1967 Pontiac Gto 4sp. H/t 3.55 Posi Drag Car Sun Gauges Hurst Shifter Console 67 on 2040-cars
Brandon, Florida, United States
1967 Pontiac GTO 2dr. H/T Street/Strip Drag Car. This car was basically a Street/Strip Drag Car its whole life. According to the past owner that had it for 40 years most of the miles on the odometer are from the car being flat towed to and from the track. The car was raced in New York & Ohio in the late 1960's and 1970's up until the middle 1980's. That is when the motor was blown and the car has sat ever since. The car was originally Atoll Blue with White bucket seat interior and no vinyl top. It was a No Power Steering, No Power Brakes straight line type of car. It has a full factory console in it, bucket seats and lots of vintage speed stuff including: Horstman Aluminum Cool Can, Hurst Short Shifter with Hurst Line Lock button, Sun fuel pressure gauge, SW Oil, Amp & Temp gauges, plus a Vintage Tach. This car has had one re-paint in the 80's in the same Atoll Blue. The motor in the car is believed to be the original motor (code WT) but has a piece of the cam missing so it is estimated that the motor has serious internal damage to it. The rest of the drive line was all working when the motor was blown in 1986 but it all has been sitting since then so I do not know the condition of any of it. The rearend spins freely. The code on the Muncie trans is: P0D21A, so I assume it is an M20. I have the drive shaft. I have a few other parts of the engine ie: starter, alternator, brackets, pulleys, cast iron intake, headers. I do not have the heads or the carb for this car. This car also has a driveshaft loop under it. The body on this car does have some rust in it. The trunk floor is completely gone, the rear window area is weak and has rust in it. The lower part of the body has rust in it. Also, the front lower windsheild has rust. The floors have a few holes in them that have been patched but will probably need to be replaced eventually. The hood has rust in the front lip. If you live in the Central Florida area and are interested in this car I would suggest that you come and look at the car for yourself. It is going to need a lot of work to get it back on the road (or strip) but it is fixable. This car would be really cool to restore it to the way it was raced in the late 60's and 70's. Most of the vintage speed equiptment is still with the car and it would be easy to restore back to that configuration. I have a lot of other pictures of this car on Photobucket. If anyone wants to see those pictures I can email them the link through Ebay or by phone. I'm sure I am leaving some of the many details about this car out. Look at the pictures and if you have any additional questions LMK. You can talk to me via email or at 8 one 3 - seven three 2 - six zero six 8. Thanks, Curtis
On Apr-26-14 at 19:36:07 PDT, seller added the following information: **** NOTICE ****** To answer a few of the questions I have gotten from some Ebay'ers about this car ...... I have the PHS documents to verify the car and the PHS will go to the high bidder of the car. The PHS states that it is/was a 400 4bar, M20 Muncie trans, 3.55 posi rearend, AM Radio, Console, Deluxe Wheel Discs, Clock, rear seat speaker ..... All ID tags on this car are still it there factory applied positions and are perfect. The car has a 1983 Ohio title which is open and states that at that time (1983) the car had 46228 miles on it. The speedo in the car now shows 48765 miles. Again, I don't have any way to prove it for sure but I believe that this car only has 48765 miles on it from new, as it has been a Drag Car most of its life and has been off of the road now since 1986. |
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Auto blog
1939 Pontiac Ghost Car commands $308,000 at auction
Mon, 01 Aug 2011For the 1939 World's Fair, Pontiac built a Deluxe Six bodied in Plexiglass. Part of the Previews of Progress pavilion in which General Motors' Futurama showed off what was to come in the world of autos, the 'invisible' Pontiac is credited as the first transparent car in America. And there were no shortcuts taken with its body: the Plexiglass form was fabricated by the company that brought the material to market in 1933, Rohm & Haas.
The see-through sedan was sold at RM Auctions' St. John's auction in Michigan on July 30, fetching $308,000. Not bad appreciation for a domestic oddity that cost $25,000 to build when new. You can check out the high-res gallery of its innards, including copper and chrome metalwork and white moldings and wheels, and get the exhaustive details on it after the jump.
