To say the Pontiac Fiero was an interesting automobile would be an understatement. It was an American mid-engine sportscar in an era where that was unheard of. Even today, almost 40 years after the ...
One could argue the Pontiac Fiero came at the wrong time, but it remains an iconic two-seat sports car that predated the Chevy C8 Corvette's rear-engine architecture by about three decades. The Fiero ...
If General Motors could be encapsulated in a single car-shaped nutshell, that nutshell would be shaped suspiciously like the Pontiac Fiero. Michigan’s (original) mid-engined sports car was the meeting ...
It was marred by defects and other issues, but the Fiero continues to live on as one of the most unusual and unique cars in American automotive history. In the dark days of the late 1970s, the U.S.
The early 1970s was marred by a horrific stock market crash, the energy crisis, rationing of gasoline, and the death of big-muscle factory hot rods. American auto manufacturers were forced to stop ...
Third-generation car buff Fred Bartemeyer fell in love with the Fiero before the cars ever rolled off a GM production line in 1984. He now cannot wait to join his fellow car collectors next month for ...
At first glance, this seems like a terrible idea, but I've come around to the prospect of a 1988 Fiero GT serving as a daily driven battery electric vehicle. The seller, an avid Fiero enthusiast, ...
The YouTube channel Out of Spec Renew recently met up with the Classic EV Conversion team near Denver, CO to check out their 1980’s Pontiac Fiero GT conversion. The auto shop specializes in preserving ...
This week, we featured the very rare and little known 1980 Corvette America on the site – a custom, coach built four-door Corvette that was officially commissioned by General Motors. The Corvette wasn ...
Every so often, the used sports car market serves up a hidden gem that makes gearheads do a double-take. It’s the kind of car you wouldn’t expect to find sitting in the bargain bin, especially given ...
Fiero. It means "Fire" in Italian. That's actually not true, it means "Proud," but a lot of people think it means fire, perhaps because the early Pontiac Fieros had a disproportionate tendency to ...
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