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

1966 Pontiac Gto, 4-speed Manual, Tri-power, Super Clean, Rare, See Video !!! on 2040-cars

Year:1966 Mileage:34701
Location:

Fort Myers, Florida, United States

Fort Myers, Florida, United States
Advertising:

 

Up for auction is a 1966 Pontiac GTO 

Tri-power 

4 Speed 

Here is a rare opportunity for anyone to purchase a super clean GTO.  This is a REAL GTO 42 code car (not a recreation). The car is laser straight (not wavy) and does not need restoration.  Look at the body lines. PERFECT ! The floors, frame and sub-frame are rock solid and painted black (not undercoated).  

The paint is beautiful! No orange peel.  

The interior from carpet to dash to seats, door panels and headliner is in excellent condition. Chrome and stainless is near flawless.  Headlights, blinkers, turn signals are functioning as they should. Spare and floor jack in trunk. 

The 389 tri-power runs as it should.  Pump it 3 times and turn the key and she will start right up.  Power steering.  4-speed manual transmission shifts as it should and the clutch is good.  

This car has not been modified or upgraded to be modernized in any way.  It retains its classic style as it did in 1966.

I rate this car as show quality.  No disappointments.

Clean/Clear Title with mileage being exempt due to the year per FL law.

SEE VIDEO !!!

For sale Worldwide!!!


100% Feedback seller!!!


TERMS OF SALE
1.     By placing a bid you are entering into a legally binding contract and are committed to purchasing the vehicle described above. The details of this commitment are further outlined in the eBay User Agreement. 
2.     Vehicle is also offered for sale locally and RCC reserves the right to end its auctions early or to cancel bids solely at its discretion and shall not be held liable for any such cancellation.
3.     RCC will contact the winning bidder within 24 hours of the auction end to finalize the details of the sale transaction.
4.     The winning bidder is responsible for providing a $500.00 nonrefundable Paypal deposit within 24 hours of the auction end.  This deposit reserves the vehicle to the winning bidder and removes it from the market.  Balance of winning bid to be paid by cash in person or via bank wire transfer within 7 days of auction end.
5.     If RCC is unable to make contact with the winning bidder within 24 hours of the auction end vehicle may be made available to the next highest bidder or another qualified local buyer on a first come first serve basis. 
6.     Final or winning bid price does not include shipping, tax, title, or registration fees. It is the purchaser's responsibility to provide for any state or local taxes and shipping expenses resulting from the sale. 
7.     For all out of state and/or international sales, Buyer is responsible for making the necessary shipping arrangements.  We can provide assistance, if requested, through our network of private and commercial carriers.
8.     For all vehicles delivered in the state of Florida, RCC will be required to collect the applicable sales tax as per the guidelines specified by the FL Department of Revenue.
9.     RCC has represented this vehicle to the best of its ability through the description in the auction, the video description in the auction and the pictures in the auction. 
10.  Please be aware that all pre-owned vehicles, regardless of age, mileage, or manufacturer are subject to cosmetic wear and mechanical failure. Prospective buyers are encouraged to come see the car in person (all vehicles are located in Fort Myers, FL approximately 10 minutes away from the Southwest Florida International Airport “RSW”) or have a third party inspection completed prior to bidding/making an offer on the vehicle to help ensure your satisfaction.
11.  Prospective bidders are encouraged to contact us directly anytime at 239-221-9500.   If you have any additional questions feel free to ask. Do not assume.
12.  All vehicles are sold “AS-IS” and with no warranties expressed or implied. 
13.  To provide the best possible value RCC, waives the additional documentation fee (typically $150 - $300) normally added to the purchase price at the time of sale by most automobile dealers. 

*this is a rare car and cars like this GTO (not lemans, not tempest, not judge) and many other rare classic cars / muscle cars (such as 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972 Chevelle, Camaro, Mustang, Torino, Shelby Cobra, Corvette, Roadrunner, GTX, Nova) are going up in value due to the international demand.  Don't miss the opportunity to own a part of automobile history.




