Pontiac Firebird Base on 2040-cars
Garland, Kansas, United States
ONE OF A KIND FIREBIRD RESTOMOD. FRAME OFF REBUILD. 502 CRATE ENGINE. 700R4 TRANSMISSION. CUSTOM 3 " EXHAUST WITH 6 PIPES EXITING THE REAR. CUSTOM DESIGN FENDERS HOOD AND GRILL. NICE CANDY APPLE METALLIC OVER SILVER BASE PAINT JOB. B&M MEGA SHIFTER. POWER FRONT DISC BRAKE CONVERSION. ALL NEW SUSPENSION. MSD IGNITION. ALUMINUM RADIATOR WITH HIGH PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC FAN AND WATER PUMP. NEW BOSS 17" AND 18" WHEELS WITH NEW NITTO RUBBER. POWER STEERING. CUSTOM DRIVE SHAFT (UP TO 800 HP) NEW ELECTRIC FUEL PUMP AND 18 GALLON FUEL CELL. I BOUGHT THIS CAR ABOUT AYEAR AGO AND IT HAD A FEW PROBLEMS BUT IT WAS NICE. SINCE I'VE HAD IT I HAVE TAKEN OFF THE DUAL CARBS WHICH FLOODED THE CAR. I INSTALLED A NEW DURASHINE MANIFOLD AND EDELBROCK 650 CARB WITH ELECTRIC CHOKE SO I HAD SOLVED THE PROBLEM. I ALSO INSTALLED A NEW ENDURASHINE AIR CLEANER AN NEW MATCHING 502 VALVE COVERS. I STRAIGHTENED OUT THE WIRING. NEXT IT HAD THE WRONG TRANSMISSION IN IT SO I HAD A NEW 700R4 BUILT TO HANDLE THE POWER OF THE 502, IT HAD A OLD SPOOLED REAR END IN IT SO I PUT A NEW 373 POSITRAC IN IT. FINALLY I HAD THE FRONT END ALIGNED. NOW THE CAR IS GREAT. RUNS DOWN THE ROAD FAST AND STRAIGHT. I GET A TON OF COMPLIMENTS ON THE WAY IT LOOKS AND SOUNDS. I JUST WANTED YOU TO KNOW ALL THIS SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT SPENDING MORE MONEY. JUST SHOW AND GO. MY LOSS IS YOUR GAIN. THE LAST AUCTION I HAD ALMOST REACHED RESERVE ON THE 2ND DAY WHEN SOMEONE LOCAL CAME AND BOUGHT IT. SO DON;T WAIT. IT IS PRICED TO SELL LOCALLY AS WELL AS ON EBAY. GOOD LUCK AND GOOD BIDDING. STEVE 316-990-6294 LOCATED IN WICHITA KS I DO NOT NEED HELP SELLING THIS CAR SO ONLY CALL IF INTERESTED PLEASE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Pontiac Firebird for Sale
- Pontiac firebird w68(US $2,000.00)
- Pontiac firebird 30th anniversary(US $2,000.00)
- Pontiac firebird trans am coupe 2-door(US $1,000.00)
- Pontiac firebird base coupe 2-door(US $1,000.00)
- Pontiac firebird trans am(US $1,000.00)
- Pontiac firebird 350(US $1,000.00)
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Auto blog
Another Burt Reynolds Trans Am is up for auction
Wed, Jan 18 2017Fans of Smokey and the Bandit, your car has arrived. This Saturday, January 21, Barrett-Jackson will auction a 1977 Pontiac Trans Am clone that, while not originally in the movie, was owned and signed by the Bandit himself, Burt Reynolds. Not only that, but it packs many modifications that should make this Pontiac drive the way we all imagined it did. This is a Trans Am clone, not an original. The car was built by Nebraska company Restore A Muscle Car, and started life as a lowly Firebird Formula. However, the company brought it up to Trans Am grade and beyond. Under the hood is a fuel-injected 8.2-liter V8 from Butler Performance that Restore A Muscle Car says produces 600 horsepower. Coupled to the big V8 is a Tremec five-speed manual transmission. There's even Hurst line-lock on-board, so this Trans Am should be perfect for on-demand burnouts. The car also comes with QA1 coil-over suspension, so it should corner better than the original, too. The outside looks roughly like a stock Trans Am, but it now has 18-inch wheels styled after those from the movie car, and the shaker scoop says "8.2" on each side. View 5 Photos In 2014, a 1977 Trans Am owned by Reynolds sold for a whopping $450,000. That car wasn't an actual movie car either, and lacked the modifications of this one. However, it was used as a promotional car and was given to Reynolds, so it did have some history with the film. This upgraded car is listed in the Barrett-Jackson catalog as "no reserve," so it's going home with a new owner on Saturday, regardless of price. Related Video:
Fiero-based Zimmer Quicksilver was objectively terrible, but we'd totally drive it
