1966 - Pontiac Gto on 2040-cars
Denver, Colorado, United States
1966 GTO Family Owned Nearly 49 Years My father factory special ordered this GTO on the 16th of April in 1966. It was Built on the 18th of May and my father drove it down our driveway on the 21st of May 1966, I was waiting for my father to come home and still remember him as he turned down our driveway for the first time! Price got your attention? Make me an offer--- Double click on picture to get full sized images---ebay doesn't tell you that! Call/contact me for more detailed info and pictures. Moving overseas and can't take it with me--- I can assist in shipping arrangements 1966 GTO Tri-Power Automatic It has the original drivetrain including starter and alternator Engine and trans have been completely rebuilt. The car has had a complete frame off restoration and has been painted in the original Palmetto Green Color I have the Original Title as well as a Duplicate in the same names, so you can keep the original, I also have the original purchase order, 30 day tags, most of the original license plates, all of the registrations, repair receipts, two folders worth to include letters to dealerships getting the best price for the car order! Notebooks of our bi-yearly cross country trips to include fuel stops, cost, gallons, mileage, our hotel stops, some receipts and a 1966 AAA map highlighted showing our cross country routes! I keep finding more! I have a few pictures of our documented cross country trips that also show the license plate numbers and my family, including the GTO behind my brother and I with the go-kart in 1967. RESTORATION DETAILS: The Radiator has the original HD tanks with a new staggered 5 row core, original radiator cap and lower radiator hose! The cooling fan is the larger HD aluminum 7 blade clutch type. New heater core. ENGINE DETAILS: The original engine has been bored .030 oversize using TRW forged pistons, an oval dish has been machined to lower the compression to 9.8:1, the pistons also have a Thermal Barrier applied to the tops. Piston rings are "Total Seal" Gapless second, moly top ring. The crank is a 421 piece that has been machined to fit the original unmodified block and is now 421 cu.in. The crank assembly has also been balanced. I still have the original std. never turned Arma Steel crank . The original 093 heads have been completely rebuilt using all new guides, all new TRW valves, hardened valve seats, new screw in studs, 3 angle valve job, pocket ported, new pushrods, all original rocker arms and nuts! Camshaft is a Pontiac Tri-Power cam Starter and alternator are the originals and have been rebuilt. Included, is a ram air/cold air air cleaner pan Transmission is the original ST-300 Turbo Hydramatic that has been rebuilt with new clutches, Kevlar band and shift kit Included, is a 200-4r 4-speed overdrive trans that has been rebuilt in detail with extra clutches, hardened splines, shifter cable, Console shifter position plate and all hardware needed for trans conversion. No driveshaft modification needed. Driveshaft has new vintage GM Saginaw u-joints and has the original driveshaft and yoke Differential is the original Safe-T-Track 3:55 ratio with new axle bearings and all new seals The cover has never been removed and still has the original whale oil in it! Body and Frame: Have been completely disassembled and media blasted clean (see pictures) All tie rods, ball joints, center link, idler arm, front springs and shocks, bushings have been replaced with Moog parts and Polygraphite bushings. All new fuel, brake lines, fuel tank and sending unit Exhaust system has the original dimension replacement mufflers with 2.25" diameter pipes Brake Shoes: are the Kevlar and Ceramic, by Muscle Car Brakes. Unbelievable stopping power! All weatherstrips, window channel and track felts replaced, vent window, trunk, and door rubber seals replaced. Floor soundproofing and carpets replaced. Front seat covers are new with preformed seat foam Instrument panel new real walnut insert (best I could find) Firewall; heater box and steering column seals replaced Car runs very strong, drives excellent and sounds great!
