•
244 DLS (1977–1978): Export model to the former
German Democratic Republic with 264 hood and grille from 264DL. Engine B21A. Five different body paintings (solid) available. Total amount exported approx. 1,000 units. The cars were mainly sold to residents of East Germany. Sedans only. •
DLi – MY 1978 limited edition for
West Germany. DL trim; equipped with fuel-injected
B21E engine (instead of
B21A carbureted engine on standard "DL" models). Mostly sedans. •
GLi: MYs 1981 and 1982 specification for the
Netherlands. GL trim; equipped with fuel-injected
B21E engine (instead of
B21A carbureted engine on standard "GL" models there and then). Only estates. in the
Oldtimer Museum Rügen •
264 TE (top executive, 1976–1981): A
limousine version of the 264; many now reside in Germany as 135 production models, two in
landaulet form, were converted and exported to the former
German Democratic Republic until 1984 for transporting government officials, who would neither use the small
Trabant or
Wartburg models nor import West German autos such as
BMWs and
Mercedes-Benzes. As a result of the number of politicians seen driving to and from their preferred home town in Volvo 264 TEs, the East German public nicknamed
Wandlitz Volvograd. •
245 T (transfer) (1977–early 1980s): An extended wheelbase station wagon designed to have additional rows of seats for use as taxi or rural school bus. These cars had the same wheelbase as the 264 top executive. •
262C/coupé by
Bertone (1978–1981): This had custom body work and interior from Bertone. The exterior coach building of these two-door saloons consisted of a chopped roof (2.25in shorter than 242) and a more raked windscreen. The 1980 & 1981 models were badged
coupé instead of
262C. These cars were further characterized by additional Bertone badges on the front wings. Mostly built in left hand drive form, right hand drive vehicles are very rare. •
242 GT (1978–1980, until 1981 in Australia): Sport model with tuned sport suspension and a fuel injected engine. All US models were Mystic Silver metallic with black and red racing stripes going from the hood to the side to the trunk. Special black corduroy interior with red stripes. 1980 Canadian models were available in black with red pinstripes along the side of the car, in addition to the US model silver. Only 200 black GTs were made. The model was created as Volvo in the US had enjoyed a sportier image and though Volvo now felt too safe and boring. Due to short time and budget constraints they had to make the most with small means. It used the same B21E (B21F in North America) engine as the GL model but it received ventilated front disc brakes, The chassis was improved with front braces, strengthened stabilizers and 30% harder springs than a regular DL. It changed the car from being prone to understeer to being prone to oversteer, something that was often shown in advertising pictures. 3M had approached Volvo about new stripes that would not fade or get damaged in automatic car washes. All 242GTs came in silver metallic with stripes in black and red-orange. Another design change is that decor that was normally chromed was black and vice versa. It had fog lights in the grille as standard and a front spoiler. For the first time in a Volvo the headliner was black. The seats were in black corduroy with red-orange stripes. The dashboard got a central tachometer. In 1979 it got the new high-compression B23E engine. The majoritry of GT model cars were M46 manual transmission, but some Australian market cars did have a BW55 3-speed automatic transmission swapped into them by the importer. •
GLT Turbo (1981–1985): Replaced the GT as the sporty model, equipped with a turbocharged engine, with the 760T intercooler from late 1983, following the sale of the 500 FIA Evolution cars, which were the first 240Ts to be fitted with this uprated intercooler as standard. The two-door model was available 1981–1984; four-door sedans available late 1981-early 1985 and wagons available 1982-early 1985. Came with new black trim as opposed to the popular chrome trim found on the GLs (grill, door trim, door handles, tail light sills and lens dividers). All came factory stock with 15" Virgo alloy wheels. •
240 SE (1991–1993): Late, runout edition for certain markets, only for 1991 in the United States. Typically with GL or GLT interior trim but without the performance and handling modifications. Usual equipment was ABS, power mirrors, central locking, tachometer, 14" "Scorpius" alloy rims, all-black grille and trim. Roof rails on wagon model. •
Police (1981–1985): A special edition 240 aimed at the Swedish police, but also made in right-hand-drive form and used by some British constabularies. It was effectively a 240GLT with vinyl, rather than cloth, trim, steel wheels and no sunroof. •
240 Polar (1991–1993) – Austerely equipped entry level version for certain European markets such as Italy (1991), Belgium and the Netherlands (1992–1993). Italian spec. always,
BeNeLux spec. very often with the
B200F engine (instead of the
B230F). Cloth interior instead of tricot plush on
GL-badged vehicles. Another Polar version was earlier (1986) available in the German market. •
240 Super Polar (1992–1993), for Italian market. Well-equipped version with black leather upholstery, power windows all around, air conditioning, and cross-spoke aluminium wheels. Three different metallic paints to choose between, all-black trim instead of chrome. Only available with the
B200F engine. There was also some Rare Wagon only Super Polars equipped with special side graphics, full car width front Bullbar and steel grilles over the rear tail lights. •
240 Classic (1992–93): European markets from the 1992 model year; Swiss market cars were fitted with the B230FX engine. For the North American market, only 1,600 were produced in April and May 1993, half wagons and half sedans. European Classics have fully equipped interior with wood dash trim and "Classic" badges on hatch/deck lid. In addition to the European equipment, the 1,600 North American Classics have body-matched painted grilles and side mirrors, special 14" alloy wheels, production-number plaque on the dash, and special paint colors — ruby red or metallic dark teal green. •
Limited – (1993); very similar to the Classic, but not numbered and with a brass plaque instead. •
240 GL (1992): North American market. Slightly different from the early 1975–1989 GL model, more like the 1993 Classic and the 1991 SE model. Only available in 244 sedan body style. •
240 Torslanda (1992–1993) – Station wagons only, these cars can be identified by
Tørslanda badging (a deliberate, Scandinavian-looking misspelling of the town where they were built), tinted windows, plastic exterior trim, multi-spoke 15" alloy wheels, and full-length body striping above the rocker panels. Three body colours were available, either red, white, or silver. Simply equipped, the only features were heated front seats, power steering and the standard heating systems. The Torslanda was sold in Great Britain as a limited run special edition to mark the rundown of 240 production. •
240 family edition: Entry level cars for the German market from 1990 to 1993. Simplified interior with cloth upholstery (instead of tricot plush on "GL"-models). No heated front seats as standard but all equipped with headlamp wipers and fixed black roof rails. No sedans. Shipped with petrol-fired
B230F engine or
D24 diesel engine. All badged
240. •
240 Tack: Limited edition in 1992–93 to phase out the 240 series in Japan;
tack means "thank you" in Swedish. Tricot plush trim, five body paintings to choose. Sedans and estates. All units with
B230F engine. At the same time a more upmarket limited edition badged "Classic" was offered. Same five paintings as "Tack" available, but shipped with black leather upholstery, wood trim on the dash board and "Corona" alloy wheels. Also engine
B230F. Sedans and estates as well.
Anniversary special editions •
244 DL Anniversary (1977): Volvo released this model to celebrate its fiftieth anniversary. Based on the 244DL, the anniversary car was finished in metallic silver with a black and gold band around the waistline. Around 50 were sold in ten different countries, taking the total number produced up to 500. •
264 Anniversary (1977) Volvo released this model to celebrate its fiftieth anniversary. Based on the 264, the anniversary car was finished in metallic silver with a black and gold band around the waistline. Numbers produced unknown. •
240 DL Jubileum (1987): Volvo released this model to celebrate its sixtieth anniversary. Like the fiftieth anniversary edition, it was based on the 240 DL series, only this time it was available as both a saloon and an estate. •
244 Thor (1979–1980) Around 300 were produced for the UK market and this spec lay somewhere near the GLE spec. Noticeable extras fitted as standard were, metallic black paint, premium stereo, auto box, black cloth seats, front electric windows and corona alloy wheels and fuel injection. Noticeable exclusions for a limited edition premium model were, power steering, electric rear windows and air conditioning. == Concept models ==