Buick Graphic Control Center In-Depth Look|Buick Electronic Control Center|CRT|Touchscreen

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  • čas přidán 4. 10. 2018
  • In this video, we are taking a look at this simply amazing and very advanced CRT Display in the Buick Reatta known as the Electronic Control Center. In the Buick Riviera, this was also known as the Graphic Control Center. While looking very dated today, this was outstanding technology back in the 80's, and with them becoming more and more rare, it was awesome to bring this system to life in this car, and, in twist of irony, digitally preserve this relic from the 1980's.
    *Please note that I am not employed by any dealership NOR and I selling any vehicle depicted on this page! All dealer info is shown at the beginning of the video along with contact information. If you have questions regarding price or availability, please contact the appropriate dealership tagged in the video!*
    Neighborhood Car Reviews gives you an alternative look at the already impressive list of car videos that are online. What we do is a first-person walk-around of the car. We show features and details that are on the particular model being shown. Performance data, safety equipment and the like are usually not shown due to the already enormous amount of videos that cover the aforementioned topics.
    We like to cover everything from classics to high-end and everything in between.
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Komentáře • 129

  • @SDav21
    @SDav21 Před 5 lety +107

    Amazing honestly. I can imagine what people must have thought when they got in this car. It must've been so wow.

    • @sofadviolator
      @sofadviolator Před 3 lety +5

      actually many people hated them. Plus, the cost to replace them was around $2000 (BIG money back then and now). I was around 15 when these came out and I was enthralled with them, so I bought myself a 1988 a year ago.

    • @greeniembush4106
      @greeniembush4106 Před 3 lety +5

      Man they was a head of there time on the screen.

    • @petermuller161
      @petermuller161 Před 3 lety +2

      @@sofadviolator I see why people would have hated these considering that besides the cool factor its better to just have a plain old gauge.

    • @CynHicks
      @CynHicks Před 2 lety

      I was but I was a kid so...

    • @stemid85
      @stemid85 Před 2 lety +2

      The CRT warm up sequence when touching the door felt especially scifi to me for some reason. Just imagine that the show Knight Rider was on TV in 86 so for the few people who could afford this system the advances must have felt like real scifi yet somehow attainable and not as far into the future as they ended up being.

  • @digimon916
    @digimon916 Před 4 lety +52

    Im a huge car and tech guy and work valet. One came in an i was like, "is that a touchscreen!?!????" losing my mind. Car drove beautifully too.

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 4 lety +8

      Yeah. They are pretty good cars, actually. GM over-engineered them, and despite them being hand-built in Lansing, they hold up extremely well over time. I have been told that the touchscreen usually outlasts the car. I don't remember who makes them, but they did an amazing job with it. Interestingly, my ears have a high-pitch sensitivity, and when the CRT is on and running, it emits a high-pitch tone, much like CRT televisions, and I can't spend too much time with them because I end up with a horrible headache. One reason why I haven't yet purchased a Reatta as of yet.

    • @sofadviolator
      @sofadviolator Před 3 lety +3

      @@NeighborhoodCarReviews zenith made them actually. I have an '88 and it works like a champ.

  • @richardhall9815
    @richardhall9815 Před 4 lety +68

    Amazing -- the mileage and fuel economy on this car are almost identical to mine!
    I'll let you in on a little secret. Go to the Climate screen, then hold down the OFF and WARM buttons at the same time for about 4 seconds. It'll bring up a hidden on-board diagnostics page with much more detailed status information with diagnostic codes and live data on numerous parameters from the ECM, BCM, and CRT and IPC (instrument panel cluster) controllers. This was supposed to be a screen meant for Buick service technicians to use that would be unknown to most Reatta owners and is not documented in the owner's manual; only in the service manual (a book all Reatta owners should have who want to keep their Reattas running)!

    • @theotherside931
      @theotherside931 Před 3 lety +6

      *They really built technology ahead of time.*

    • @sac3528
      @sac3528 Před 3 lety +14

      You're telling me they put a multitouch digitizer in this thing? 30 years early?

    • @ronkruzyk5108
      @ronkruzyk5108 Před rokem +1

      Will give that a try when control module is installed... Thanx...

