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1969 Firebird With A 400 Engine And 6x Heads!! on 2040-cars

Year:1969 Mileage:64000
Location:

Ashland City, Tennessee, United States

Ashland City, Tennessee, United States
Advertising:

 I have a 1969 Firebird with a 400 engine and 6X heads!! The perfect cruiser or daily driver. I bought the Bird to fix up into a daily driver, it doesn't need much to be turned into a show car either. I have been driving it for several months now. I enjoy working on cars and have completed this car to where it needs it to be to be a dependable daily driver. I drive it to and from work regularly. I have everything done but the body work for painting. I currently have had the front left fender replaced, that's why its still black in the picture. The engine is from a 1970 Firebird 400 and is not numbers matching. It still has the stock cam in it which makes it great for highway driving. It has a Carter AFB competition series carb with a high ignition distributor which really makes it come to life when you need it.

The things I have replaced on it.
-New seats
-New carpet
-New floor pan, (front and back) and covered in Dyno Mat.
-New headliner
-New emblems
-Front and rear shocks
-Sway bar and end links
-Top and bottom control arm ball joints
-Tie Rod rebuilt
-New battery
-New Gas tank
-New Fuel lines
-New Fuel pump
-New Distributor
-Edelbrock Air cleaner
- Edelbrock Valve covers
-New Tires
-New Magnaflow dual exhaust
- Rear Air shocks
- New brake lines, Brake booster and Master cylinder.

Things it needs.
-Front right fender patch. I took a close up of it for you to see the cancer spots.
- Trunk pan (its not too bad but it will need replaced sometime)
- Radio
- Rear Quarter patches
- Paint Job

This Pontiac Firebird is a great runner!!! You will not be disappointed if you are looking for an AWESOME daily driver. Only thing you'll need to do is get a paint job and you'll have a $25,000 car! Summers here and you deserve to have a nice classic car to enjoy it in! This car gets thumbs up and looks where ever it goes due to its classic hot rod looks.

Feel free to email me with any questions you may have and I will do my best to accommodate your requests. Thank you for looking.



On Jul-01-14 at 19:48:54 PDT, seller added the following information:

 I forgot to add that it will need a printed circuit board to allow the bulbs and gauges within the dash to work.


On Jul-03-14 at 07:21:24 PDT, seller added the following information:

 I just lowered the reserve! Someone is going to get a great car for a STEAL!

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Auto blog

Junkyard Gem: 1988 Pontiac 6000 LE Safari Wagon

Wed, May 27 2020

The Detroit station wagon was fast losing sales to minivans and trucks as the decade of the 1980s progressed, but Pontiac shoppers still had plenty of choices as late as the 1988 model year. A visit to a Pontiac dealership in 1988 would have presented you with three sizes of wagon, from the little Sunbird through the midsize 6000 and up to the mighty Parisienne-based Safari. Today's Junkyard Gem is a luxed-up 6000 LE, complete with "wood" paneling, found in a car graveyard in Fargo, North Dakota. Confusingly, the "Safari" name in 1988 was used by Pontiac to designate both a specific model — the wagon version of the Parisienne/Bonneville— and as the traditional Pontiac designation for a station wagon. That meant that the wagon we're looking at now was a Safari but not the Safari in the 1988 Pontiac universe. The 6000 lived on the GM A-Body platform, as the Pontiac-badged version of the Chevrolet Celebrity. Production ran from the 1982 through 1991 model years, with the A-Body Buick Century surviving all the way through 1996. The LE trim level came between the base 6000 and the gloriously complex 6000 STE (which wasn't available in wagon form, sadly). I visited this yard in Fargo after judging at the Minneapolis 500 24 Hours of Lemons in Brainerd, Minnesota, last fall. Up to that point, I had visited 47 of the Lower 48 United States, with just North Dakota remaining, so I made a point of doing a Fargo detour in order to check that state off my list. I'm pleased that I found such a good example of the 1982-1996 GM A-Body in this yard, because the most famous of all the A-Bodies is the 1987 Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera driven to Brainerd by the inept Fargo-based kidnappers in the film "Fargo." This Minnesota-plated 6000 had some rust, but just negligible levels by Upper Midwestern standards on a 31-year-old car. The interior looked very good, with the original owner's manual still inside. The 6000 LE boasted "redesigned contoured seats and London/Empress fabric," which sounds pretty swanky. Something less swanky lives under the hood: an Iron Duke 2.5-liter pushrod four-cylinder engine, known as the Tech 4 by 1988. The Iron Duke was, at heart, one cylinder bank of the not-quite-renowned Pontiac 301-cubic-inch V8; while fairly rugged, the Duke ran rough (typical of large-displacement straight-four engines) and made just 98 horsepower in this application. Pontiac offered a couple of optional V6s in the 6000 in 1988, but no Quad 4.

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.

This Auto Aerobics car art ties our brains in knots like pretzels

Sat, 14 Dec 2013

We like cars, and we like art. Naturally, Chris Labrooy's Auto Aerobics series - computer-generated images of some seriously contorted 1968 Pontiac Bonnevilles floating in mid-air - instantly clicked with us. If the Pontiacs weren't floating or hollow, we could be fooled into believing the image is real. But where's the fun in that?
Check out the gallery we included of Labrooy's Bonneville art, and feel free too head over to his website for some Formula One humor.