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

1967 Pontiac Gto Gto on 2040-cars

US $19,800.00
Year:1967 Mileage:85000 Color: White /
 Tan
Location:

Wells, Maine, United States

Wells, Maine, United States
Advertising:

For more details email me at: melidamwwindhorst@uktrainers.com .

Beautifully restored 1967 Pontiac GTO with a date code correct 400 block and 4 speed Muncie M21 manual transmission. This is a real "242" code GTO with full PHS documents and original factory build sheet. I also have clean title in hand. The body is all original except a floor pan and trunk pan, all other metal is original! This GTO just finished a 3 year body off restoration earlier this year and only has a few hundred miles on it since. Everything on this car has been replaced or refinished. The paint work is beautiful and done in its factory color "Montego Cream". The interior is all new and a perfect 10, everything works. All the glass is brand new with factory tint. All suspension and brake parts are brand new, again, everything in this car is brand new. The motor is a YS block out of a 67 GTO and is date coded 3 month before the build date of the car. It is 100% rebuilt with all new internals including an Edelbrock cam and only has a few hundred miles on it (I have the motor build-sheet). The transmission and rear end have also been totally rebuilt. The car has power steering and power disk brakes. It also has power windows and per PHS documents the car was ordered with a factory trunk pop which is also in the car. This GTO runs and drives like brand new.

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Auto blog

Gordon Murray, F1-driven production and .. the Pontiac Fiero

Tue, Oct 31 2017

Gordon Murray's design and engineering chops are unquestionable. But does his carmaking approach owe something to the short-lived Pontiac Fiero, a scrappy little car program that emerged from GM against serious resistance? Murray had a Formula One career that ran from 1969 to 1991, with stints at Brabham ('69 to '86) and McLaren ('87-'91), that resulted in several shelves' worth of trophies for the cars he was instrumental in designing. He moved on to McLaren Cars, the consumer side of things, where, during his tenure from 1991 to 2004, he helped design the McLaren F1 and the Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren, two cars that took learnings from his two decades in Formula One. What do all of these cars have in common? Three things: They are light. They were built in limited numbers. And they were (and are) exceedingly expensive—when the McLaren F1 debuted in 1994, it stickered at $815,000. Murray went on to establish Gordon Murray Design in 2007. GMD has created some interesting concept vehicles, such as the diminutive T.25 city car (94.5 inches long, 51.1 inches wide and 55.1 inches high), and the OX, a lightweight truck for the developing world that packs like an IKEA shelf and is working toward realization through a worthy crowdfunding campaign established by the Global Vehicle Trust. Now he has created a vehicle manufacturing company, Gordon Murray Automotive, that will use manufacturing methods that he developed under the moniker "iStream." Unlike a unibody, there are the "iFrame," a cage-like construction made with metallic components, and the "iPanels," which are composite. The panels aren't simply a decorative skin; they actually provide structure to the vehicle. Presumably this has something of the F1 monocoque about it. Going back to the three elements, (1) this arrangement results in a vehicle that can be comparatively light; (2) Murray has indicated that his manufacturing company will be doing limited-run production; and (3) to launch Gordon Murray Automotive they are going to be building a flagship model, about which Murray said, "With our first new car, we will demonstrate a return to the design and engineering principles that have made the McLaren F1 such an icon." Which seems to imply that it will be on the pricey side. According to the company's verbiage, "iStream forges an entirely new production method that defies conventionality with its Formula One-derived construction and materials technologies." It also sounds a whole lot like ...

What car brand should come back?

Fri, Apr 7 2017

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Hurst Edition Trans Am proves the Screaming Chicken will rise from the ashes

Wed, 31 Oct 2012

It seems the Pontiac Trans Am steadfastly refuses to die. Ever since Chevrolet was granted a retrofied Camaro to compete with the Ford Mustang, Pontiac lovers have lamented the loss of this 1970s icon. And, looking at the Hurst Edition from Trans Am Depot, shown here at the 2012 SEMA Show, may explain what all the fuss is about.
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