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During this period, Pontiac's intermediate lineup included the base Le Mans, Le Mans Sport Coupe, GTO (1973 only), Luxury Le Mans (became the Grand Le Mans in 1975), the Euro-styled Grand Am from 1973 through 1975, and on the 1977 Can Am. Body styles were all based on GM's Colonnade design for both sedans and coupes (no convertibles or hardtops ...
Subcompact car, rebadged Chevrolet Chevette: 6000: 1982 1991 GM A platform: 1 Mid-size car J2000 / 2000 / 2000 Sunbird: 1982 1984 GM J platform: 1 Compact car Fiero: 1984 1988 GM P platform: 1 Sports car Trans Sport: 1990 1999 GM U platform: 2 Minivan Sunfire: 1995 2005 GM J platform: 1 Sport compact Montana: 1997 2009 GM U platform: 2 Minivan ...
The Pontiac Grand Am is a car model that Pontiac Division of General Motors produced in various years between 1973 and 2005. The first and second generations were RWD mid-size cars built on the LeMans GM A platform. The Grand Am name was reused for a FWD compact car for the third- and fourth-generations. The fifth-generation versions was ...
1973 Pontiac LeMans with the GTO option and the Pontiac Grand Am — Available with a 400 cid 230 hp (170 kW) V8 which was available with a 3-speed (LeMans, GTO) or 4-speed manual (LeMans, GTO, Grand Am) transmission or an automatic (LeMans, GTO, Grand Am), or a 250 hp (190 kW) 455 with an automatic transmission only. Also announced for the '73 ...
1972 Pontiac Le Mans Hardtop Coupe with GTO option and optional honeycomb wheels. In 1972, the GTO reverted from a separate model to a US$353.88 (~$2,578 in 2023) option package for the LeMans and LeMans Sport coupes. On the base LeMans line, the GTO package could be had with either the low-priced pillared coupé or hardtop coupé.
Pontiac GTO Judge Convertible (1971) Pontiac Parisienne (1971-1976) (Canada only) Pontiac Firebird Trans Am (1971-1973) Pontiac Safari (1971-1976) Pontiac Ventura (1971-1977) Stutz Blackhawk (1971-1987) Yenko Stinger Vega (1971-1973)
The base 1972 mid-sized Pontiac was now called LeMans. James MacDonald left the post of general manager to be replaced by Martin J. Caserio in late 1972. Caserio was the first manager in over a decade to be more focused on marketing and sales than on performance. 1973 Pontiac Grand Am, the first model year of the Grand Am
1973 – 1975 Pontiac Grand Am; 1973 – 1977 Pontiac Grand Prix; 1973 – 1977 Pontiac LeMans; 1977 – 1977 Pontiac Can Am; The successor to the A III platform. 1980 Chevrolet Malibu. A V: RWD: 1978: 1981: 1978 – 1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo; 1978 – 1981 GMC Caballero; 1978 – 1981 Buick Century; 1978 – 1981 Buick Regal; 1978 – 1981 ...