Most people who walked into a Pontiac dealership in 1965 ended up ordering a hardtop, with the carmaker producing 55,722 units this year. The convertible was the runner-up but its demand significantly ...
The 1965 GTO confirmed what everybody already knew: it was almost an overnight hit, with every unit selling like hotcakes. Pontiac produced over 75,000 GTOs in 1965, up from approximately 32,500 units ...
A remarkable discovery has emerged from two decades of dry storage—a 1965 Pontiac GTO that's not quite what it appears to be. Initially sold as a Le Mans with a modest 326 two-barrel engine, this ...
Let's get the most important thing out of the way first: this is not a numbers-matching GTO, and the trim tag tells you so. The decode confirms the car left Pontiac's Michigan assembly plant in August ...
Conceived in early 1963 by Pontiac’s John Z. DeLorean, Bill Collins, and Russ Gee, the Pontiac GTO was a factory hot rod born by replacing the standard 326 cubic-inch V8 in the mid-size Pontiac ...
(Editor's note: LeRoi "Tex" Smith, field director of the International Car Club Association and official club coordinator of Car Craft's new car club road test series, has had a long association with ...
With its sleek design and performance prowess, Michael Bilo’s 1965 Pontiac GTO was among the cars that stood out at Lima’s Cool Car Cruise-In during September. LIMA – Michael Bilo is 76 years old, ...
Is it genetic? Are some of us born with a desire to own and build Pontiacs, or is it learned? Since his parents were never really big on Pontiacs, for Kentuckian Eric Emmerich it appears to be learned ...
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