Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

2002 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am Coupe 2-door 5.7l on 2040-cars

US $27,000.00
Year:2002 Mileage:8877 Color: Silver /
 Black
Location:

Murfreesboro, Tennessee, United States

Murfreesboro, Tennessee, United States
Transmission:Manual
Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:5.7L 350Cu. In. V8 GAS OHV Naturally Aspirated
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Private Seller
VIN: 2G2FV22G122153042 Year: 2002
Make: Pontiac
Model: Firebird
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Trim: Trans Am Coupe 2-Door
Options: T-Tops, Leather Seats, CD Player
Drive Type: RWD
Safety Features: Anti-Lock Brakes, Driver Airbag, Passenger Airbag
Mileage: 8,877
Power Options: Power Mirrors, Power Hatch, Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Locks, Power Windows, Power Seats
Sub Model: Trans AM
Exterior Color: Silver
Interior Color: Black
Number of Doors: 2
Number of Cylinders: 8
Condition: UsedA vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections.Seller Notes:"99% Perfect and Flawless in every detail"

Purchased Feb 2012 with 1750 miles on the odometer. I'm a 53 yr old professional male, the only driver, always garaged. I have never spun the tires, they cost too much and it's hard on the car. Bought from a private collector who never drove the car. I bought this to build it into a serious street machine. I have spent a year and $22,000.00 to get this Trans Am to where it is today. I'm a performance car builder ( GTO, Trans AMs, SRT vehicles) and enthusist with lots of experience and many cars on my resume. I will e-mail you the "build resume" on this gorgeous car for you to read, it's 4 pages and would take too much to list here.

I built this to keep as it is my last project, and planned on driving it and  being buried in it when I die. I along with the performance shop and a friend with 20 years experience who helps me with car projects went thru this car with a surgeons precision to make it what it is today. I'm probably the only person who would drop the front cradle and engine, suspension, transmission, gas tank and overhaul a car with 2750 miles on it, that's what I did with this TA.

I have pics of the mileage at 1750 then 2750 during the build, and 8877 as it is presently. Every piece and part has been touched, inspected or replaced as needed. The car was only driven 1750 miles over 10 years. $22,000  invested in engine, suspension, exhaust, powdercoating, wheels,tires,interior, sound system, and more...30 MPG HWY with 500 HP and the car still looks almost stock in appearance. This was built as an NHRA Trans Am from the factory, it has all the WS6 parts also.

Summary of the performance modifications: Comp Cams 228/228, Stage 2 CNC Ported Heads, American Racing Headers, B&B Triflow Quad exhaust, Koni Struts, suframe connectors, bigger swaybars, WS6 OEM Hood, Blackwing Intake, 4 layers of undercoating, interior sound deading, Stereo with a sound stage that is unbelievable until you hear it, SiriusXM, bluetooth, DVD watch movies while driving, retains factory steering wheel controls, numerous interior upgrades,it goes on & on.................

Original Laminated window sticker, 2 keys + Fobs and a folder with all the build invoices and everything else. Please ask for and read the build sheet it is descriptive and covers everything. I have other pics and a few from the build time w/2750 milles. Future Relocation forces sale.

This Trans AM drives as smooth as a new Corvette, 0-60 4 seconds flat, NO exhaust droan or road noise in the cabin, immaculate show room condition, everything and I mean everything is new on this car, top to bottom, bumper to bumper, inside and out. Folder with all invoice and expenses goes with the car, title in hand, car remains parked until sold.

 

                     OVER $42,000 INVESTED IN THIS CAR

 

If you are looking for a low mileage Trans Am they are getting to be rare these days, if you have always wanted the ultimate american muscle car owned by a mature owner and built to precision standards like this one only 2 choices exist:

1) try to find one under 10,000 miles that's $20-$24,000 and spend a year and $22,000 to get it to this level and performance.

2) Consider this car and spend the extra $4-$5,000 and save yourself a lot of money, I'm taking a $15,000 hair cut selling this car, and throwing in $1,500 of additional Wheels, Tires, Slotted rotors, pads, and other stuff all BRAND NEW for FREE!

Call me if interested: Jay 615-310-1749 

Auto Services in Tennessee

Wholesale Inc ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 1811 Gallatin Pike N, Joelton
Phone: (615) 855-0025

White & Peels Auto Center ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 1421 Choate Rd, Ooltewah
Phone: (423) 629-1828

West Broad Auto Sales ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 1928 W Broad St, Bloomington-Springs
Phone: (931) 854-1424

Topside Auto Sales ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 1240 Topside Rd, Louisville
Phone: (865) 970-2083

Tire Barn Warehouse ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers, Wheels-Aligning & Balancing
Address: 8522 Kingston Pike, Mascot
Phone: (865) 670-8473

Stout`s Riverside Auto Center ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 2047 W Elk Ave, Johnson-City
Phone: (423) 543-8388

