1968 Pontiac Firebird Convertible 4.1 Ohc 6-cylinder Automatic Phs Documentation on 2040-cars
Wind Gap, Pennsylvania, United States
Body Type:Convertible
Engine:4.1 L 250 Cubic Inch
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Number of Cylinders: 6
Model: Firebird
Trim: CONVERTIBLE
Drive Type: Automatic Powerglide
Options: Convertible
Mileage: 127,371
Exterior Color: Green
Interior Color: Black
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
CONTACT JEFF AT 570 977 0741. Up for sale and your consideration is a beautiful 1968 Pontiac Firebird Convertible with the 4.1 liter 250 cubic inch 6-cylinder engine and powerglide automatic transmission. This car is an older restoration in very nice condition. Turn key drive home and enjoy immediately today. It runs great and drives down the road nice and straight. The engine has been upgraded with a Rochester Quadrajet 4-barrel carburetor and intake manifold for more power and performance. The powerglide transmission shifts well and is coupled to a 3.23 ratio open rear. Car is easy to drive and great on gas. Power steering and drum brakes. Very nice solid original floor pans, undercarriage and chassis. Trunk is clean and painted and trunk mat installed. Correct ballast weights in trunk. Brand new and correct power convertible top which works effortlessly. Nothing like cruising a classic with the top down in the summertime ! Pontiac Ralley wheels with newer tires. Interior is very nice and complete. Center console. All lights and gauges work. The fuel gauge only works from 1/2 tank to empty. If fuel level is over 1/2 tank the gauge reads over full. Once at half it corrects itself. Chrome is very nice and shiny. Paint is nice. A little wavy in some spots but overall very nice for an older paint job. Car presents very well and looks very nice. Some Sprint badging has been added for cosmetic touches. Complete PHS documentation has been compiled and is included with the car for complete documentation purposes. Please take the time to look at all the photos. I have many more photos of the car that I can send to any prospective buyer. Feel free to give me a call and I'll send them out. If any prospective buyer has any concerns as to the condition or integrity of this car, I welcome the opportunity to show this car in person to any prospective buyer by appointment only. I have a clean Pennsylvania title in hand ready for transfer to the new owner. Car is titled in antique status and mileage is listed as exempt as many older cars were without the sixth digit on the speedometer. Title will be processed into the new owners name by a licensed PA notary. A complete bill of sale will be provided as well to the new owner.
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Auto Services in Pennsylvania
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A case for Pontiac's return
Wed, Apr 5 2017Sadly, many brands have disappeared off of the automotive landscape over the decades. Many people have imagined over the years of restarting defunct automotive brands. A few of those dreamers even made prototypes to shop around and to established connections with investors. But, alas poor Yorick, however valiant an effort, many brands are shuttered for good, rarely to be heard of again except in historical tales or maybe seen in car shows. So, what do you do when you win the lottery? Not just any lottery... In fact, it is a lottery that takes care of you and your loved ones for life? You and your family don't have to work, ever. You can give to charity, pay other people to do those projects that you've been putting off, and so on and so on. But, you're still a Car Nut right? There begins the conundrum. Do you buy and fix cars, new premium cars, old muscle cars, or classics, or maybe, just maybe, do you buy the rights to an old departed automotive brand and bring it back to life. Hmm. Which brand? The problem with the old Pontiac was that it was an additional badge engineered vehicle in the portfolio of GM. The meant the brand was diluted by competition from its own parent company, in addition to the competition outside the camp. So, if it were to come back, it would have to be different. Yet, it would still need to keep true to its roots at the same time in order to wake up its armies of existing fans. Even those that aren't fans of Pontiac cannot deny that Pontiac has a long heritage of legendary vehicles. So do Packard, and Studebaker, and others. So, why would a lottery winner choose Pontiac as the marque to bring back? That's easy! Pontiac's long heritage is closely tied to performance vehicles that made many of a teenager drool. Even more important though is that Pontiac is still fresh on people's minds. The brand itself is only recently departed. So, Boomers, Generation X, and Millenials all would all be able to identify with it as opposed to brand names that disappeared multiple decades ago and that now have a more limited appeal. The return of Pontiac couldn't just be another launch of a badge engineered vehicle. It would have to be performance oriented, yes. But, it would have to be unique in some way, a niche brand. What niche though? Look at the automotive landscape now and you see that Tesla is the one out there grabbing at the wide open electric niche with success.
Rumormill: DeLorean Motor Company considering rescuing Pontiac Solstice?
Wed, 07 Oct 2009 DeLorean Motor Company Pontiac Solstice renderings - Click above for high-res image gallery
General Motors has made a science out of sharing platforms. So when the company's Kappa platform was introduced for a new rear-drive roadster to be distributed across three different motor divisions, you'd have figured the program was pretty safe, right? Unfortunately for the workers at the Wilmington Assembly Plant which manufactured the Kappa roadsters, those three divisions were Pontiac, Saturn and Opel - three units which the General has either sold or shut down. Which is a shame, because a perfectly good rear-drive roadster platform is a heck of a thing to waste.
In one of the strangest rumors we've heard recently, however, our compatriots over at Jalopnik report that the DeLorean Motor Company (yes, that DeLorean Motor Company) is considering buying the plant and the platform from GM and putting it back into production as a new DMC.
What car brand should come back?
Fri, Apr 7 2017Congratulations, wishful thinker! You've been granted one wish by the automotive genie or wizard or leprechaun or whoever has been gifted with that magical ability. You get to pick one expired, retired or fired automotive brand and resurrect it from its heavenly peace! But which one? That's a tough decision and not one to be made lightly. As we know from car history, the landscape is littered with failed brands that just didn't have what it took to cut it in the dog-eat-dog world of vehicle design, engineering and marketing. So many to choose from! Because I am not a car historian, I'll leave it to a real expert to present a complete list of history's automotive misses from which you can choose, if you're a stickler about that sort of thing. And since I'm most familiar with post-World War II cars and brands, that's what I'm going to stick to (although Maxwell, Cord and some others could make strong arguments). So, with the parameters established, let's get started, shall we? Hudson: I admit, I really don't know a lot about Hudson, except that stock car drivers apparently did pretty well with them back in the day, and Paul Newman played one in the first Cars movie. But really, isn't that enough to warrant consideration? Frankly, I think the Paul Newman connection is reason enough. What other actor who drove race cars was cooler? James Dean? Steve McQueen? James Garner? Paul Walker? But, I digress. That's a story for another day. Plymouth: As the scion of a Dodge family (my grandfather had a Dodge truck, and my mom had not one, but two Dodge Darts – the rear-wheel-drive ones with slant sixes in them, not the other one they don't make any more), I tend to think of Plymouth as the "poor man's Dodge." But then you have to consider the many Hemi-powered muscle cars sold under the Plymouth brand, such as the Road Runner, the GTX, the Barracuda, and so on. Was there a more affordable muscle car than Plymouth? When you place it in the context of "affordable muscle," Plymouth makes a pretty strong argument for reanimation. Oldsmobile: When I was a teenager, all the cool kids had Oldsmobile Cutlasses, the downsized ones that came out in 1978. At one point, the Olds Cutlass was the hottest selling car in the land, if you can believe that. Then everybody started buying Honda Civics and Accords and Toyota Corollas and Camrys, and you know the rest. But going back farther, there's the 442 – perhaps Olds' finest hour when it came to muscle cars.