Wed, Jan 19 2022Now here's something you don't see everyday. It's listed in our classified ads as a 1986 Pontiac Fiero, but as you can see, that description is a bit misleading. In fact, it's a Zimmer Quicksilver, which was indeed built atop the guts of a mid-engine Fiero coupe but was heavily modified by the Zimmer Motorcars Corporation at a facility in Pompano Beach, Florida. And the one you see here actually seems to be a pretty decent deal for a highly unusual car. We're not sure what was a more popular starting point for kit and custom cars in the 1980s and 1990s, but it would have to be either the Fiero or the vintage air-cooled Volkswagen Beetle. Fiero-based machines usually mimicked the design direction of any number of highly desirable Italian stallions, most commonly, we'd guess, the Lamborghini Countach. The Quicksilver is an altogether different animal, with over a foot of extra wheelbase added in front of the A-pillar to make for a dramatic, long and low silhouette that somehow still only has barely enough room for two passengers in its leather- and wood-lined interior. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. A stock 2.8-liter V6 engine from General Motors is mated to a three-speed automatic transmission that sends 140 horsepower and 170 pound-feet of torque to the rear wheels. Period road tests found the 0-60 run took a little over 10 seconds, which is terrible today but wasn't all that bad for the mid '80s. Best we can tell, only around 170 Quicksilvers were made between 1984 and 1988, which are, not coincidentally, the same years that Pontiac produced the Fiero. The 1986 Zimmer Quicksilver you see here is priced at $18,495 and shows well under 30,000 miles on the odometer. There aren't a lot of Zimmer Quicksilvers currently for sale for us to compare, but the ones we did find that had sold within the last few years suggest a little under $20,000 is a reasonable asking price. It could be a fun and offbeat addition to the garage, and if nothing else, you're not likely to see another one at your local car show. Related video: This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings.
Junkyard Gem: 1986 Pontiac Sunbird Sedan
Sun, Jun 28 2020The J-Body platform was a giant seller for GM, staying in production from the first 1981 Chevrolet Cavalier all the way through that final 2005 Pontiac Sunfire. Outside of North America, Opels and Daewoos and Isuzus and Holdens and Vauxhalls and even Toyotas flew the J flag, and better than ten million rolled out of showrooms during that quarter-century. In the United States, Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Buick, and Cadillac each sold J-Bodies. Of those, the Pontiac Sunbird often had the sportiest image, more cavalier than even the Cavalier Z24. I've documented a discarded Sunbird Turbo in the past, and now here's a bread-and-butter Sunbird sedan from the same era. The Sunbird name began its life in 1976 on the Pontiac-badged version of the rear-wheel-drive Buick Skyhawk, itself based on the Chevy Vega. The first J-Body Pontiacs had J2000 badges, then 2000 badges, then 2000 Sunbird badges, until finally the pure non-2000 Sunbird appeared for the 1985 model year. I remain disappointed that the 2000 name didn't survive into our current century, because we could have had a 2000 Pontiac 2000, or just the "2000 2000" for short. The base engine in the '86 Sunbird was this SOHC 1.8-liter four of Brazilian origin, rated at 84 horsepower. Originally developed by Opel in the late 1970s, this engine family went into cars built all across the sprawling GM empire. 84 horsepower doesn't sound like much— and it wasn't much, even by 1986 standards— but at least the original buyer of this car had the smarts to get the five-speed manual transmission. This car weighed just 2,336 pounds, a good 500 pounds lighter than the current Chevy Sonic, so performance with the manual transmission was tolerable. The '86 Sunbird's interior was much nicer than those in its Cavalier siblings, though nowhere near the Cadillac Cimarron's reading on the Plush-O-Meter. An AM/FM/cassette stereo with auto reverse was serious audio hardware in a cheap car during the middle 1980s, when even a scratchy factory AM-only radio cost the equivalent of several hundred 2020 bucks. The price tag of this car started at $7,495, or about $17,500 in 2020 dollars. The cheapest possible Cavalier sedan went for $6,888 in 1986, but a zero-option base '86 Cavalier would make you think you'd been transported to the Soviet Union every time you slunk into its harsh confines. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings.