1992 Firebird T-top 305 V8 Auto 75k! Clea! Super Nice! All Original! on 2040-cars
Lenoir City, Tennessee, United States
Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:5.0L 305Cu. In. V8 GAS OHV Naturally Aspirated
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Make: Pontiac
Model: Firebird
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Trim: Base Coupe 2-Door
Options: Cassette Player
Drive Type: RWD
Safety Features: Driver Airbag, Passenger Airbag
Mileage: 75,000
Power Options: Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Locks, Power Windows
Exterior Color: Red
Interior Color: Black
Number of Cylinders: 8
Number of Doors: 2
Im listing this for a close friend so please be email robris8@bellsouth.net for any questions on this car.
What I have for sale is my 1992 Firebird with 75,XXX actual miles. This is low mileage for a car of this age and you just don't see them in this condition anymore.
This car has been garage kepted for most of its life. It has the original factory paint that almost shows new with no clear coat peeling or issues. The T-Tops DO NOT LEAK.
It has four new BFGoodrich Radial T/A's on factory rims. Car is solid and the doors are tight with no slop.
This car dose not leak any fluid what so ever and the engine is dry from top to bottom.
The interior from the dash back to the trunk latch is near flawless condition with no rips, tears, cracks or fading.
It has power windows, power door locks, power rear view mirrors, tilt steering, timed wipers, cruise control, factory AM/FM cassett player with equalizer which all are in working condition. (The stereo system sounds great.) All gauges work and it has tinted windows.
It comes with the original owners manual which incudes the emergency credit card key, original T-Top storage case and the original T-Top shade inserts.
It has an oil change every three thousand miles since I have owned the car, new front brakes, wires and plugs and wiper blades all done recently. I also had a brand new air conditioning system installed which can get uncomfortably cold for eight hundred dollars and have receipts for all work done.
This car gets alot of looks at car shows and people stop me when I'm out in it wanting to look inside and ask if I would be willing to sell it. Now I am.
You will not be disappointed with the condition of this Firebird. I have a clean title in hand.
Pontiac Firebird for Sale
1967 pontiac firebird convertible 100% rust free california car $18,900
1978 firebird redbird edtion rare barn find(US $6,500.00)
Lt-1 v-8, automatic, **no reserve** cleanest you will find!!!!(US $4,500.00)
1979 pontiac trans am ws6 hardtop coupe 5 speed(US $26,500.00)
National award winning trans am se 400 v8 4 speed(US $69,900.00)
No reserve!! 1989 pontiac firebird formula coupe 2-door 5.7l
Auto Services in Tennessee
Veterans Auto Services ★★★★★
Toyota Of Cool Springs ★★★★★
Sun Tech Auto Glass ★★★★★
Roger Miller`s Boat & RV Fiberglass Body Shop ★★★★★
RES Automotive ★★★★★
Quality Motors ★★★★★
Auto blog
Here are a few of our automotive guilty pleasures
Tue, Jun 23 2020It goes without saying, but I'll say it anyway. The world is full of cars, and just about as many of them are bad as are good. It's pretty easy to pick which fall into each category after giving them a thorough walkaround and, more important, driving them. But every once in a while, an automobile straddles the line somehow between good and bad — it may be hideously overpriced and therefore a marketplace failure, it may be stupid quick in a straight line but handles like a drunken noodle, or it may have an interior that looks like it was made of a mess of injection-molded Legos. Heck, maybe all three. Yet there's something special about some bad cars that actually makes them likable. The idea for this list came to me while I was browsing classified ads for cars within a few hundred miles of my house. I ran across a few oddballs and shared them with the rest of the team in our online chat room. It turns out several of us have a few automotive guilty pleasures that we're willing to admit to. We'll call a few of 'em out here. Feel free to share some of your own in the comments below. Dodge Neon SRT4 and Caliber SRT4: The Neon was a passably good and plucky little city car when it debuted for the 1995 model year. The Caliber, which replaced the aging Neon and sought to replace its friendly marketing campaign with something more sinister, was panned from the very outset for its cheap interior furnishings, but at least offered some decent utility with its hatchback shape. What the two little front-wheel-drive Dodge models have in common are their rip-roarin' SRT variants, each powered by turbocharged 2.4-liter four-cylinder engines. Known for their propensity to light up their front tires under hard acceleration, the duo were legitimately quick and fun to drive with a fantastic turbo whoosh that called to mind the early days of turbo technology. — Consumer Editor Jeremy Korzeniewski Chevrolet HHR SS: Chevy's HHR SS came out early in my automotive journalism career, and I have fond memories of the press launch (and having dinner with Bob Lutz) that included plenty of tire-smoking hard launches and demonstrations of the manual transmission's no-lift shift feature. The 260-horsepower turbocharged four-cylinder was and still is a spunky little engine that makes the retro-inspired HHR a fun little hot rod that works quite well as a fun little daily driver.
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.
Lutz says Washington killed Pontiac, next G6 was to be ATS derivative
Tue, 29 Oct 2013How many people think Buick or GMC should have gotten the axe instead of Pontiac? You can't see it, but I'm raising my hand. Autoweek reports that former Vice Chairman of GM, Bob Lutz, has indicated that things didn't have to end up the way they did.
"The Feds said, 'Yeah, how much money have you made on Pontiac in the last 10 years?' and the answer was, 'Nothing.'"
In a talk given at the Petersen Automotive Museum for the Inside the MotoMan Studio series, Lutz says "The Feds said, 'Yeah, how much money have you made on Pontiac in the last 10 years?' and the answer was, 'Nothing.' So, it goes. And when the guy who is handing you the check for $53 billion says, 'I don't want Pontiac, drop Pontiac or you don't get the money,' it doesn't take you very long to make up your mind." Lutz even added that the next-generation Pontiac G6 would have benefitted from the rear-wheel-drive platform of the Cadillac ATS. How awesome would that have been?