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Auto blog

GM Design shows what could have been and what might be

Thu, May 27 2021

We periodically like to check in with GM Design's Instagram account to see what they're cooking up. Even better is when we catch a glimpse of an alternate history of what legendary designers from The General's past were thinking, though those ideas may not have made it into production. This week, for example, the account posted some illustrations from George Camp, whose career at GM spanned nearly four decades, from 1963 to 2001. One of the renderings is of what appears to be a 1971-72 Pontiac GTO Judge, but with two headlights instead of the production unit's quad beams. The rear departs from the canonical version most dramatically, with a massive integrated wing. Other bits that didn't make the production cut include large side vents, a gill-like side marker and rectangular intakes below the headlights that wouldn't be out of place on a modern design today. Amazingly, from what we can make out of the date, it appears that the drawing was done sometime in 1965, which makes it quite prescient.           View this post on Instagram                       A post shared by GM Design (@generalmotorsdesign) There's also a very aerodynamic interpretation of a Corvette ZR-1. To our eyes it splits the difference between the 1986 Corvette Indy concept and a fourth-generation F-body Pontiac Firebird, so perhaps parts of Camp's work on this sketch did make it into physical form. There's also a radical sports car concept from May 1970 that resembles the Mazda RX-500 concept from the same year, a Syd Mead-looking Cadillac coupe, and an Oldsmobile with a cool take on the company's trademark waterfall grille and elements of the Colonnade Cutlass at the rear. Other recent posts include a FJ Cruiser-like off-road EV, a sleek coupe with the Chevy corporate grille, and a rendering of a Silverado-esque pickup that looks far better than the current production version.           View this post on Instagram                       A post shared by GM Design (@generalmotorsdesign) It's pretty easy to lose hours in the account, but it's always fascinating to see GM's visions of what could have been and what might be. Related Video:

Lutz says Washington killed Pontiac, next G6 was to be ATS derivative

Tue, 29 Oct 2013

How many people think Buick or GMC should have gotten the axe instead of Pontiac? You can't see it, but I'm raising my hand. Autoweek reports that former Vice Chairman of GM, Bob Lutz, has indicated that things didn't have to end up the way they did.
"The Feds said, 'Yeah, how much money have you made on Pontiac in the last 10 years?' and the answer was, 'Nothing.'"
In a talk given at the Petersen Automotive Museum for the Inside the MotoMan Studio series, Lutz says "The Feds said, 'Yeah, how much money have you made on Pontiac in the last 10 years?' and the answer was, 'Nothing.' So, it goes. And when the guy who is handing you the check for $53 billion says, 'I don't want Pontiac, drop Pontiac or you don't get the money,' it doesn't take you very long to make up your mind." Lutz even added that the next-generation Pontiac G6 would have benefitted from the rear-wheel-drive platform of the Cadillac ATS. How awesome would that have been?

Junkyard Gem: 1996 Pontiac Grand Am SE Coupe

Thu, Jun 22 2023

The Grand Am was the best-selling Pontiac model in the United States for every year of the 1990s, and it outsold most of its N-Body platform-mates (including the Chevrolet Corsica/Beretta) during nearly all of that decade. A sporty-looking compact with two or four doors, the Grand Am offered true 1990s radness—and, in some cases, respectable performance — at a good price. Today's Junkyard Gem is a nicely preserved example of the facelifted 1996 Grand Am, found in a Denver-area car graveyard. This is an SE Coupe with base engine and transmission, the most affordable Grand Am available in 1996. List price was $13,499, or about $26,523 in 2023 dollars. The factory-issued Monroney sheet for this car was still inside, so we can see that the original buyer got the car at Bob Ruwart Motors in Wheatland, Wyoming (about 175 miles up I-25 from this Pontiac's final parking spot), and paid a total of $16,054 ($31,543 in today's money) after the cost of options and the destination charge. The '96 Grand AM SE buyer had to pay extra for cruise control, air conditioning, power windows, rear glass defogger and other features we now take for granted on new cars. The base engine was the 2.4-liter Twin Cam four cylinder, a member of the screaming Oldsmobile Quad 4 family. This one was rated at 150 horsepower and 155 pound-feet. A 3.1-liter V6 with 155 horses and 185 pound-feet was an option. If you got the V6 in your '96 Grand Am, however, you couldn't get a manual transmission. This car has a proper five-speed manual, which made for fun driving with the high-revving Twin Cam engine in a machine weighing just 2,802 pounds (which is quite a bit less than what the current Honda Civic weighs). It traveled just over 160,000 miles during its 27 years on the road. The body and interior were still in fairly good condition when the car arrived here, so we can assume that some expensive mechanical problem doomed this car. Perhaps the original clutch wore out and the owner didn't consider it worth replacing. After all, a mid-1990s Detroit two-door with a transmission most people can't drive isn't worth much these days. Though nobody knew it when this car was new, the Grand Am would be gone in nine years and Pontiac itself would get the axe five years after that. It makes the ordinary extraordinary. Husbands and wives would argue for 12 hours over who got to drive the Grand Am, if we are to believe this ad. Proud sponsor of the 1996 Olympic team.