Junkyard Gem: 1991 Pontiac Grand Am LE with Quad 4 Engine
Wed, May 9 2018GM introduced the N-Body compact platform with the Oldsmobile Calais and Pontiac Grand Am for the 1985 model year and continued building N-based cars through 1998. Most of these cars weren't interesting from an enthusiast standpoint, but a handful rolled off the assembly line with raucous DOHC Oldsmobile Quad 4 engines and manual transmissions, and those cars were plenty of fun. Here's a 1991 Grand Am with that rare setup, photographed in a self-service yard in California's Central Valley. The base engine in the 1991 Grand Am was the 110-horsepower, 2.5-liter pushrod Iron Duke, an engine that might have been fine on a Romanian tractor in 1953 but had no place on an American street car as the 21st century approached. Fortunately, GM started bolting the modern 2.3-liter DOHC Quad 4 engine into 1988 cars, and this was a proper four-cylinder. The Quad 4 ran a little rough and uncivilized, and it had its share of reliability problems, but you could rev the piss out of it and it made good power. In 1991, this engine was rated at 180 hp. That made this 2,592-pound sedan pretty quick. Unfortunately, the slushboxization of America had progressed with depressing rapidity during the 1980s, and by 1991 most Grand Am buyers — even the ones who opted for the Quad 4 — chose the automatic transmission. That didn't happen with this car, though — it boasts a rugged Getrag 5-speed instead of the happiness-amputating three-speed automatic. Yes, that's the kind of odometer reading you'd expect to see on an Accord or Maxima from this era. Someone loved this car and took care of it. Here we see an interesting mix of 1980s and 1990s car-radio technology. CD players in cars were still costly luxury items in 1991, seldom seen in affordable cars like the Grand Am, while 1980s-style slider-style EQ controls were on the way out. This Delco unit straddles both decades nicely. I seek out Quad 4-equipped cars during my junkyard travels, and I have photographed quite a few: this '89 Cutlass Calais, this '90 Cutlass Calais, this '90 Grand Am, this '91 Quad 442, this '93 Achieva SCX, and this '98 Cavalier Z24. It's a shame that Buick never put the Quad 4 in the Reatta, which was a fine car ruined by a somnolent and obsolete V6. The music in this ad is even more early-1990s than Crystal Pepsi. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings.
Junkyard Gem: 1992 Pontiac Firebird
Mon, Dec 18 2023Last spring, this series featured a 1992 Chevrolet Camaro RS in a Northern California junkyard, an example of the final model year for the highly successful third-generation GM F-Body. On a later visit to that yard, I spotted the Pontiac sibling to that car, a Firebird that was born the same year at the same Southern California factory. When the Chevrolet Division introduced the first Camaro as a 1967 model, the Pontiac Division got its own version of the F-Body called the Firebird. While the two cars were built on the same chassis and looked very similar, the first-generation Camaros got Chevrolet engines while their Firebird colleagues got Pontiac engines (including the innovative SOHC straight-six). The 1970-1981 second-generation Firebirds still had some Pontiac-only engines, but Chevrolet and Oldsmobile power crept under some hoods during that period. The third-generation Firebirds first appeared as 1982 models, and they drew from near-identical stockpiles of GM running gear (including the distinctly agricultural Iron Duke four-banger, which could be considered a Pontiac-derived engine). When the Camaro got the axe after 2002, the Firebird's neck was put on the same chopping block. When the Camaro returned for 2010, the Pontiac brand was sputtering to an agonized halt during its final year and there was no chance of the Firebird's return. This car is a fairly ordinary coupe, though it does have the mid-grade 205-horsepower 5.0-liter Chevrolet small-block V8 instead of the base 140-horse 3.1-liter V6. A 5.7-liter small-block was available as well. A five-speed manual transmission was base equipment, but few Americans wanted a three-pedal setup by the early 1990s. This car has the optional four-speed automatic. The MSRP with 5.0 engine, automatic transmission and air conditioning (which this car has) started at $14,304. That's about $31,868 in 2023 dollars. It was built at Van Nuys Assembly in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles County. By the dawn of the 1990s, the Camaros and Firebirds made at Van Nuys Assembly had become known as the worst-built GM cars made in North America, and the plant was shut down forever soon after this car was built. Today, a shopping mall lives where the factory once stood. This car managed to drive more than 150,000 miles during its life, so it beat the odds. The thrid-gen F-Body was pretty antiquated by the early 1990s, but the fourth-gen cars handled better and looked up-to-date for the era.