Oldsmobile Omega

The Oldsmobile Omega is a compact car that was manufactured and sold from 1973 through 1984 by

Oldsmobile. The name omega was used to imply the last, the end, or the ultimate limit of a set, in contrast to alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet. There were three generations of Omegas, all being badge-engineered Chevrolet models, and each of the three using one of two GM X platformarchitectures: The Omega was one of 3 X-body Chevrolet Nova clones introduced in 1973 (the Buick Apollo being the other one; the Pontiac Ventura was introduced in 1971). Naturally it shared the Nova's body and many of its mechanicals, but it had its own unique nose and tail, and, being an Oldsmobile, it had a little fancier trim than the Nova. It even borrowed the Nova's dashboard, but Olds added woodgrain trim to it for a more upscale look.
 * 1973–1979 - rear-wheel-drive, related to the Chevrolet Nova.[1]
 * 1980–1984 - front-wheel-drive, related to the Chevrolet Citation.