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YankeeRodder

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Discussion starter · #1 ·
Looks almost like a 57 Chevy BelAir from the side view.I like it,if it had the Pontiac Fuelie motor you couldn't touch it for $24K.
 
needs a mild 455 backed with a 6 speed..
FINALLY, someone is talking sense!

By the way, does everyone know that Fuel Injection and Tripower were available on 57 Pontiacs?
ALTHOUGH, the ONLY 57 Pontiacs to get FI were the (600) Bonneville convertibles.
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I'd give even more if it was a 57 Pontiac of that same body style built in Canada, since those were smaller versions on Chevrolet frames with Chevrolet engines. They still had Pontiac sheet metal on the outside though.
 
All the window glass interchanges with the 57 Chev. Neat old cars.
 
I always see a really nice one of these that is mildly customized just right at Back to the 50's every summer. These are a lot more unique then the common tri-five chevy IMO and stick out a lot more at shows.
 
All the window glass interchanges with the 57 Chev. Neat old cars.
was there a class action lawsuit because they put "Chevy" parts in a Pontiac at the factory?
they used to take their brand identification seriously back in the olden days...
 
I took a 1956 Pontiac with two carbs on a test run in 1959 in Muskegon Michigan that a private owner wanted to sell.

Rob
317 c.i?


The Rochester F.I. units for the Chevies had check valves, whereas the Pontiac versions did not. That was the undoing of the Pontiac F.I. option. When the Pontiac units sat, the fuel could leak into the cylinders, causing an initial flooding on startup, followed by a fuel dry condition (it had leaked out). Not a good experience for Bonneville owners. Considering how pricey the F.I. Bonnevilles were, how unfamiliar the typical mechanic was towards them, and the above stated problems relating to the lack of check valves, well lets just say that of the 630 produced, most were converted to carburation.

In Canada the Canadian-built Pontiac-Chevrolet hybrids could have been had with the vaunted 283 fuel injection setup , although hardly anybody sprung for it. They were too busy cheaping out with the standard 261 truck six (with hydraulic lifters for passengercar use). Those engine ran silently. We even got a sedan delivery model through 1958.

The visible differences between the Canadian & U.S. versions became greater once the wide track era began on the 1959 models. The Canadian cars looked goofy with their skinny tracks if you were used to the wide tracking U.S. models. In Canada they were the value division of the Pontiac-Buick-Cadillac dealer networks; they matched the Chevrolet line model for model. They were one of the most, if not the most popular car makes in Canada.

Personally I think the 57 Pontiac looks better than the 57 Chevy, especially in the fin / tail light treatment.
 
Had a buddy way back that had the 57 FI engine and 4 speed in his 32 Vicki street rod - he had it dialed in though and it ran smooth and hard.
 
I know a guy that has a 63 Chevy pickup boom truck for his wrecking yeard, it's a real hack job, bed missing, boom setup made out of old well casing or something, nasty. It has some early Pontiac V-8 with that old F.I. setup. That was in the 90's, still running today AFAIK. thing started instantly on the first revolution every time, which was mainly why the owner had never changed.

He knows what it is and what it might be worth to the right Indianhead though. Too bad.
 
Discussion starter · #18 ·
If I somehow ended up with this I would be watching for a totaled late model GTO 6 litre 6 speed,, thus the GTO emblems to go on the trunk, have some GTO emblems water jet cut from stainless in the same script to match the fender emblems of the era, thus the faux 57 GTO:thumbsup:
 
The very first brand new car my Dad bought was a 1957 Star Chief 4- door hardtop It had a 275 HP engine, and you HAD to burn the highest octane gas available. They used Gulf "Crest".

It was white with that maroonish brown stripe in the quarter trim, had Burundy leather upholstery, and was just about the best looking car ever.

But it was a mechanical nightmare. He was always "rebuilding" the carburator, and changing plugs. But the real winner is when a freeze plug between the engine and that gosh awful huge, and heavy, hydra-matic transmission started leaking.

I can still remember him on his back, in the driveway, cussing at that thing as he and a nieghbor wrassled with that monster to get at and change that freeze plug.

But, that was sure a pretty car.

https://www.google.com/search?hl=en...sSdilY8MCxCOrv4IGgAMIaGtO9-hOIix&sa=X&ei=04SMVNeAEof5yQTx2oHQDQ&ved=0CBoQwg4oAA
 
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