    • @ronkruzyk5108
      @ronkruzyk5108 Před rokem +1

      @@sac3528 "and many have paid for it"!!!!....1991 & 1992 went back to "push 🔘 button" operations.......(i.e.= $128,300.00 new in 1988)????!!!!

  • @ramonayala4726
    @ramonayala4726 Před 5 lety +54

    Ahead of its time for sure

  • @Barbaroossa
    @Barbaroossa Před 10 měsíci +4

    Even to this day, this is still mind blowing. That's like finding a PC from the 1980s with a touch-screen.

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 10 měsíci +3

      100% agree! I love this obscure piece of automotive history/technology! And I love that I was able to demonstrate it in depth.

  • @toainsully
    @toainsully Před 3 lety +29

    Imagine if Buick was able to get a touchscreen onto a mobile phone

  • @MySparkle888
    @MySparkle888 Před 5 lety +14

    This brings back memories. I had a 1986 Buick Riviera I purchased from my grandfather in 1998. I though it was the best thing ever until it broke and the dealership wanted $3,000 for a new one. I found one at a junk yard that reconditioned them for a $160. I gave him the broken monitor and her have me a fixed one. Good times. The one that came with the car did not have the 6 physical button but had all soft touch buttons. The replacement did have physical buttons. It sucked in the winter trying to turn the heat on. It had the best stereo of any car I owned that is until I got my 2018 Ridgeline

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 5 lety +4

      +Anthony LaFata Ooh. The unit on yours without the 6 hard buttons was early production. Only a few of the Reatta’s had them. Most of the Rivieras has that, since it was originally designed for that car.

  • @MarEpor
    @MarEpor Před 3 lety +17

    not only is this thing revolutionary and ahead of its time, but it even has a relatively nice, clean UI with it, same with the dashboard area, kinda similar to a prius.

  • @1marcelfilms
    @1marcelfilms Před 3 lety +16

    So good it could almost pass off as a modern system with retro theme

    • @hiltonhowell3098
      @hiltonhowell3098 Před 2 lety +2

      I have a 2020 Subaru Impreza that doesn't have all the features this does!

  • @eddiiie9790
    @eddiiie9790 Před 3 lety +5

    Wayyy ahead of its time. Car software today couldn’t even do as much stuff this thing did. It’s almost like a blueprint to smartphones and CarPlay with the birthday and oil change reminders, graphic EQ, diagnostics, etc. Only here cuz I seen one at a shop nearby for $3000.

  • @Ronaldl2350
    @Ronaldl2350 Před rokem +2

    I started my technician career at a Buick dealer back in the eighties. Worked on many Reattas and Rivieras. Replaced many of those touch screens when they were still under warranty. We were a high volume Buick dealer, so we saw a lot of cars.
    It remember when they first came out, it was quite a surprise to us techs. Helped with some of the available diagnostics at the time as well.

  • @dstrong1337
    @dstrong1337 Před 3 lety +4

    Today at work i got to play with one. It is actually super responsive and the touch works very well.

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 3 lety +1

      It’s amazing how reactive they were. And how durable as well. And the ones that have stopped working can be fixed pretty cheaply by people who are restoring them. Best thing about them is no software updates, and the ergonomics and layout just work.

  • @westwasbest
    @westwasbest Před rokem +1

    I had this system in my 86 and 87 Riviera T-Type, two of the best cars I ever owned! As an electronic technician, I always found this system to be very user friendly, interesting, and one of a kind, coupled with the electroluminescent switches and legends that would light up with a 110 volt inverter behind the dash, even the turn signals would have a chime to them instead of the usual clicking, the car handled great and the seats were the best I ever sat in with the motorized thigh supports, all in all it was a wonderful car in it's time and I still find it very interesting and well-built and ahead of its time for sure.

    • @sheliaingram8377
      @sheliaingram8377 Před rokem

      I cant find a graphic control center for my 1986 buick riviera. Looked every where. Help me find one please

    • @westwasbest
      @westwasbest Před rokem

      @@sheliaingram8377 Junkyards

  • @Addiman98
    @Addiman98 Před 3 lety +4

    The start up chime sounds like a brand new 2021 Buick. 😂

  • @seshansmith
    @seshansmith Před 2 lety

    I remember my grandpa got a Buick in yeh 80s when he became president of a company and I thought the car was so amazing because it talked to you if you left the door open etc. I can smell the leather and feel the smooth quiet ride just by watching this video. I swear that car was a spaceship when I was a kid.

