Tag Archive: Pontiac

Jun
30

The Answer to 06/29/2011′s Auto Quiz..

Long before Hugh Hefner would launch his famous Playboy Magazine in 1953 you had the 1946-1949 Playboy Car the answer to 06/29/2011′s What Auto is This?? quiz. The idea of Lou Horwitz a former Packard dealer, Charles D Thompson a former Pontiac engineer and Norman Richards a gifted mechanic the Playboy Car was marketed as a second car due to its tiny size.  Featuring the first retractable hardtop ever produced in an American car it would never reach full production with only 97 prototypes being built. Unlike the magazine of the same name it would never reach any true glory and die in 1949 as a blip in automotive history. According to an episode of the “Biography” TV series and of ”The E! True Hollywood Story,” as well as in a 2010 documentary entitled “Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel,” a woman who worked for Playboy Motor Cars at the time they shut down suggested to her son’s friend that he use the Playboy name for his new magazine. That friend’s name was Hugh Hefner.  The story was confirmed by Hefner in a letter that reads  “The Playboy name was suggested by a friend whose mother had worked at the then defunct Playboy Motor Car Company…”   - Signed Hugh M. Hefner. Hefner also confirmed he has never owned a Playboy Car..   Take a ride in a Playboy Car in this cool video..

Mar
11

Answer To 03/10/2011′s Auto Quiz

The answer to 03/10/2011′s What Auto is This?? Quiz is the 1988 Pontiac Banshee show car.This car styling would be the basis of the last Firebirds and Trans Am’s produced by Pontiac. This would be the fourth Banshee concept car made by GM. The first in 1964 would hold strong styling cues to the Chevy Corvette Stingray but GM decided to give its flag ship car The Vette the go ahead for the Bill Mitchel styled car. The 1988 Banshee gained fame when it appeared in the movie “Back To The Future II” and in later years as a key player in “Grand Theft Auto” Too see the original Back To The Future movie trailer Click on the very Flux Capacitor  movie poster. 

Jan
04

Port Jefferson Cars

1959 Chevy Impala during the Port Jeff hill climb 2010

Ushering out the decade of wild tail fins and chrome decadence was the 1959 Chevrolet Impala. A radical new model compared to the semi-conservative 1958 Chevy it replaced. The 59 Impala was everything good and bad about the 1950s. Sharing body shells and platforms with the lower priced Buicks,Olds and Pontiacs it was part of GMs effort to keep cost down while giving each division its own unique styling.

 Bill Mitchel and his styling crew gave them all their own chrome ladden “Fin-a-fied” look. Riding on a new for 1959 X-Frame it had much improved ride and handling over the 1958 model. The roof was three inches lower and bodies measured two inches wider than its 1958 brother. Another innovation was the  “flying wing” roof line and “panoramic view”  rear glass.

 The huge trunk was offset by “batwing” rear tail fins and “cats eye” taillights. Auto writer Tom McCahill of Mechanix Illustrated joked that the trunk was “Big enough to land a Piper Cub” on. Rumors at the time were at high speed the batwings would make the rear of the car rise like a plane taking off. Something Chevy never confirmed or denied.

Perhaps  the best way to keep the lift down was to fill the “4 body trunk”.. Body styles ranged from a two door sedan,hardtop and convertible. Four door models came in four door sedan and pillar-less hardtop. Backing up the range was a nine passenger station wagon. Engines ranged from the thrifty 235 cubic inch 6 cylinder. The V8s started with the tried and true 283 cubic inch small block with power ranging from 190 to 290 horsepower.

Topping off the V8s was the 348 Big Block(new in 1958) with power options up to 315 horsepower. Choices of transmissions were 3 or 4 speed manuals. The famous “Slushbox” or “Powerglide”was the only automatic available. In 1959 you could purchase a nicely optioned Impala Convertible with a 190 horsepower 283 V8 and a “Slushbox” for $2967.00.. The featured Port Jefferson Cars 1959 Impala Sport Coupe would of set you back $2580.00 with the 283-V8. Ahhh how times have changed. The featured 59 Impala made it up the hill with no problems during the PJ Hill Climb. Its V8 dual exhaust rumbling the entire trip. We just hope the “batwings” didnt lift at high speeds..

Dec
31

What Auto is This?? Being Frumpy And Frugal Can Be Cool

In car starved post World War II the public wanted new cars..any new car.This car company was founded in 1946 by an former Packard dealer, a former Pontiac engineer and a talented garage mechanic. The intension for this smallish car was as  a “second” family car for running local in town errands. Its price was planned to be under $1000.00. This semi sporty car featured the first “retractable”roof  offered on an American car..Almost 10 years before Fords famous retractable. Riding on a tiny 90 inch wheelbase it was powered by an “outsourced” 2.2 Liter 4 cylinder engine producing a turtle like 48 horsepower. The only transmission was the Warner 3 speed with no first gear syncro.  All this performance was riding on Go-cart like 12 inch wheels. Like another great automotive idea The Tucker this car would never reach production. A total of 97 pre-production models were made. Also like the Tucker these cars would get heavy media and press time. Some were even shipped to Europe in hopes of getting captial. In an odd twist of fate the stock offering would fail due to fears from the Tucker scandal and the company would fail in 1949. Henry Kaiser of “Kaiser Automobile” fame would try to bring the company back to life in 1950 but failed due to lack of interest and funding. Of the 97 made 40 are still known to of survived. What Auto is This??

Nov
02

The Daily Gripe..

“Pontiac dealers to close their doors today” GMs contracts with all Pontiac dealers today has expired.  The last Pontiac rolled off the assembly line about a year ago but as part of the agreement Pontiac dealers kept the doors open till today. The last car to bear the Pontiac name was a rather dull white G6. I was never a Pontiac fan but I understood its role in American car history. After many years of Granny-mobiles Pontiac created the Muscle-car era. Stuffing a big engine in a midsize car created the GTO in 1963. After the gas crisis of the early and mid 70s Pontiac never found its role again as “The Excitement Division” Maybe a few Screaming Chicken Trans Ams gave a glimmer of hope. GM gave up on Pontiac a long long time ago. GM should of made Pontiac the Euro killer division. Why would the GM spend billions of dollars buying SAAB(Slaaab) Then shut the doors on Oldsmobile. Olds could of been the retro division. Imagine 442s,Delta 88s and a retro styled Cutlass. Why didnt GM learn from the lessons of VW(the New Beetle),Ford( The Mustang) and others. People love to remember auto glory days of the past. I wish GM the best. Alot of good jobs are at stake. Till GM understands what people want and not what they think they want. No army of force fed Azteks and Fieros will ever succeed. Thats The Daily Gripe..

Oct
15

Todays “All Time Worst Cars”

#3  The Pontiac Aztek..Not that  these were bad running vehicles.And yes they offer some cool options..but to say it as nice as I can..”Only a face a mother could love” The GM stylist that penned this horror shouldn’t of been allowed to smoke crack on the job..I was in the Little Rock Ar.airport rental car desk one time.The very nice rental clerk offered the customer a free upgrade to an SUV..The customer asked “What type of SUV?  The girl answered “Aztek” …The man answered “ I would rather walk” Even for free you couldn’t give one away..