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2006 Pontiac Gto Base Coupe 2-door 6.0l on 2040-cars

Year:2006 Mileage:62422
Location:

Talladega, Alabama, United States

Talladega, Alabama, United States
Advertising:

2006 Pure Stock Pontiac GTO Beautiful Cyclone Gray Metallic (no dings) LS2 Z06 Corvette Engine w/ 400 HORSEPOWER, 400 FT/LBS TORQUE w/ Brand New Bosch Platinum Spark Plugs Automatic trans w/ OD Independent Rear Suspension w/ Locking Rear Differential Black Interior w/ Power Leather Bucket Seats 4-Wheel ABS 4-Wheel Disc Brakes (New Front Pads and Rotors) A/C (new compressor) Power Quick Ratio Steering Blaupunkt AM/FM Stereo w/ 6CD Changer Adjustable Leather Steering Wheel w/ Sound System Controls 18'' Factory Aluminum Wheels Plus V-Rated Tires Auto On-Off Headlights Auxiliary Power Outlet Cruise Control Daytime Running Lights Air Bags (driver,passenger,side) Illuminated Vanity Mirrors Driver and Passenger Lumbar Adjustment Fog Lamps Front and Rear Factory Floor Mats Front Reading Lamps Intermittent Wipers Keyless Entry Power Door Locks Power Mirrors Power Windows w/ Auto-Up Rear Defrost Rear Spoiler Remote Trunk Release Traction Control Trip Computer Vehicle Anti-Theft System New Interstate Battery, New Radiator, Hoses, Thermostat and Cap New Front Bushings and Control Arms  62,400 responsible adult driven. The motor and transmission been rebuilt with paper work in hand so the car only have 400 miles on the motor and the trans. The motor was rebuilt in march 2014 and trans in april of 2014 by a certified shop. The reason for the rebuild of the engine is because the valves were taping. A great collector for the year 06 the last of the GTO in great condition my loss your gain. (256)223-2383

Auto Services in Alabama

We Buy Junk Cars ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Junk Dealers, Recycling Centers
Address: Joppa
Phone: (205) 907-6646

Used Tire World ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Recap, Retread & Repair, Tire Dealers
Address: Rainsville
Phone: (256) 533-0194

Thompson Automotive ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Towing
Address: 122 Barrett Rd, Newell
Phone: (770) 258-5114

Texaco Xpress Lube ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Auto Oil & Lube, Gas Stations
Address: 4496 Montevallo Rd, Mountain-Brook
Phone: (205) 956-8180

Serra Kia ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers
Address: 630 Fieldstown Rd, Watson
Phone: (205) 631-2277

Robert`s Auto Service ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 570 Highway 84 E, Fort-Rucker
Phone: (334) 598-2880

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Junkyard Gem: 1991 Pontiac Grand Am LE with Quad 4 Engine

Wed, May 9 2018

GM introduced the N-Body compact platform with the Oldsmobile Calais and Pontiac Grand Am for the 1985 model year and continued building N-based cars through 1998. Most of these cars weren't interesting from an enthusiast standpoint, but a handful rolled off the assembly line with raucous DOHC Oldsmobile Quad 4 engines and manual transmissions, and those cars were plenty of fun. Here's a 1991 Grand Am with that rare setup, photographed in a self-service yard in California's Central Valley. The base engine in the 1991 Grand Am was the 110-horsepower, 2.5-liter pushrod Iron Duke, an engine that might have been fine on a Romanian tractor in 1953 but had no place on an American street car as the 21st century approached. Fortunately, GM started bolting the modern 2.3-liter DOHC Quad 4 engine into 1988 cars, and this was a proper four-cylinder. The Quad 4 ran a little rough and uncivilized, and it had its share of reliability problems, but you could rev the piss out of it and it made good power. In 1991, this engine was rated at 180 hp. That made this 2,592-pound sedan pretty quick. Unfortunately, the slushboxization of America had progressed with depressing rapidity during the 1980s, and by 1991 most Grand Am buyers — even the ones who opted for the Quad 4 — chose the automatic transmission. That didn't happen with this car, though — it boasts a rugged Getrag 5-speed instead of the happiness-amputating three-speed automatic. Yes, that's the kind of odometer reading you'd expect to see on an Accord or Maxima from this era. Someone loved this car and took care of it. Here we see an interesting mix of 1980s and 1990s car-radio technology. CD players in cars were still costly luxury items in 1991, seldom seen in affordable cars like the Grand Am, while 1980s-style slider-style EQ controls were on the way out. This Delco unit straddles both decades nicely. I seek out Quad 4-equipped cars during my junkyard travels, and I have photographed quite a few: this '89 Cutlass Calais, this '90 Cutlass Calais, this '90 Grand Am, this '91 Quad 442, this '93 Achieva SCX, and this '98 Cavalier Z24. It's a shame that Buick never put the Quad 4 in the Reatta, which was a fine car ruined by a somnolent and obsolete V6. The music in this ad is even more early-1990s than Crystal Pepsi. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings.