  • @djhaloeight
    @djhaloeight Před rokem

    My buddy had a Riveria back in the late 90s with this system. Was pretty crazy…super ahead of its time for sure!

  • @billblonco
    @billblonco Před 3 lety +4

    Lincoln had had a similar system in 85 called comtech for the mark 7 but never made it to market. It even had steering wheel controls.

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 3 lety +3

      Yes. I’ve seen that in videos, but I’ve never experienced it in person. Would love to some day!

  • @captainkaveh1
    @captainkaveh1 Před 4 lety +3

    That was the most beautiful display ever

  • @chikitabowow
    @chikitabowow Před 3 lety +1

    That is SO COOL!

  • @mikeyveloster7615
    @mikeyveloster7615 Před rokem +2

    Basically everything a Tesla Model S can do in a 1980's version, surprised this didn't catch on at the time, would have loved to have a Roadmaster or Fleetwood Brougham with a ECC

  • @CT-zc6ne
    @CT-zc6ne Před 3 lety +2

    Insane

  • @tristanmathesonsinventory2443

    The 1986 wildcat concept had it too

  • @iloper
    @iloper Před 2 lety

    Better clarity than some new supercars... And i love the font..

  • @lincoln537
    @lincoln537 Před 2 lety +2

    Whoa that is some Cyberpunk material! Love it and would rather have this than those modern systems.

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah. I’ve always been fascinated by this screen, so I was excited to be able to cover it in depth.

    • @lincoln537
      @lincoln537 Před 2 lety

      @@NeighborhoodCarReviews Thank you so much for that video! I do appreciate it!

  • @mao_eng
    @mao_eng Před 3 lety +3

    3:25 I have a 2015 Opel Astra and it beeps the same

  • @generaloranger6150
    @generaloranger6150 Před 5 lety +13

    They should have put this into the Vette. Buick owners were too conservative for touchscreen.

  • @AndyThomasStaff
    @AndyThomasStaff Před 2 lety +3

    Video starts at 3:33

  • @philtru
    @philtru Před 2 lety

    I own a white 1988 Reatta. The touch screen is very unique and cool, but sometimes impractical. When driving I keep in on gages for the tachometer. I still love the car to death and I never plan on selling it.
    The cars drive beautifully. The 4 speed 440T transmission is pretty smooth, and with regular fluid changes can easily do 250k+ miles. The car also was the first vehicle with the infamous Buick 3800. Makes about 165 hp but youre luck to get 150.
    Fun fact the original plan for this car was to be the successor of the Grand National (yes, *the* grand national) it would come with a RWD-FE turbocharged v6 and manual transmissionz I really wish they wish they did that.

  • @PopeCromwell
    @PopeCromwell Před 2 lety +7

    That warm up sequence on the dashboard: It manages to appear much more futuristic than any electronic system we have now. Perhaps because it looks much more serious than the tacky, sluggish feel I get from modern UIs. It says, 'this is real hardware and it is ready for the road, no matter what comes your way'
    It must feel like climbing into the cockpit of an X-Wing, but our modern car computers just feel like logging on to facebook. Like it is just the minimal functionality to do a job, just another crappy web page that's written by a third-rate programmer , that needs to know who I am because it wants to show me advertisements.
    Our culture was just in a more optimistic place back then. 2:51 - 'Time circuits on!'

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 2 lety +3

      I 100% agree. This is why I’ve always loved the Riviera and Reatta from this era. It was so far advanced, and the computers were incredibly expensive, but this was a time when GM experimented with everything. Even though they only lasted a couple years, it was a cool piece of automotive history.

  • @sethbingo
    @sethbingo Před rokem

    Has a more responsive touch screen than most modern cars today, it's insane what engineers were able to pull off back in the day

  • @kevinmontoya7318
    @kevinmontoya7318 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow

  • @newyorkny5023
    @newyorkny5023 Před 3 lety +3

    So they stuck a Pitboy in the radio slot huh?

