View allAll Photos Tagged GTO
Saturday evening Deb and I stopped by a local cruise in.
This was the first time I had been to this one.
Not as many cars as I would have liked but later I found out it was truck night. Lots of trucks there.
I spotted this nice GTO sitting here and had to take a photo.
The color is off because of the lighting in the parking lot. I tried to balance it but this is the best I could do.
A nice evening to walk around an look at the cars.
55,722 GTO 2-door hardtops (LeMans with GTO package) were built for the 1965 model year (August 1964-July 1965) at $2,920 factory delivered suggested retail price. The 4-barrel 389 V8 (335 HP) with dual exhausts was standard on the GTO, with an optional high performance 360 HP variant available.
1965 Pontiac full line brochure: www.lov2xlr8.no/brochures/pontiac/p65/p65.html
1964 Pontiac GTO
On Display at the Monthly Golden Oldies Car Club Cruise on Southern Overland Park, Kansas on August 20, 2011
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For 1974, the GTO moved from the mid-size LeMans platform to the compact Ventura X-body. This was, mercifully, the last year for the GTO, and would stay that way for almost 30 years.
One of my buddies had one of these as a teenager, and of course it ended up totaled, wedged under the trailer of a semi making a left turn.
White Ferrari 599 GTO with black rims in London. Check out the video of the car making crazy loud revs and accelerations: www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3pdg0c5yQ0
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A shot of the GTO from a recent shoot with my new 28-135mm Canon lens. This is one of my favorite angles to shoot, so you'll probably see it a lot if you follow me.
From the Richmond, Ontario Auto Classic. September 1st, 2008. The 1970 Pontiac GTO, arguably, one of the true kings of the muscle car era
White Ferrari 599 GTO with black rims in London. Check out the video of the car making crazy loud revs and accelerations: www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3pdg0c5yQ0
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The 599 GTO is very accurately reproduced by Hot Wheels Elite, sharp angles, thin details, and well reproduced head/tail lights make this model a must have (also available in red/grey roof and black). It has an excellent Quality/price ratio.
My first GTO. Pearl white with a black stripe..... Oh my God. I wish I could've gotten a better shot, but it took everyone by surprise. The owner was gunning it the whole time, and it sounds absolutely amazing. Can't wait to see it again!
1970 PONTIAC GTO FOR SALE SEEN HERE AT A CLASSIC CAR DEALERSHIP NEAR FREEPORT, MAINE, USA. 18/AUGUST/2008.
"A shimmering seaside sunset. A Perseid meteor streaking across the August night. A flash of lightning against a darkly brooding thunderhead. These are the fleeting moments of beauty and grandeur that, if left unrecognized, forever pass into the night of memory and regret. These are the chance opportunities that demand the attention of our eyes, those masters of vision and perception that have been dubbed the windows to the soul. And we must leave those eyes focused and steadfast. For just a momentary blink might cause us to miss something truly incredible: In this case, the offering of a speed machine so celebrated that it qualifies as the very definition of a legend.
By late 1961, Ferrari began to develop a competition replacement for the successful 250 GT SWB. While the Short Wheelbase Berlinetta had been a dominant force in its day, the beautiful sports-racer was increasingly approaching its limits, most evident in the upright front end that inherently prevented the model from exceeding 155 mph. Coincidental to these machinations at Maranello, the FIA’s CSI announced new regulations for the 1962 racing calendar, replacing the prior World Championship of Sports Cars with the new International Championship of Manufacturers, which was to be determined exclusively by GT production car racing classes. Larger-displacement prototype racecars would be allowed to participate in some events, but not for points.
With the 250 GT platform already firmly homologated after six years of racing activity and corresponding road car production, the model was an obvious choice for Ferrari to continue in 1962. The luminary engineer Giotto Bizzarrini was tasked with further refining the 250 GT berlinetta, and the bulk of his efforts centered on developing new coachwork through aerodynamic testing in the University of Pisa’s wind tunnel and on the Monza track.
Introduced at a press conference in February 1962, the 250 GTO was absolutely stunning. Power was provided by the latest development of the 3-liter Colombo short-block V-12, a competition-tuned, dry-sump lubricated engine that breathed through six dual-throat Weber carburetors to produce 300 horsepower, in an echo of Testa Rossa engine specifications. The new type 539/62 chassis featured a number of engineering advances, including smaller, lighter tubing in some areas of the frame, a new all-synchromesh five-speed gearbox, and a revised rear suspension with stiffer springs and a stabilizing Watts linkage. Perhaps most significantly, the new chassis architecture and the dry-sump oil system allowed for the engine to be placed lower than the outgoing SWB, ensuring a lower center of gravity and correspondingly improved handling. Longer and lower than the 250 GT SWB, the new model also weighed roughly 250 pounds less than its predecessor.
As the Scuderia Ferrari continued to focus its sports car racing activities on the rear-engine Dino prototype racecars, the 250 GTO was largely entrusted to privateers, and numerous examples were sold to preferred racing clients (and marque distributors) like Maranello Concessionaires and Luigi Chinetti’s North American Racing Team. It did not take long for the GTO to make its mark in competition, as the second car built (chassis number 3387 GT) finished 1st in class and 2nd overall at the 1962 12 Hours of Sebring, with Phil Hill and Olivier Gendebien driving on behalf of Chinetti. This commenced a period of solid dominance that extended well into 1964, eventually establishing the 250 GTO as one of the most successful racing sports cars of all time.
Meanwhile, regulation changes were also afoot at the Circuit de la Sarthe. Despite the FIA's attempt to limit competition to GT models only, the Le Mans organizers remained committed to the idea of the prototype racecar. So, for 1962, the ACO stipulated a larger-displacement 4-liter class whose purpose was ostensibly to develop cars that might eventually translate into road car production. Other endurance racing venues quickly followed suit, with a 4-liter class being adopted at Sebring, the Targa Florio, and the Nürburgring 1000 KM. This wrinkle was not lost on Ferrari's engineers, and they soon began to seriously consider the potential of dropping a 4-liter motor into a GTO. It was this vein of thinking that gave rise to the fascinating history of the featured lot..."
Source: RM Sotheby's
Photographed at Villa Sucota at Fuori Concorso
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