2004 Pontiac Grand Prix Gtp 3.8l Supercharged V6 on 2040-cars
Des Moines, Iowa, United States
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I'm posting for sale my USED 2004 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP, with CompetitionG package. This beautiful car has 66,000 miles and I am the third owner. It has been well cared for and maintained. It is in good shape, with normal wear and tear for its age. Its interior is all leather, includes all working power options, supercharged V6 and is a joy to drive. I recently installed four brand new tires, brake pads and new rotors on all wheels, and two new rear brake calipers. I also installed a new front right wheel bearing and hub. In all, just over $2,400 worth of improvements in the past six weeks. The seat leather bolsters have normal wear and minor cracking on outside edges of seats. There are no stains, cuts or splits in the leather seating surfaces or dash surface. A small section of the plastic heads-up display trim piece has an approximate 1" crack, but does not degrade the appear of the car. Some of the seatbelt warning stickers have curled due to age and sunlight. I do not smoke, but there may be a slight hint of very old cigar odor with a prior owner. A gentleman in my office parking lot recently gently backed into the left rear bumper cover and knocked a few chips of clear coat and paint from it. I attempted a home repair. It is not a professional finish but it removed the paint swipes left by the other car. Photos are attached. The steering wheel leather has some rough spots along the bottom, and a few of the radio buttons show slight wear. There are a few minor exterior paint chips and rust spots along the rocker panels and fender skirts near the wheels. You may be alright with these issues or you may choose to have them professionally improved if you decide to buy the car. Either way, the car is sold "AS-IS, WHERE IS" with no warranty neither expressed nor implied. Serious bidders only, please. Buyer should have your funding source ready and available if you decide to purchase or make an offer on my USED 2004 Grand Prix GTP. Additional photos can be provided; email me for any and all questions or additional information requested PRIOR to bidding. A deposit of $250 via Paypal is required with buyer's agreement to purchase, with remaining funds due by end of 7 business days. All Sales Final; No Refunds. A bill of sale, odometer statement and damage disclosure statement will be provided at conclusion of sale. Buyer is responsible for all tax, title and license registration fees with buyer's local vehicle registration authority. Buyer is responsible for all costs to ship, travel for or transport the vehicle to buyer's location. Title is clear and in-hand. Vehicle will be released for pick-up and/or shipping transport only AFTER buyer's funds have cleared at the seller's bank. For this reason, I prefer to exchange funds via Bank-to-Bank Wire Transfer; although in the case of this vehicle, I will consider receiving a Cashiers Check drawn on a legitimate bank in the U.S. I will not accept cash nor or personal check. Again, vehicle release and title re-assignment will not occur until AFTER buyer's funds have cleared at the seller's bank. Seller reserves the right to re-list the vehicle for sale if the buyer does not complete the final funding transaction within 7 business days, or work with the seller to notify seller of buyer's intent to complete the purchase.
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Junkyard Gem: 1987 Pontiac Firebird
Sat, May 9 2020From 1967 through 2002, the Pontiac Division offered the Firebird, close sibling to the Chevrolet Camaro. By the third generation, which debuted for the 1982 model year, it became more difficult to tell the two F-body cars apart at a glance and the Pontiac-exclusive engines of the earlier years disappeared, but the Firebird still retained its own personality and its own position in the GM marketing hierarchy. I still find the occasional 1982-1992 Camaro as I search car graveyards for interesting stuff, but the corresponding Firebirds have become scarce in recent years. Here's a base-engine-equipped '87, its Bright Red paint (yes, that was the official name for the color) faded by the Colorado sun as it awaits the crusher. Firebird shoppers had their choice of three engines in 1987: A 5.7-liter Chevy V8 (210 hp), a 5.0-liter Chevy V8 (205 hp) and the same 2.8-liter 60° V6 that went into the Fiero and countless front-drive GM sedans (135 hp). This car has the base engine. The third-gen F-body didn't weigh much (3,105 pounds for the '87 with six-banger, about what a 2020 Corolla weighs), so 135 horses was tolerable. Plenty of these cars got T-5 5-speed manual transmissions, but this one got the two-pedal setup. Camaro wheels, of course. Our Friend the Carburetor didn't disappear from new cars until the early 1990s in the United States, though electronic fuel injection had become very commonplace by 1987. Still, GM considered this car's EFI worth a door-handle brag. It's not worth fixing up a mashed six-cylinder third-gen Firebird, so we can see the route this car took to its final parking space. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. When you're about to be beaten to a pulp by catcalling, Olds-driving thugs, run to the Firebird! This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. So much big hair in these late-1980s Pontiac ads! Featured Gallery Junked 1987 Pontiac Firebird View 24 Photos Auto News Pontiac Automotive History Coupe Firebird pontiac firebird Junkyard Gems