  • @garbage854
    @garbage854 Před 5 lety +3

    Cool 😀

  • @Sam11747
    @Sam11747 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the KNAWLEDGE

  • @mattdrake6381
    @mattdrake6381 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow. when I clicked on the video I figured it would be from the late 90s

  • @midinotes
    @midinotes Před rokem +1

    Shame they didn't invent lower case text! 😊 I wonder what CPU they used for this?

  • @Not_Aran8276
    @Not_Aran8276 Před 3 lety +3

    Nice how much is that car cost?

  • @theotherside931
    @theotherside931 Před 3 lety +4

    *Very fast for a 1987 product.*
    *Who has the patent?*

  • @Motardebase.
    @Motardebase. Před rokem +1

    incroyable

  • @jakecain2460
    @jakecain2460 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Ya know.....my 2018 Mercedes e class doesn't even have touch screen. And here's Buick, 30 some odd years earlier, knocking it out of the park. UI is 20 times better than my Mercedes as well.

  • @sheliaingram8377
    @sheliaingram8377 Před 2 lety

    I need a 1986 graphic control screen for my buick riviera. Mine no longer works. Please help me find one.

  • @sabujpattanayek8799
    @sabujpattanayek8799 Před 2 lety +2

    3:33

  • @erpoe6420
    @erpoe6420 Před 3 lety +2

    You are probably here from daily dose of internet
    but this is a great channel and a good video

  • @vannjunkin8041
    @vannjunkin8041 Před 2 lety +2

    GM used to create some cool vehicles

  • @borg-borg-2015
    @borg-borg-2015 Před 2 lety +3

    Looks great, I guess work well too. Nowadays there is too much cpu/gpu power used on useless, distracting and silly animations, shadows, textures, blurs and transparencies - just to show a text box that says something...cut that crap - return to minimal!

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 2 lety +2

      That’s why I like this. It’s no-nonsense. It had a task, and does it flawlessly. Even by todays standards, green fluorescent display aside, it’s very modern and well laid out.

  • @LanDiEvil
    @LanDiEvil Před 3 lety +3

    Didn't David Hasselhoff have one of these in an episode of Baywatch? I'm pretty sure it had voice control or something too.

    • @revivedfears
      @revivedfears Před 3 lety +5

      You're thinking of knight rider mate 😂

  • @Jdplayz-bq4ys
    @Jdplayz-bq4ys Před 3 lety

    It’s crazy to think this but Most car manufacturers started to do this in 2009.

  • @Jwdude123
    @Jwdude123 Před 2 lety

    Ahead of its time but not ground breaking

  • @User-cb4jm
    @User-cb4jm Před 2 lety +1

    Imagine getting Carplay to work on it 😂

  • @davidinark
    @davidinark Před rokem

    But can it run Doom?

  • @mr_gamble_good
    @mr_gamble_good Před 2 lety +1

    So is your engine overheating and your oil level very low?

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 2 lety

      No. They were Service Warning Tests. It’s what would show up IF something was wrong. It’s a check to make sure the program was running as intended. The car itself was flawless.

    • @mr_gamble_good
      @mr_gamble_good Před 2 lety

      @@NeighborhoodCarReviews thank you

  • @jackvreeswijk9704
    @jackvreeswijk9704 Před 7 měsíci

    If you press the climate button and press off and warm at the same time it goes into a detailed engine diagnostic computer mode telling you everything. Service manuals tell you this not the owners manual

  • @manietemadi3989
    @manietemadi3989 Před 3 lety +1

    Everybody gangsta till the car gets a pip boy

  • @zackcharcoal5934
    @zackcharcoal5934 Před 3 lety +30

    who's here cause of Daily Dose of Internet?

  • @stevewhitestl
    @stevewhitestl Před 6 měsíci +1

    No tire level?

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před 6 měsíci

      No, Tire Pressure Monitoring wasn't really established in the 80's, so, the Reatta did not have that feature. However, it would not have been out of the realm of possibility, though! GM was doing all sorts of crazy things back then!

  • @DonWej
    @DonWej Před 3 lety +1

    ...why did they spell that button "Gages"?

    • @jamesscrivner6755
      @jamesscrivner6755 Před 2 lety

      Probably same reason the '56 Plymouth Belvedere accessory was labeled "LITER".

  • @raymondturner6784
    @raymondturner6784 Před 2 lety +1

    My 1990 model year Toronado's touchscreen was much cooler than this Buick's. There was color and navigation. Unfortunately, it also had a lackluster 3.8. The transmission went out not much past 100,000 miles. I actually really liked the car, but too much of it was too special order. I think it eventually went to a crushed :(

  • @NewsBroadcasting
    @NewsBroadcasting Před 4 lety +1

    Good video but no Mention of Toyota/Denso & Japanese companies they contributed to it to make it possible.

  • @incrediblenova938
    @incrediblenova938 Před 3 lety

    PIP-BOY! ????

  • @jamesthefisherman1060

    Things that millennials and gen z’s think didn’t come out until the 2000s

  • @planemod8399
    @planemod8399 Před 3 lety

    Brick buick

  • @Mooskers
    @Mooskers Před rokem

    All fun and games until you crash and the CRT imploded and you get xposed to x rays

  • @a.s945
    @a.s945 Před 3 lety

    Find out the way do you font read from clipboard while recording it. Either learn it or invest in technology. Otherwise new subscriber and if I were I would consider talking when pressing the buttons etc. Wojld be much more interactive in certain way.

  • @abdou6003
    @abdou6003 Před 4 lety +2

    Please give TOYOTA the credit as well as DENSO

  • @NickDalzell
    @NickDalzell Před 5 lety +7

    I remember when this came out. it was notoriously unreliable--many used Reattas with it now are dead--the display doesn't work. They removed it later on as a response. Today we have Ford SYNC and others and the history is repeating itself--both in being unreliable, and not supported or future proof--today they're still using skeuomorphism and Windows XP based software that will not have any support 5 or so years later. Should it fail it will just signal the second coming of going back to basics just as cars in the 90s did in answer to the overdone digital dashes and talking cars of the 80s did.

    • @SynSys
      @SynSys Před 5 lety +7

      It isn't unreliable nor notorious for being so.. it is 30 years old now, so any broken after even 15 years isn't really a valid complaint. Most Reatta owners have perfectly working CRTs without a rebuild. A rebuild is as little as $100. They are easily serviceable, they are aviation grade and sunlight readable. They look better in direct sunlight than any modern LCD. The software is written in Fortran4 and you will never, ever, ever see it crash due to software... ever.. People were not ready, but it worked.

    • @Father_Nature88
      @Father_Nature88 Před 5 lety +6

      This is way more reliable than todays junk! at least the car still works if it quits working lol. If I remove my infotainment system out of my Infiniti my car won’t start let alone use my climate controls.. so if my infotainment system dies I think my car has to have open heart surgery.. lol it’s sad..

    • @briankelly9347
      @briankelly9347 Před 5 lety

      Oh shut the fuck up nothing out of the 1980s tech boom wasn't unreialiblae

    • @briankelly9347
      @briankelly9347 Před 5 lety

      Sorry old man

    • @Father_Nature88
      @Father_Nature88 Před 5 lety

      Old man? Lol

  • @ronkruzyk5108
    @ronkruzyk5108 Před rokem +2

    This has been an expensive pain in the ass to analyze as it flickers/is blurry/not useable, in my 1988 Reatta. It's still at the dealership, being replaced X3, and still not fixed.....

    • @NeighborhoodCarReviews
      @NeighborhoodCarReviews  Před rokem

      I wish I knew what language it was written in. Probably Basic, but more likely C or C+. I know it used a Motorola 6800 processor. I think IBM wanted to use theirs, but not quite sure.

    • @ronkruzyk5108
      @ronkruzyk5108 Před rokem +1

      ????? Now it "MAYBE" The Electronic Control Module....@$435.00.......=$1,600.00 (control center, headlight switch, new battery, control module & labor)...."It'll fix itself & u need a headlight controller switch", say's *Neon Classes*, Willoughby, Ohio...... STAY AWAY!!!!