1967 Pontiac Lemans Gto Clone Nice Classic Car on 2040-cars
Morris, New York, United States
OK GUYS HERES A PIECE OF AMERICAN CAR HISTORY UP FOR GRABS!!! THEY DONT COME ALONG OFTEN, DONT MISS OUT. SELLING A 1967 PONTIAC LEMANS V8 CAR WITH A 3 SPEED TRANNY!!! HERES WHAT I KNOW OF THIS CAR AS I PURCHASED IT FROM THE PAST OWNER WHO HAD IT MOST OF THE CARS LIFE AND HAD HOPES OF RESTORING IT BUT HIS DREAM DIDNT HAPPEN, SO THIS IS WHAT I WAS TOLD, IT WAS ON THE ROAD WHEN HE PARKED IT, SO IT HAS NOT BEEN PARTED OUT IT IS A COMPLETE CAR!!! IT WAS ORIGINALLY A V8 CAR BUT CAME EQUIPED WITH A 326 MOTOR AND IT HAD BEEN REPLACED BY THE 400 THAT IS CURRENTLY INSTALLED IN IT NOW, POWERED BY THE AUTO 3 SPEED ON THE FLOOR WHICH I WAS TOLD WAS ORIGINAL. THE FRAME LOOKS TO BE ALL THERE OBVIOUSLY HAS SURFACE RUST BUT NO NOTICABLE ROT AS I LOOKED UNDERNEITH IT WHILE IT WAS LOADED UP ON MY CAR TRAILER! THE TRUNK IS SUPPRISINGLY STILL WHOLE INSIDE AND SEATS ARE IN GOOD STRUCTURAL CONDITION BUT WOULD NEED TO BE RECOVERED, THE WHOLE CAR IN MY EYES WOULD NEED TO BE RESTORED OR I GUESS SOME BONDO AND PAINT, TIRES BRAKES ETC... ALL THE GLASS IS STILL IN THE CAR AND LIKE I SAID IT WAS PARKED YEARS AGO IN THIS SAME CONDITION. I ALSO NOTICED THAT IT DOES HAVE A GTO HOOD ON IT! A+ FOR CLONE GUYS BUT ONE OF THE HOOD SPRINGS IS BROKE AND HAS A HARD TIME TO OPEN AND CLOSE... I DONT KNOW WHAT ELSE TO SAY BUT HERE IT IS GUYS!!!! COULD BE A DREAMERS CAR.... THIS IS A CLASSIC SO OBVIOUSLY THERE WILL BE NO WARRENTEE ON IT AND ITS BEING SOLD AS IS, BUT PLEASE BID WITH CONFIDENCE AND NOTICE MY 100% FEEDBACK SCORE THANKS |
Pontiac Le Mans for Sale
- 1971 pontiac lemans convertible le mans sport coupe
- 1967 pontiac lemans project/ parts car(US $1,300.00)
- 1977 pontiac lemans, beautiful car, everything works, runs great, many pictures(US $7,800.00)
- 1964 pontiac lemans 400 auto(US $16,800.00)
- I have the title (US $1,800.00)
- 1970 pontiac lemans sport convertible 350 auto power disc brakes tilt
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Auto blog
Junkyard Gem: 1986 Pontiac Fiero GT
Wed, Nov 2 2022If you like affordable, mid-engined two-seaters, the 1980s were your decade. Fiat (and, a bit later, Bertone) offered the X1/9, Toyota sold MR2s, and even General Motors got into the act by creating the Fiero. Available from the 1984 through 1988 model years, the Pontiac Fiero showed plenty of promise but ended up being mostly disappointing, in some ways echoing the career of the Chevy Corvair of a couple of decades earlier. Today's Junkyard Gem is a once-spiffy 1986 Fiero GT, found in a self-service yard near Denver, Colorado. After a long and painful development period stretching all the way back to John DeLorean's XP-833 Banshee (which ended up being a major influence behind the original Opel GT), the Fiero finally debuted in 1983 as a 1984 model. The top-of-the-model-range GT appeared the following year. The Fiero was built as a notchback coupe and as a fastback, with all the GTs being the latter type. I couldn't get the engine lid open, but this car would have left the assembly line (in Pontiac, Michigan) with a 2.8-liter V6 rated at 140 horsepower. This car has a five-speed manual transmission, making it a credible rival for Toyota's MR2. The 1986 MR2 was less powerful than the Fiero GT (112 horsepower versus 140), but also scaled in significantly lighter (2,459 pounds against the Pontiac's 2,780 pounds). The MR2 also cost less, priced at $11,298 while the Fiero GT cost $12,875 (that's about $30,540 and $34,805, respectively, in inflation-adjusted 2022 