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 Pontiac Le Mans GTO was, is, and forever will be, The Great One that fired the wick to the gunpowder barrel that sparked the muscle car revolution. In 1964 and 1965, the GTO wasn’t fully ...
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 ...
The Pontiac GTO was introduced in 1964 as an option package for the Pontiac Tempest LeMans. Imagined by a rebellious cadre of Pontiac personnel led by John Z. DeLorean, the GTO is considered by many ...
Montana resident Roger Hinther graduated secondary school at the dawn of the muscle car movement. It was 1964. The Big Three were beefing up their lineups for an all-out assault on the senses of the ...
Own this 1965 Pontiac GTO, a two-owner, matching-numbers classic with 81,000 miles (assumed based on context), located in Chesapeake, Virginia. With paperwork since 1965, this 389 4bbl beauty features ...
The Pontiac GTO was conceived early in 1963 by Pontiac’s John DeLorean, Bill Collins, and Russ Gee. The trio wanted to make a factory hot rod by replacing the standard 326 cubic-inch V8 in the ...
Orvil Osche is a lucky man. He has owned not one, but three beautiful '65 GTOs. How and where he found his latest, however, led to an adventure. Each of us knows that the perfect Pontiac is out there ...
I first laid eyes on Mike Boyd's 1964 Pontiac at a car show held at Bloomington's Baxter BioPharma Solutions. It was hard to see past Boyd's fire-engine-red GTO. The employee event was in memory of ...
While the hot new GTO was stealing the thunder for 1964, the Pontiac Motor Division had another trick up its sleeve for the sporty set: the full-size Catalina 2+2. Unlike the GTO with its four-barrel ...