Autobuff Year 1987 Magazine Back Issues
1982198319841985198619871988
- All New Swimwear Issue!
- Super - Bad Street Machines
- Bikini-Clad Beauties Frameable Centerspread
- Cars, Cars, And More Cars!
- Dream Machine '69 Blown Mach I Mustang
- The Executioner '84, 431 C.I. Olds Cutlass
- Grand Illusion '73 Z-28
- Special Delivery '69 433 C.I. Firebird
- Nasty Nova 406 C.I. Street Burrier
- Kentucy Brandy '65 Malibu SS
- Flame Thrower Blown '72 Striptarts
- Bad Omen Mean Injected Z/28
- Special Vette Coverage America's Best, Meanest, Baddest Street Machines!
- Jumbo Centerspread Luscious Ladies
- Automotive Action From Cover-To-Cover!
- MuscleCar Test: 1978 Police Special Nova
- Autobuff's Selection Of The Six
- Best MuscleCars Ever Made
- Street Machines Street Rods... And A Whole Lot More!
- Super Tough Street Machines!
- Lotsa Lovely Ladies
- Pulsating Pavement Pounders
- Full Color Centerspread
- Special Cruise Mate Of The Year!
- Street Machine Madness
- More Cars, More Color, More Foxy Ladies... What More Could You Want
- America's Musclemachine Magazine!
- More Beautiful Color Features
- Mouth-Waterin Centerspread
- America's Finest Street Machines
- Buy, Sell & Swap Section More Beautiful Cruise - Mates
- America's Finest Street Machines!
- Camaros Mustangs Corvettes T-Birds Etc...
- Fantastic Centerspread And A Whole Lot More!
1982198319841985198619871988
AutoBuff was published by Dale Naef and Carnaby Communications Corporation in Minneapolis, MN and later Atlanta, GA. It was started in late 1982 and published continuously into 1987. With the tag line, "The Magazine for the Adult Automotive Enthusiast", the publishers attempted a unique magazine with muscle cars and street machines coupled with adult humor, bikini-clad or topless women, auto-related fiction, music reviews, naughtly cartoons and X-rated crossword puzzles.
The publishing team included Mr. Naef, Hollis "Holly" Hedrich and Frank Fittanto. All three had previous stints at Hot Rod, Car Craft, and/or Motor Trend magazines. The publishers also started Sports Car Illustrated in November, 1985.
The title was a curious choice for a name. In modern times, "buff" has lost a meaning -- a devotee to a subject or activity. The phrase "auto buff" was a common but now is an old term describing the target market of the automobile publishing industry. But of several other current meanings, the term still means naked. So the authors chose a somewhat clever use of both meanings.
Nudity as represented in AutoBuff is tame by today's standards. Female beauty was presented in a more natural manner in this timeframe, and this title is one of several that used nudity to sell magazines.