dollars). Meanwhile, the $6,998 Honda Civic CRX two-seater lured away many potential Fiero buyers despite being a front-engined/front-wheel-drive car, and the $7,186 Ford EXP/Mercury LN7 also put a dent in Fiero sales. I can't find a price for the 1986 Bertone X1/9, but it cost a hard-to-believe $13,990 in 1984. GM still was using five-digit odometers in many vehicles by the middle 1980s, but this Fiero has a six-digit unit and thus we can see that it nearly achieved 150,000 miles during its driving career. The 1984-1987 Fiero suffered from a parts-bin suspension design, with the front suspension borrowed from the Chevrolet Chevette and the entire rear transaxle/suspension assembly lifted from the front end of the Chevrolet Citation. For the 1988 model year, GM finally spent the money to design an improved Fiero-specific suspension … and then promptly put a halt to production.
This junkyard '91 Grand Am is as hooptie as it gets
Wed, Jun 29 2016I spend a lot of time in junkyards. A lot of time. With all this experience, I have learned to recognize a perfect hooptie when I see one, a car whose final owner got every last bit of use out of it when its value was hovering right about at scrap value. This 1991 Pontiac Grand Am that I spotted in a San Francisco Bay Area self-service wrecking yard a few days ago, from the final model year for the third-generation Grand Am, checks all the hooptie boxes just right. First of all, it's a low-option coupe with the wretched and unloved GM Iron Duke engine, a rattly, gnashy, thrashy 2.5-liter four-cylinder kludged together using off-the-shelf parts from the Pontiac 301-cubic-inch V8 during the darkest years of the Malaise Era and used in cars whose buyers just didn't care. Most of the paint has been burned off by 25 years of harsh California sun, but the car spent sufficient time in a damp, shady spot for lichens to build up here and there. There are skeletons-with-sombreros stencils sprayed here and there, plus a big moonshine-guzzling skeleton mural painted on the hood. Goodbye, property values! Still, someone felt some affection for this car, giving it the name "Good Ol' Snakey" and painting that name on the decklid. We can assume that the Iron Duke was a bit loose by this time, probably leaving a serpentine trail of blue smoke behind the car at all times. So, the combination of cheapness, ugliness, menace, and who-gives-a-damn functionality make this Grand Am an excellent example of a pure hooptie. Within a couple of months, it will be crushed, shredded, shipped out of the Port of Oakland, and reborn in China as refrigerators and Geely Emgrands. Somewhere in Northern California, though, a few of Ol' Smokey's friends will remember this car fondly.
1939 Pontiac Ghost Car commands $308,000 at auction
Mon, 01 Aug 2011For the 1939 World's Fair, Pontiac built a Deluxe Six bodied in Plexiglass. Part of the Previews of Progress pavilion in which General Motors' Futurama showed off what was to come in the world of autos, the 'invisible' Pontiac is credited as the first transparent car in America. And there were no shortcuts taken with its body: the Plexiglass form was fabricated by the company that brought the material to market in 1933, Rohm & Haas.
The see-through sedan was sold at RM Auctions' St. John's auction in Michigan on July 30, fetching $308,000. Not bad appreciation for a domestic oddity that cost $25,000 to build when new. You can check out the high-res gallery of its innards, including copper and chrome metalwork and white moldings and wheels, and get the exhaustive details on it after the jump.