There's a 'Knight Rider' movie in development

Mon, Aug 17 2020

James Wan, who has directed films from the first "Saw" to "Aquaman," with "Furious 7" in between, and produced even more projects, is producing a new Knight Rider movie according to a report in Deadline. Just in case there's a reader who doesn't know, Knight Rider was one of the seminal trio of iconic-car shows from the 1980s, along with "The Dukes of Hazzard" and "Miami Vice." The series lasted 90 episodes that ran from 1982 to 1986, following the crime-fighting exploits of Michael Knight, a man who crusaded for justice after being shot in the face. Billionaire Walton Knight hired Michael to work with the Knight Foundation, where Michael helps develop the Knight Industries Two Thousand, a Pontiac Trans-Am with AI that can talk, drive more than 200 miles per hour, and could teach MI6's Q Branch about gadgetry. Collider described David Hasselhof's Michael Knight as "crimefighter by trade and wearing-a-leather-jacket-with-no-shirt-underneath innovator by hobby." The show made such an impression that there was a series spinoff called "Code of Justice," two TV movies in 1991 and 1994, a convention called KnightCon, and a series reboot on NBC that lasted for one season from 2008 to 2009, as well as stores full of action figures and models and literature, YouTube fan-made trailers and movies, and this wacky German-dubbed short "Knight Rider" film starring Hasselhoff. We don't know anything about the new movie's plot yet, other than that it's set in the present. T.J. Fixman, better known for now as a video game writer who worked on franchises like "Ratchet and Clank" and "Resistance: Fall of Man," has been attached to write, with a mandate to keep "the anti-establishment tone of the original." With matters still early in development there's no telling when the movie will hit theaters, and Wan's probably got his hands busy with the new MacGuyver reboot for CBS, anyway. Now that there's already been a Knight Industries 2000 and 3000, that gives us plenty of time to imagine — in a world where 200-mph hypercars powered by everything sprout like weeds and even Cannonballers are using military-like equipment — what would a Knight Industries Four Thousand possess? And would it be called KIFT? Related Video: This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings.

Pontiac Aztek rises from the ashes of infamy in Firebird Trans Am guise

Thu, Apr 9 2020

What if the Pontiac Aztek, one of the most widely ridiculed vehicles ever built, was reimagined with a little flair from one of the former brand’s more legendary cars? Well, it turns out that someone not only came up with that idea, but followed up on it. And so, we present to you the Pontiac Aztek Firebird Trans Am, uh, trim package? ItÂ’s not real, of course, but it comes from Abimelec Arellano, an Hermosillo, Mexico-based car designer with too much time on his hands who goes by the name Abimelec Design. Arellano redesigned the midsize SUVÂ’s wimpy front fascia to surprising success by simply adding widened fender flares and perhaps modernizing the headlights. He also went all-in embracing the AztekÂ’s abrupt, flattened rear end by removing the rear bumper lip, adding a slightly more aggressive rear spoiler to boot. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. Elsewhere, the dominating and cheap-looking gray plastic under-cladding is gone in favor of body-color panels. Arellano also added some probably larger Pontiac Snowflake wheels with gold accents that really make them pop and play well against the signature Firebird decal dominating the hood. Commenters generally fall into one of two buckets. As one put it, “I never thought the Aztek could look this good.” Others implored Arellano to do a version with a T-top. Or as one Autoblog editor put it, “So it turns out the reason the Aztek was a laughingstock failure is that it didnÂ’t come in a Smokey and the Bandit Edition. Somewhere, a dude who got shouted down in a product-planning meeting years ago is vindicated.” Sold between 2001 and 2005, the Aztek arguably reached the pinnacle of its notoriety as the metaphor for the drab, underachieving life of Walter White in AMCÂ’s meth drama, “Breaking Bad.” It came equipped with a 3.4-liter V6 that made 185 horsepower and sent it through a four-speed automatic to the front wheels, with an all-wheel drive version also available. The Aztek may have the last laugh, especially if it gets a screaming chicken. “The fact it was a controversial design and didnÂ’t sell well will make it an object of curiosity from a historical standpoint many years from now,” McKeel Hagerty, president and CEO of classic-car insurer Hagerty Insurance, told Autoblog back in 2016.