The Fiero was a noble attempt to help Pontiac stand out from its General Motors brethren, but it flamed out (no pun intended) after just a few years. Could V8 power have saved this small sports car?
Conceived in the late 1970s as a two-seat economy commuter car, the Pontiac Fiero evolved into a sports car over its short life span. Just as it became the car it should have been, GM killed it.
Pontiac muscle cars were ridiculously popular back in the day, but for some reason, almost no one picked these exact trims ...
The debut of the seventies caught Pontiac in the midst of turmoil; the division was undergoing a transformation to adapt to various changes in Detroit's increasingly unstable environment. With the ...
The Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors had a good run before being phased out in GM's 2010 restructuring. The carmaker is largely credited with inventing the muscle car. Even during the ...
While classic car prices have normalized and are returning to pre-Covid levels, used (modern) car quotations are exploding, and buyers are still lining up for them because they know that things might ...
The 1953 General Motors Motorama car show held at New York City's Waldorf-Astoria hotel featured a number of new models and concepts, but few created the stir the Chevy Corvette concept did. The ...
Pontiac rolled out a new GXP edition of their Solstice sports car for the 2007 model year and the newbie gets a more powerful engine without sacrificing the standard 4-cylinders fuel ...
The 1970 Pontiac GTO exemplified muscle-car era power, design, and mechanical simplicity. Features include a 400-ci Ram Air III V8, four-speed manual, and period-correct styling. This example remains ...