Auto blog

Junkyard Gem: 1968 Pontiac Catalina sedan

Wed, Aug 14 2019

During the late 1960s, General Motors ruled the American car landscape, growing so dominant that the federal government considered antitrust action to break up the company. The General offered sporty Corvettes and muscular GTOs and rugged pickups and opulent Fleetwoods, sure, but the fat part of the sales numbers came from the bread-and-butter full-sized sedans and coupes, which boasted superior engineering and modern-looking styling; in 1967 alone, the Chevrolet Division moved 972,600 full-sized cars, and that's not even counting the 155,100 full-sized Chevy station wagons that year. Pontiac, Buick and Oldsmobile sold the same big cars with division-specific engines and bodywork, and they flew off the showroom floors. For 1968, the entry-level full-sized car from Pontiac was the Catalina, and I've found an example of the most affordable version of the most affordable big Pontiac for 1968, discarded in a northeastern Colorado wrecking yard about 50 miles south of Cheyenne, Wyoming. A '68 GM full-sized coupe, convertible, or even a four-door hardtop might be worth the cost and effort of a restoration, but a no-options base-trim-level post sedan with rust and plenty of body filler just won't get many takers these days. Like so many vehicles that sit outside for decades on the High Plains, this one is full of rodent nests. I wouldn't want to work on the interior of this car without a respirator and a lot of work with a shop-vac, because hantavirus is a significant danger in these parts. Alfred Sloan's plan to offer a stepladder of prestige for GM buyers, in which your first new car was a Chevrolet and you moved up through Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick until you became sufficiently prosperous for Cadillac ownership, worked brilliantly for decades. In 1968, the Catalina was a notch above its Impala sibling on the Snob-O-Meter, with the sedan starting at $3,004 (about $22,600 in 2019 dollars). In fact, the V8-equipped 1968 Chevrolet Impala sedan listed at $3,033, and the Oldsmobile Delmont 88 went for $3,146, so the lines were beginning to blur between the relative positions of the lower-end GM divisions by this time. The base engine in the 1968 Catalina was a 400-cubic-inch (6.5 liter) V8 rated at 265 horsepower and enough torque to tow an aircraft carrier.

This or That: 2005 Chrysler Crossfire SRT6 vs. 1984 Pontiac Fiero

Tue, Feb 10 2015

Welcome to another round of This or That, where two Autoblog editors pick a topic, pick a side and pull no punches. Last round pitted yours truly against Associate Editor Brandon Turkus, and my chosen VW Vanagon Syncro narrowly defeated Brandon's 1987 Land Rover. In fact, it was, by far, the closest round we've seen, with 1,907 voters seeing things my way (for 50.8 percent of the vote) versus 1,848 votes for Brandon's Rover (49.2 percent). Sweet, sweet victory! For this latest round of This or That, I've roped Editor Greg Migliore into what I think is a rather fun debate. We've each chosen our favorite terrible cars, setting a price limit of $10,000 to make sure neither of us went too crazy with our automotive atrocities. I think we've both chosen terribly... and I mean that in the best way possible. 2005 Chrysler Crossfire SRT6 Jeremy Korzeniewski: Why It's Terrible: Taken in isolation, the Chrysler Crossfire isn't necessarily a terrible car. In fact, it drives pretty darn well, and there's a lot of solid engineering under its slinky shape. Problem is, that engineering was already rather long in the tooth well before Chrysler ever got its hands on it, having come from Mercedes-Benz, which used the basic chassis and drivetrain in a previous version of its SLK coupe and roadster. Granted, the SLK was an okay car, too, but even when new, it hardly set the world on fire with sporty driving dynamics. Chrysler took these decent-but-no-more bits and pieces from the Mercedes parts bin – remember, this car was conceived in the disastrous Merger Of Equals days – and covered them with a rather attractive hard-candy shell. Unfortunately, the super sporty shape wrote checks in the minds of buyers that its well-worn mechanicals were simply unable to cash, though an injection of power courtesy of a supercharged V6 engine in the SRT6 model, as seen here, certainly helped ease some of those woes. In the end, Chrysler was left with a so-called halo car that looked the part but never quite performed the part. It was almost universally panned by critics as an overpriced parts-bin special, which, I must add, was damningly accurate. As a result, sales were very slow, and within the first few months, dealers were clearancing the car at cut-rate prices, just to keep them from taking up too much of the showroom floor. Why It's Not That Terrible, After All: I can speak from personal experience when discussing the Chrysler Crossfire. You see, I owned one. Well, sort of...

This 1988 Pontiac Grand Prix Daytona 500 pace car could be yours

Fri, Jan 29 2021

Hopefully, the fans of GM's W-body '80s/'90s intermediates can forgive us, but we had pretty much forgotten — or had never really known — that one of the ways that era's Pontiac Grand Prix bathed itself in glory was by serving as the pace car for the Daytona 500. In fact, the Grand Prix paced NASCAR's marquee race every year from 1988 to 1992, and again in 1997, 1998, 2000 and 2003. That first year, 1988, the Grand Prix was all-new, making its debut on the W-body platform. It was also Motor Trend's car of the year. The 1988 Daytona 500 marked the 17th year in a row that a Pontiac was chosen to set the pace but the first time a front-wheel-drive car was so honored. The '88 Grand Prix followed a spate of Pontiac Trans Ams. This '88 Grand Prix, for sale right now on eBay Motors, is presented as an actual pace car, although fans could order a complete set of pace car decals for their very own GP. The pace car is based on that year's top-spec Grand Prix, the SE. In place of the standard car's 2.8-liter V6, however, the pace car uses a modified 3.1-liter V6, which is hooked to a five-speed manual transmission. This Grand Prix is otherwise largely standard fare excepting the roof-mounted light bar, the switches for which are located next to the radio. The mechanical odometer tucked into the digital instrument cluster shows just over 5,000 miles, and presumably, not all of them were acquired on the high-banked oval. With four days to go in the auction, bidding sits at $4,000 with the reserve unmet. Although the reserve is unknown, one clue is that this Grand Prix had been listed by a classic-car dealership in Pennsylvania for $18,500. Besides the debut of the W-body Grand Prix pace car, the 1988 race is also notable for its final lap: Bobby Allison held off his son, Davey Allison, to take the checkered flag, with the father-son duo enjoying a 1-2 finish. Now, who wants to re-live those Grand Prix glory days? Get on your Pontiac and ride!   This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings.