Hello all!
This weekend I scored my first W-body - a '94 Cutlass Supreme coupe (recently rebuilt 3.1, no rust, 107K miles). The former owner rear-ended someone with it, destroying the hood, DS fender, bumper plastics/grill, bumper "innards", and radiator. Her husband stripped the broken parts and shoved it into the garage, planning on finding others and putting it back on the road... but she divorced him first. Eighteen months and five hundred greenbacks later, it's now in MY driveway

I went to the local junkyard and yanked a radiator from a Lumina before going to get the car. It took about 20 minutes to install it, replace the coolant, and get the turn signals working - after that the 150 mile journey home then went off without a hitch (but with many strange looks from oncoming traffic).
Now that it's home, I need a front clip for it. Hollander says that only 92-97 coupes are candidates... but I suspect that if a person isn't concerned about authenticity (which I'm not), there might be others. What, for instance, is the REAL difference between coupe and sedan front-end parts? Or 88-91 versus 92-97? I've yet to get a straight answer.
Hopefully somebody here can give me a more detailed description of what swaps and what doesn't... I really don't care if the appearance is different, or if I have to change wiring for the lights - as long as the metal bolts up and the lines match I'm happy.
In specific, I've found two cars that had me curious:
First is a '95 4-door. It's straight, it's white (same as mine), and its parts are available on the cheap. Would this be doable? What would differ - and are there any showstoppers involved?
Second is a 2-door that I recalled being a '92 or so, but turned out to be an '88 upon closer examination. The parts would need painting - but again, they're there and they're cheap. Would this be a better option, or an option at all?
Also, slightly unrelated: I hear tell of a local kid who slapped an early '90s Grand Prix front clip onto a Cutlass Supreme of some sort. I'm not considering doing such a thing (there ARE limits, after all) - but does anyone care to weigh in on the validity of this rural legend?
--Keith