When General Motors founded Pontiac in 1926, it probably didn't expect the new brand to struggle. But that's what it did, barely surviving its first few years due to the Great Depression and an ...
The Pontiac GTO was the direct result of John Z. DeLorean trying to find a way to attract the youth market after GM brass forbid all the divisions from participating in competitive motorsports. GM had ...
The Pontiac GTO is commonly known as the car that kicked off the muscle car revolution during the 1960s. Though it would become one of many midsize American cars sporting powerful V-8s during the mid- ...
The Pontiac GTO, often hailed as the original American muscle car, owes its name to the Italian phrase “Gran Turismo Omologato.” This term, borrowed from European racing heritage, signifies a grand ...
The Pontiac GTO was the prototypical muscle car. The iconic three-letter initialism today is more associated with Pontiac than the racing category it usurped. Back in the 1960s, the GM division's ...
The 1964 Pontiac GTO occupies a rare space in the collector market, combining genuine historical importance with performance that still feels vivid today. For buyers, understanding how its value, ...
Although it may have been a Holden Monaro at heart, the 2004 to 2006 Pontiac GTO has been quite the hot topic for debate since it debuted for the American market. Arguments center around the fact that ...
A rare Ferrari 330 LM / 250 GTO from 1962 has sold for $47 million (plus fees) at auction in New York, falling short of its estimate of $60 million but setting a new record for a Ferrari sold at ...
Just because a car brand goes the way of the dinosaur doesn't mean that it can't be fondly remembered for years after. Take, for instance, Pontiac, which rose to prominence throughout the 20th century ...