Most people who purchased a Pontiac GTO back in 1965 picked the hardtop, with the parent company building over 55,700 units in this body style. Needless to say, the convertibles were much rarer, and ...
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 ...
After serving in the U.S. Army, Tom Jackson was eager to find a "hot car," and when he saw the first model of the Pontiac Gran Turismo Omologato in 1964, he had to have it. A year later, the 1965 GTO ...
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 ...
There is plenty to be said for having things just the way you want. Satisfaction is guaranteed, you're the envy of your friends, and life is just better all around. So when Frank Platt decided that he ...
If you’re a muscle car fan itching for some classic drag racing action, then this video should certainly satisfy. What we have here is a 1320 throw-down between a 1965 Pontiac GTO and 1970 Chevrolet ...
Back in 1965, Pontiac’s advertising executive Jim Wangers teamed up with Royal Pontiac, George Hurst and Petersen Publishing to boost the sales of performance parts and the GTO. It resulted in a ...
Nancy Clark, of Brewerton, has two icons on her hands, cars that have attracted attention forever. One is a 1965 Pontiac GTO hardtop and the other is a 1957 Chevrolet Nomad. The GTO is held in high ...
The recipe was pretty simple. The GTO was based on the Pontiac Tempest and added a large displacement V8 to turn the mild-mannered mid-size into a fire-breathing monster, ready to terrorize the street ...
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