s a 1970 Impala convertible. — Kyle Smith

1955–59 Bentley Continental by Mulliner

1957 bentley continental mulliner personal luxury
Broad Arrow

I know the personal luxury car is often understood to be an American thing, but for this dream cruise, you’d find me luxuriating like a boss behind the wheel of a 1955–59 Bentley Continental with fastback coachwork by H.J. Mulliner. They are gorgeous cars from any angle, and equipped with a 4.9-liter six that purrs along at modern speeds, power windows, air conditioning, an adjustable suspension, gorgeous wood veneers, and some plush leather seating, they certainly make a strong case as the pinnacle of 1950s luxury. — Stefan Lombard

1993–98 Lincoln Mark VIII

Lincoln Mark VIII
Sajeev Mehta

As an owner of multiple personal luxury coupes (PLCs) and American land yachts in general, I hate to say it, but I need the models from the tail end of the era for a road trip.

Here’s my issue: older PLCs have lost their once-unassailable levels of comfort on modern roads at modern speeds. Time has passed them by. I could lament this handing of the torch all day, but the biggest concern for me is the need constant course correction at the speeds I drive in Texas (i.e. 70mph or more).

All that course correction is not relaxing, not to mention acceleration and braking isn’t terribly great in those conditions either. PLCs from the good old days weren’t designed for these parameters. But the second-to-last holdout of the genre nailed it: the 1993-98 Lincoln Mark VIII.

Everything that a PLC from their zenith could do is done better in a Mark VIII. Highway speeds are a snap with a long bullet nose and a 32-valve engine that accelerates with gusto and verve that can’t be touched by a big block with PLC-worthy gearing or an imported luxury coupe of the era (looking at you Lexus SC 400). Speed-sensitive steering means you set it and forget it, muscles can and will relax. Computer engineering of everything from the rear-wheel drive chassis to the braking system and the fully independent air suspension means its essentially impossible to get a better ride anywhere else. The Mark VIII has many of the technological benefits we appreciate in new vehicles but in a slick, not-CUV package that hugs the road like a true PLC.

An honorable mention must go to the V8 or Supercharged Thunderbird whence the Mark VIII came…but don’t take my word for it, as their marketing tagline said “Drive Everything Else First.” — Sajeev Mehta

1973 Plymouth Road Runner

1973 Plymouth Road Runner vintage ad
Flickr / Alden Jewell

I suspect I’m expected to pick one of the cars I’ve test-driven over the years, but I won’t. I’d like to have back my 1973 Plymouth Road Runner, 400-cubic-inch V-8 with a so-thirsty Thermoquad carb and a Hurst pistol-grip four-speed and DeeCee, the One Who Got Away, on the other side of the blue vinyl bench seat. Was it really as good a road-trip car as I remember, or am I influenced by the trip we took where she said she loved me? Don’t care, and that’s my answer. — Steven Cole Smith

Lexus SC 400

1996 Lexus SC400
Ronan Glon

I’m a sucker for 1990s Japanese machinery, and although I haven’t ever given much thought to the idea of a personal luxury coupe, the Lexus SC 400 would be my pick, hands down.

I absolutely adore the 4.0-liter 1UZ-FE V-8 that the SC came with. That motor is an engineering masterpiece. I had one in a 1997 Lexus LS 400, and to this day, it’s the only car that I’ve ever owned that I would take back in a heartbeat, and possibly at an upcharge.

I’d get the benefit of that dead-reliable engine and the competence of a young, hungry Lexus brand that was laser-focused on nailing every little detail of a luxury car. It would be stylish, swift, and uneventful for years at a time. What’s more luxurious than peace of mind? — Nate Petroelje

1977–90 Aston Martin V8 Vantage

aston martin v8
Aston Martin

I’m going to follow the lead of Stefan and go the European route for my luxurious cruise-mobile. My criteria of luxury are simple: A richly powerful V-8 complemented by oodles of luscious-smelling leather and wood. Unlike Nate, I will set practicality and reliability aside and choose with my heart: The first V-8-powered Vantage built by Aston Martin (1977–1990). I’ve always thought these cars are incredibly handsome, and I’d love the chance to answer the question: Would I love them as much as I do now after doing a road trip in one? — Grace Houghton

aston martin v8
Aston Martin

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Comments

    I’ve had a number of convertibles through the years but the coolest cruisers were my 64 Impala, 73 Delta 88 and 75 Caprice Classic.
    Tremendous rides

