1965 Pontiac Tempest on 2040-cars
Whittier, California, United States
I am selling my 65 Pontiac Tempest that its been in our famliy for more than 25 years. The car was always in the garage and recently there was a lot of work done to the car. Having said that the interior has to be redone it does not go with how nice this car looks.
The car had a disc conversion installed on the front. Has a new battery the original distributor was changed with an electronic one for better performance once was done bought 150 dollars new spark plug cables to go with the 350 dollar distributor not including labor. Has a new transmission cooler and transmission lines. I am currently driving this car everyday to pick up my son in High School no problems on over heating. The paint job was a 6k paint job there was minimal bondo applied to the car. I am selling only because I have 4 Classic cars and trying to just keep a couple. I will not ship this car you will have to personally come inspect the car and hand me the cash. You will have plenty of time to inspect it. I really hate to let it go but I need to finish other projects. Car is in Whittier CA 15 minutes away from Disneyland I will need a $ 500 pay pal deposit and balance once you pick up the car. The car it was built in Fremont CA and has spent his life in California. Has a new windshield and the bumpers were re chromed with all of the other stainless steel parts and chromes. I will take best offer but will not give away this car I know what they are worth please dont offer me 6k for the car this will tell me you are not a serious buyer. |
Pontiac Tempest for Sale
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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.
Watch as Hot Rod goes from El Paso to LA the hard way
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Realizing that no one actually wants a Catalina sulking around the shop, Freiburger and Finnegan put the car up for auction on eBay Motors the instant they had the title in hand. By the time they rolled into Hot Rod HQ, the vehicle sold for a little over $500.
The video is part of a new series called Roadkill that should document similar adventures. Keep your eyes peeled for more calamity-soaked clips in the near future. In the meantime, hit the jump to check it out yourself.
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