GM Design shows what could have been and what might be
Thu, May 27 2021We periodically like to check in with GM Design's Instagram account to see what they're cooking up. Even better is when we catch a glimpse of an alternate history of what legendary designers from The General's past were thinking, though those ideas may not have made it into production. This week, for example, the account posted some illustrations from George Camp, whose career at GM spanned nearly four decades, from 1963 to 2001. One of the renderings is of what appears to be a 1971-72 Pontiac GTO Judge, but with two headlights instead of the production unit's quad beams. The rear departs from the canonical version most dramatically, with a massive integrated wing. Other bits that didn't make the production cut include large side vents, a gill-like side marker and rectangular intakes below the headlights that wouldn't be out of place on a modern design today. Amazingly, from what we can make out of the date, it appears that the drawing was done sometime in 1965, which makes it quite prescient.      View this post on Instagram            A post shared by GM Design (@generalmotorsdesign) There's also a very aerodynamic interpretation of a Corvette ZR-1. To our eyes it splits the difference between the 1986 Corvette Indy concept and a fourth-generation F-body Pontiac Firebird, so perhaps parts of Camp's work on this sketch did make it into physical form. There's also a radical sports car concept from May 1970 that resembles the Mazda RX-500 concept from the same year, a Syd Mead-looking Cadillac coupe, and an Oldsmobile with a cool take on the company's trademark waterfall grille and elements of the Colonnade Cutlass at the rear. Other recent posts include a FJ Cruiser-like off-road EV, a sleek coupe with the Chevy corporate grille, and a rendering of a Silverado-esque pickup that looks far better than the current production version.      View this post on Instagram            A post shared by GM Design (@generalmotorsdesign) It's pretty easy to lose hours in the account, but it's always fascinating to see GM's visions of what could have been and what might be. Related Video:
Junkyard Gem: 1984 Pontiac Fiero with supercharged 3800 V6 swap
Tue, Dec 31 2019Like the Corvair, the Vega, and the Citation, the Pontiac Fiero was a very innovative machine that ended up causing General Motors more headaches than happiness, and Fiero aficionados and naysayers continue to beat each other with tire irons (figuratively speaking, I hope) to this day. The General has often proved willing to take the occasional big gamble and huge GM successes in engineering prowess (including the first overhead-valve V8 engine for the masses and the first real-world-usable true automatic transmission) and marketing brilliance (e.g., the Pontiac GTO and related John DeLorean home runs) meant that the idea of a mid-engined sporty economy car (or economical sports car) got a shot from the suits on the 14th floor. Sadly, the Fiero ended up being the marketplace victim of too many issues to get into here, and The General pulled the plug immediately after the 1988-model-year suspension redesign that made the Fiero the sports car it should have been all along. But what if the plastic Pontiac had never suffered from the misery of the gnashy, pokey Iron Duke engine and had been built from the start with a screaming supercharged V6 making way better than 200 horsepower? The final owner of today's Junkyard Gem sought to make that very Fiero, by dropping in one of the many supercharged 3.8-liter V6s installed in 1990s and 2000s GM factory hot rods. The first Fieros came out in 1983 for model year 1984, and the only engine available that year was the Iron Duke 2.5-liter four-cylinder, which generated its 92 horsepower with the full-throated song of a Soviet tractor stuck in the freezing mud of a Polish sugar-beet field. The 2M4 badging stood for "two seats, mid-engine, four cylinders," just as the numbers in the Oldsmobile 4-4-2 once represented "four carburetor barrels, four-speed manual transmission, dual exhaust." This car is a top-trim-level SE model, which listed for $9,599 (about $24,200 today). The no-frills Fiero cost just $7,999 that year, making these cars far cheaper than the only other reasonably affordable new mid-engined car Americans could buy at that time: the $13,990 Bertone (aka Fiat) X1/9. The Toyota MR2 appeared in North America as a 1985 model with a base price of $10,999 and promptly siphoned off the car-buying cash from a bunch of potential Fiero shoppers.



