1980 Pontiac Firebird Convertible on 2040-cars
Fort Collins, Colorado, United States
Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:V8 301
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Private Seller
Make: Pontiac
Model: Firebird
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Trim: CONV
Options: Convertible
Drive Type: RWD
Power Options: Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Locks, Power Windows, Power Seats
Mileage: 80,000
Exterior Color: White
Interior Color: Tan
Disability Equipped: No
Number of Cylinders: 8
Auction starts at one penny and car will be sold to highest bidder.NO RESERVE. This Firebird was send out to National Couch LTD as a brand new vehicle ,converted to convertible and than sold for a lots of $$$ by Pontiac dealers.Conversion was done right by welding new frame to bottom for strength etc .Check out www.firebirdgallery.com/national_coachlot1.htm for more info. I bought this car as a daily driver 6 years ago.After few months I decided to restore it. After complete dissambly sanding priming I painted with single stage Eastwood White.I did a crapy job .After getting rid of orange peel and runs some elements are showing dark shadows.Body needs another coat of paint to make it look great or just keep few feet away :-).Unfortunatelly during that time I hurt my back .6 years and two surgeries later .....I realized that I will not be able to finnish it.
GOOD - Body was streight. Original 301 engine is running great,has perfect compression.All smog and AC equipment is there ( if you decide to go original).Car came loaded PS,PB,PDL,PW,Ptrunk,tilt steering and everything was working before I took it apart.New power steering pump filters etc.Clear SC title in my name.I have new carpet and trunk gasket (included)
BAD-Needs interior and top work.Transmission was rebuild with trans go shift kit worked great but now reverse is not working( 0 miles on rebuild,have no clue what happened).All cabin electical needs reconected and fixed ( everthing worked 100%) Interior,dash was put in just for pics.Don't have original front seats.I bought set of aftermarket still in a box which will include with car.
Please ask questions or come and see the car if you local and would like to place a bid.Good Luck.Reserve right to end this auction at any time.Please serious people only.
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Junkyard Gem: 1964 Pontiac Catalina Custom Ventura
Mon, May 22 2023Like Impala, Skylark, Malibu and Silverado (among many others), the Ventura name began its career as the designation for a trim level or option package used on another GM model, then became a model name in its own right. Initially a designation for a snazzed-up Pontiac Catalina two- or four-door hardtop, the Ventura name moved over to a Pontiac-ized version of the Chevy Nova for 1971. Today's Junkyard Gem, found in a Northern California car graveyard, proudly bears both Catalina and Ventura badging. Actually, the Catalina name itself started out as a trim level for the Chieftain and Star Chief models of the 1950s, just to confuse everybody. By the time this car was built, the Catalina was the cheapest of four Pontiac models built on the same full-size B-Body platform as the big Chevrolets and Olds 88s of the time (the Star Chief, Bonneville and Grand Prix ranked above it on the 1964 Pontiac Prestige-O-Meter). The 1964 Catalina four-door hardtop with the Custom Ventura package offered a lot of swank per dollar, with a price starting at $3,063. That's about $29,821 when converted to inflated 2023 dollars. The main benefit of the Custom Ventura package was an interior done up entirely in Morrokide upholstery. Morrokide was the name GM applied to Naugahyde fake leather when used in Pontiac vehicles; when used in Buicks, it was known as Cordaveen, while Oldsmobile Naugahyde was called Morocceen. Naugahyde took its name from the town of Naugatuck, Connecticut, where it was invented. This car's Morrokide is in rough shape. In fact, everything about this car is decayed and probably infectious. You know to be careful when a junkyard car has warnings about rat feces inked on the glass. That said, I couldn't resist examining the 8-track tapes that littered the interior. Here's Hotel California, the 1976 hit album by the Eagles. Supertramp's Paris, a live album recorded from the 1979 Breakfast in America tour, is here as well. Here's The Best of Carly Simon, from 1975. The tapes were played on this Sparkomatic player, which probably lived in the glovebox or under the seat. The factory radio was AM-only, and includes the frequency markings for the atomic-attack CONELRAD emergency frequencies. 1964 was the last year for mandatory CONELRAD radios in the United States.
Junkyard Gem: 1968 Pontiac Catalina sedan
Wed, Aug 14 2019During the late 1960s, General Motors ruled the American car landscape, growing so dominant that the federal government considered antitrust action to break up the company. The General offered sporty Corvettes and muscular GTOs and rugged pickups and opulent Fleetwoods, sure, but the fat part of the sales numbers came from the bread-and-butter full-sized sedans and coupes, which boasted superior engineering and modern-looking styling; in 1967 alone, the Chevrolet Division moved 972,600 full-sized cars, and that's not even counting the 155,100 full-sized Chevy station wagons that year. Pontiac, Buick and Oldsmobile sold the same big cars with division-specific engines and bodywork, and they flew off the showroom floors. For 1968, the entry-level full-sized car from Pontiac was the Catalina, and I've found an example of the most affordable version of the most affordable big Pontiac for 1968, discarded in a northeastern Colorado wrecking yard about 50 miles south of Cheyenne, Wyoming. A '68 GM full-sized coupe, convertible, or even a four-door hardtop might be worth the cost and effort of a restoration, but a no-options base-trim-level post sedan with rust and plenty of body filler just won't get many takers these days. Like so many vehicles that sit outside for decades on the High Plains, this one is full of rodent nests. I wouldn't want to work on the interior of this car without a respirator and a lot of work with a shop-vac, because hantavirus is a significant danger in these parts. Alfred Sloan's plan to offer a stepladder of prestige for GM buyers, in which your first new car was a Chevrolet and you moved up through Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick until you became sufficiently prosperous for Cadillac ownership, worked brilliantly for decades. In 1968, the Catalina was a notch above its Impala sibling on the Snob-O-Meter, with the sedan starting at $3,004 (about $22,600 in 2019 dollars). In fact, the V8-equipped 1968 Chevrolet Impala sedan listed at $3,033, and the Oldsmobile Delmont 88 went for $3,146, so the lines were beginning to blur between the relative positions of the lower-end GM divisions by this time. The base engine in the 1968 Catalina was a 400-cubic-inch (6.5 liter) V8 rated at 265 horsepower and enough torque to tow an aircraft carrier.
Looking Back At Oprah's Free-Car Giveaway 10 Years Later
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