    My daily driver is a 1965 Poppy red Mustang convertible. It’s only off the road when they start to put down salt on the roads in winter. I just did a 40 mile shopping trip to get provisions before the crazies from the city (NYC) start coming up later this Friday afternoon and glog up the roads. It was a fun excursion driving in a T-shirt with the top down in November. It’s been my main ride since the 80’s and it’s paid for.

    I really liked my 1969 Thunderbird for comfortable cruising. The 429 had some get up and go when it was needed. So, my vote is for a 67 to 69 Thunderbird.

    I’d take my ‘95 Prelude SRV on a road trip any day over the over-teched and overweight daily drivers I own.

    Yes, one is a bulky Honda Pilot tipping the scales at a portly 5000 pounds; and the other is my Acura TLX with the same 3.5 V6 and all wheel drive.

    The Prelude is the perfect combination of comfort and performance and just enough luxury. By contrast my early Miata is too much fun for more than a day trip.

    Nice to have choices though!

    As I matured my old carcass started to rebel against heavy duty suspensions and deafening interiors. One day I got to ride in a 1966 Corvette and a 1966 Corvair. What an eye opener. The Corvair handled as well, albeit not as quick to 60MPH, but it rode well and was more comfortable than the Corvette. Later I got to drive a 1965 Corvair convertible on some slow canyon roads with the top down and it was FUN! I bought a 1966 convertible basket case as a retirement project to fix up. No regrets.

    Oh, you got me on the 73 Road Runner 400 4-speed. Those are my favorite cars, 73-74 Runners. Most people ignore them, but they are the best.

    Seeing the articles opening photo it reminded me of my boss that had a spotless 1973 Buick Centurion convertible, last year of production, back in ‘75 and every once in a while this lucky 19 yr old, beater VW driving kid was able to drive it back a few miles to his home after taking a cab to go pick him up after an “extended” lunch. The car which I believe was a 455 ci literally floated along Chicago’s Lake Shore Drive.
    I was never a fan of the voiture décapotable for a number of reasons and of course having a substantial coiffure needing frequent management – but the ride was incredible and unforgettable.
    I guess the new land yachts today have a considerable ride enjoyment factor but the analog classic have magic with memories.

    Best cruise in my 1999 SAAB 9000SE….Toronto to Chicago in less than 7 hours in comfort and smooth ride and still had gas in the tank on arrival!!

    We like our 65 Barracuda with the big back glass. If it’s cool and sunny out, it is like being in a oven from the sun. No heat required and nice and toasty.

    I have to vote for my 2004 Jaguar XJR. Super smooth, quiet, great seats, beautiful handling, and a supercharged smidge under 400hp… what’s not to like? Too new? I had both the earlier XJR models, and they were great, too!

    Taking the long view and just comparing how driving curtesy and respect for fellow motorists has declined to its current status from decades ago, has more of an affect on stress levels than most of the machinery one could pilot.

    Since I learned to drive in our high school’s 1970 Impala four-door hardtop, I just might be partial to the Impala convertible. 350 or 454, but no small-block 400, please.

    As for the Centurion, well, I would much rather have its predecessor, the Wildcat – a 1970 convertible, with its high-compression 455, would be just fine!

    I loved the powertrain on my Mark 8, but the air suspension did not love California roads. It only felt good on a brand new freeway. Turned it in for a Riviera after 20,000 miles……got 225,000 out of the Riv before it was the filling in a sandwich accident.

    I was USAF Captain, stationed @ Naval Air Station Key West ( Sorry…very tough duty!). I drove a ’73 Road Runner, B5 Blue w/red radar stripes and white interior. Red, White, and Blue…. Navy called me Captain America. I needed to drive to Miami for numerous duty assignments and that RR was a great cruiser.

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