1967 Pontiac Firebird With 428/375hp Yh Code Engine, Solid Complete Project Car on 2040-cars
Vancouver, Washington, United States
Up for sale is my 1967 Pontiac Firebird project car. This is a very solid car and will make someone an outrageous street machine. The original 6-cylinder was pulled back in 1968 and a then-new '68 428 High Output engine was installed. The car was last running/driving about two years ago, and shows 86K miles on the odometer. This is a non-running/non-operable project car.
The engine is stamped with YH code, and has the original big-valve #16 heads on it. The intake manifold is a burley cast aluminum single-plane high rise without apparent casting marks.... original Pontiac parts counter HP manifold? Also, there's an emblem on the underside of the truck that says, "Phase 1." Not sure if it has bearing on the build of the car, but who knows? Motion? At any rate, this is an affordable "in" to a great classic muscle car. Trunk is solid, floors seem solid, rear wheel lips have some rust, lower rear rockers have bubbles under the paint. Hood had a factory hood tach that was stolen, and it has hood pins. Car has a small 70's sunroof in it that is amazingly still water-tight. The door panels, rear panels, rear seat, dash, gauges, passenger seat, and console are original and usable with some clean-up. Driver's bucket is non-original. Has later model small diameter steering wheel. Original color was Montreux Blue, with Deluxe black bucket seat/console interior... very pretty car. Early 70's GM wheels with very good radial tires. This is a good one to restore, or just get her running and hotrod around in a survivor classic. I am waiting for the title to arrive from the DOL, and have the proper and complete paperwork to transfer title now, or I can mail it to you in ~3 weeks when it arrives. The vehicle title is clear without liens or brands. I must reserve the right to end the auction early as I have it advertised for sale locally as well. Please feel free to call me to discuss your purchase at 360-936-9257. While every effort is being made to describe the car accurately, it is in fact a 47-year-old classic used vehicle, and being sold as-is, without any warranty or guarantee expressed, written, or implied. Shipping is the full responsibility of the buyer. I will make myself available for pickup on short notice. Payment must be made in full within 3 days via cash, bank wire transfer, or possibly major bank cashier's check... check with me first, please. No zero-feedback bidders without checking with me first, please. |
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The prized golden 1965 Pontiac Hurst GeeTO Tiger is headed to auction
Sat, Apr 4 2020Once upon a time, a Pontiac advertising executive named Jim Wangers created a countrywide contest with this gorgeous 1965 Pontiac Hurst GTO serving as the grand prize. The contest was centered around "GeeTO Tiger," a song by musical artists The Tigers. A 19-year-old took home the golden muscle car at the time, but now anybody can buy the rare car through an upcoming Mecum auction. As a way to boost sales and awareness of the Pontiac GTO and its performance parts, Wangers partnered up with Royal Pontiac, George Hurst, and Petersen Publishing in 1965 to create a contest. Royal provided the car, Hurst dressed it up, and Petersen distributed the contest in publications across the country. In order to participate, people were asked to provide a reason why they wanted the car and identify how many times the word "tiger" was used in the promotional song "GeeTO Tiger" (pronounced G-Tee-Oh) by The Tigers. A 19 year-old kid named Alex Lampone from West Allis, Wisconsin, won the contest and took delivery of this jazzed-up GTO at the 1965 NHRA Indy Nationals. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. The Tigers - GeeTO Tiger The prize car was completely kitted out and described by Wangers as "the nicest GTO you could put your hands on." It had more than 28 factory options, including a black cordova top, power windows, power steering, power brakes, a tilt steering wheel, a power driver's seat, dual-speed windshield wipers, a custom sport steering wheel, a rally gauge cluster, a push-button AM/FM radio with power antenna, and a Verba phonic rear speaker. What makes it stand out is the Hurst-inspired gold theme, which includes gold paint, gold mag wheels, and a gold-plated Hurst Shifter. Under the hood, this GTO has a Tri-Power 389 V8 engine that pairs with a four-speed manual transmisison. It also has a 3.55 Safe-T-Track rear axle and dual exhaust. Throughout the years, this car has exchanged hands many times and has undergone a few changes. It's been repainted, and the engine has also been rebuilt, but Mecum says it's otherwise highly original. Ony 59,000 miles have turned over on the odometer. The GeeTO Tiger Pontiac is scheduled to go up for auction in Indianapolis this June. Visit Mecum for more information. Related Video: This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. Woodward Dream Cruise Time Lapse Video
GM reintroduces Tripower name in the worst way possible
Wed, Aug 1 2018The story of General Motors' use of the Tripower moniker begins way back in 1957, when Semon E. "Bunkie" Knudsen, then General Manager of GM's Pontiac division, directed his engineers to inject more performance into his brand's line of V8-powered automobiles. Fuel injection was an option, but hot rodders flocked instead to Tri-Power (marketed way back when with a hyphen), which grafted a trio of two-barrel Rochester carburetors onto a single intake manifold. A legend was born. And that legend was born of performance. At idle and when full power wasn't required, Pontiac's Tri-Power system used just the middle carburetor, which helped make the setup easier to tune. Depending on the year and model, either a vacuum system or a mechanical linkage opened up the two outer carbs, thereby switching from two barrels to six, and allowing the engine to take in more fuel and air. And it was an easy marketing win – six barrels is better than four barrels, right? Because performance! So, when news filtered in that GM has resurrected the Tripower name, those of us who grew up attending classic car shows and wrenching on old Pontiacs did a double-take. And then we all collectively sighed. Turns out that today's Tripower refers to a trio of fuel-saving measures that include cylinder deactivation, active thermal management, and intake valve lift control, according to Automotive News. And, at least for now, it applies to GM's line of fullsize trucks powered by a 2.7-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine. We're all for saving fuel whenever possible. And we have zero say in how any automaker chooses to market its products and technologies. But, we'll offer our two cents anyway: Relaunching a storied name from the past is fine. Relaunching a storied name from the past while completely overlooking the reasons the name got famous in the first place is only going to irritate the people who remember the name in the first place. Couldn't they just call this new technology package something else? Related Video: News Source: Automotive NewsImage Credit: Getty Green Marketing/Advertising Chevrolet GM Pontiac Automotive History Truck chevrolet silverado
Looking back at Oprah's free-car giveaway 10 years later
Fri, 12 Sep 2014
Oprah kicked off her 19th season in dramatic fashion by giving all 276 members of the studio audience a free car.
Molly Vielweber's Pontiac G6 appears unremarkable at first glance. It wears forest green paint, rolls on five-spoke aluminum wheels, and it has a sizeable scrape in the driver's side door, the scar of a decade's worth of hard use. You wouldn't notice it parked at a big box store or cruising on the highway. Pontiac made hundreds of thousands of G6s in the 2000s, and a lot are still on the road. It's unremarkable in every way except for the front license plate, which reads, "Oprah 6."