1964 Pontiac Gto Base 6.4l on 2040-cars
Crown Point, Indiana, United States
This GTO is a very special car and marks the first year of production for the GTO. This is a Pontiac Historic Services (PHS) Documented car. It is a numbers matching car with the exception of the transmission and shifter. The transmission was changed to an M22 Rockcrusher and the shifter is a Hurst Competition Plus 4-Speed. The color is Nocturnal Blue which was a correct color for the 1964 GTO. It was originally Grenadine Red but was changed during restoration in 1998. The car has many desirable options including the original 4 spoke wood-grain steering wheel, factory console, original 3:23 rear end, original in dash tach, original push button radio, original reverb switch and original power steering. The intake and all three carburetors on the Tri-Power are date coded for this car. Each carburetor still has the orginal tags attached. It still has the original bucket seats and bench seat in the back. The tires are BF Goodrich Radial TA's in excellent condition and have vintage American Racing wheel rims. Vehicle also includes the original jack, jack stand and jack handle/lug wrench which have been restored.
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Junkyard Gem: 2007 Pontiac G6 GT Convertible
Sun, Jan 8 2023GM's Pontiac Division sold its first convertibles during the 1927 model year (just a year after the division's creation), then proceeded to offer memorable drop-tops for most of the following 83 years. The best-selling convertible to bear Pontiac badges during our current century was the retractable-hardtop-equipped G6, available from the G6's introduction in 2006 through the second-to-last model year of 2009 (the Sunfire convertible was available just through 2000, while the Firebird convertible vanished with the demise of the slow-selling Firebird itself after 2002). Here's one of those G6 GT convertibles, found in a Denver-region boneyard after a crash ended its driving career. Mashed right front, popped airbags. This sort of damage might have been worth repairing in 2009, but not today. The 2007 G6 was available as a coupe, sedan, or convertible. All the convertibles had the GT trim level and the 3.5-liter V6 and its 224 horsepower. The MSRP on this car was $28,750 (about $42,325 in 2022 dollars), making it the most expensive G6. The power hardtop roof folded up into the trunk, leaving 1.8 cubic feet of trunk storage space with the top down. This Karmann-designed roof system made the interior much quieter than that of a traditional soft-top convertible. All G6s were built at Orion Assembly in Michigan, where Chevy Bolts are born today. The G6 was built through the 2010 model year, making it one of the very last Pontiac models (the Vibe also made it to 2010, though it was really a Toyota Matrix). In hindsight, 2007 turned out to be an ominous year for GM.
Baseball team to dress like Trans Am, complete with screaming chicken
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How to turn a Pontiac Fiero into a trackday car
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Think about it for a second. Of course, we would all like to be snaking through the curves in something exotic, but what happens when you crash or something breaks? The bills are going to mount up quickly. However, if you ball up a Fiero at the track, as long as you're not hurt, then it's not a huge tragedy.
That's basically the story of Steven Snyder in a new video from Drive starring Matt Farah. Snyder wanted to go to the track cheaply and ended up with an awesome little Fiero with a huge wing and a claimed 220 horsepower at the wheels thanks to a V6 from a Chevrolet Lumina. Check out the video to see how this pint-size Pontiac performs.