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Junkyard Gem: 2008 Pontiac G5 Coupe
Sun, Apr 9 2023In the grim early days of the Great Recession, the situation at GM's Pontiac Division didn't feel so great but there was some cause for optimism. The Solstice still had a certain glow, the Holden Commodore-based G8 had just arrived, and vehicle shoppers could stride into their local Pontiac showrooms and choose from eight different models bearing the iconic arrowhead badge. Yes, there were still new Torrents and Grand Prix and Vibes for sale in 2008, and of course the Cavalier-twin Sunfire had been replaced by the Cobalt-twin G5 by that time. Here's one of those G5s, found in a Colorado Springs car graveyard. It wasn't long after this car was built that everything went to hell for Pontiac. In April of 2009, GM announced that the Pontiac Division would be "phased out" over the next few years. Just to drive home the point, GM itself filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy five weeks later. GM had already offed Oldsmobile—a marque dating back to 1897, making it nearly 30 years Pontiac's senior—five years earlier, so everybody knew there would be no reprieve in this case. Just to confuse everybody, Pontiac dealers offered a G3-badged Chevy Aveo (aka Daewoo Kalos) to sell alongside the G5 for 2009, but by 2010 there were just two new Pontiac models still standing in the United States: the G6 and the Vibe. Just over 70,000 G5s were sold in the United States during the 2007-2009 model years, making these cars fairly rare. The Cobalt/G5 ignition-switch fiasco of the mid-2010s really hammered their resale value at the time. Sometimes the definition of "Gem" refers to historical value, not the happier kind. Speaking of ignition switches, the key is still in this one. That generally means that a junkyard vehicle is a dealership trade-in or insurance total that couldn't sell at auction. This one is a base model, which listed at $15,675 (about $22,040 in 2023 dollars). The snazzier G5 GT started at $19,850 ($27,911 now) that year. The engine in this car is a 2.2-liter Ecotec four-banger rated at 148 horsepower and 152 pound-feet (the GT got a 2.4 with 171 hp/167 lb-ft). A five-speed manual was standard equipment, but the buyer of this car paid extra for the automatic. GM stuck these little "Mark of Excellence" badges on the fenders of its vehicles starting in 2005, then ditched the idea in 2009. I have vivid memories of this logo from the seatbelt buttons in my parents' 1973 Sportvan Beauville.
Pontiac Firebird in latest Generation Gap scrap
Tue, 30 Sep 2014Generation Gap is mining the Lingenfelter collection again this week to compare two very different interpretations of the Pontiac Firebird. An original 1968 example goes toe-to-toe with a 2010 Lingenfelter Trans Am to see whether the old man or the modern re-imagining takes the crown.
Being from the Lingenfelter collection, both cars are absolutely immaculate. The '68 packs a Pontiac 350-cubic-inch (5.7-liter) V8 with a claimed 320 horsepower and some classic, muscular style with a hood-mounted tach. Plus, it's painted in an understated shade of green that you don't usually see.
In the other corner is Lingenfelter's pumped-up take on the classic shape based on the modern Camaro, and this is just one of six concept versions ever made. It wears an eye-catching, vintage-inspired livery of blue with a white stripe package. Under its shaker hood is a 455-cubic-inch (7.5-liter) V8 with a reported 655 hp and 610 pound-feet of torque.
1969 Pontiac GTO Judge vs. 2006 GTO, which Goat gets your vote?
Mon, 08 Sep 2014The Pontiac GTO was perhaps the most iconic muscle car of the '60s and early '70s. With its beefy V8 and color palette screaming for attention, it summarized in a single vehicle everything that made the era so appealing to many young people. Pontiac tried to collect just a few drops of that aura again in the 2000s with a revived GTO, but with decidedly mixed results. The performance was still there with its big V8, but the looks never quite lived up to the powertrain. Now, Generation Gap wants to know which of these Goats is the one to own.
Things are skewed immediately because the 2006 GTO here is a real ringer. It comes from famous tuner Ken Lingenfelter's collection, and it's a one-off example partially fettled by GM Performance boasting a twin-turbocharged LS2 V8 with a claimed 750 horsepower and a wide-body kit. This Goat definitely isn't what you're going to find just browsing for one to buy in the newspaper. Still, dip the throttle just a little, and this GTO pulls like a freight train. It's enough to turn the two hosts into giggling schoolboys behind the wheel.
The '69 GTO Judge here is also out of Lingenfelter's collection, but this one is all stock with a 400-cubic-inch (6.6-liter) V8 and a Ram Air hood for a claimed 366 hp. It might not have the unbelievable power of the turbo '06, but it makes up for it with style to spare.