Famous DIY Fiero build with a 4.6-liter Northstar V8 and extensive mods is the exception to the rule about buying a project car ...
The 1988 Pontiac Fiero GT arrived as a fully sorted sports car just as the nameplate’s reputation was collapsing under the ...
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?
New high-tech 4-cylinders may be the wave of the future, but old dyed-in-the-wool hot rodders like Gary Zumult and J.D. Michael know that in the final analysis, "There's just no substitute for cubic ...
Pontiac has a long history as an automotive brand. Most casual observers know it was a General Motors brand, but it's less common knowledge that the Pontiac roots go back as far as the late 1800s.
In the 1980s, Pontiac adopted the tagline "We Build Excitement." By that point, the auto brand had been around for over 50 years and produced a number of cars that certainly lived up to the ...
Over the years, the Pontiac Fiero carved out a curious niche for itself, not for its sports car status, but as the preferred donor car for supercar replicas, largely thanks to its mid-engined layout.
The early 1970s was marred by a horrific stock market crash, the energy crisis, rationing of gasoline, and the death of big-muscle factory hot rods. American auto manufacturers were forced to stop ...