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What really killed the Pontiac Fiero

The Pontiac Fiero, a mid-engine sports car produced by General Motors from 1984 to 1988, was once hailed for its innovative ...
General Motors' four-cylinder Iron Duke drew on the proven engineering and lasted more than a decade. But it was shadowed by ...
From the legendary GTO Judge to the obscure Bonneville Special, these 10 rare Pontiac gems will leave you stunned!
Welcome to what is going to be a weird week here at the Showdown! I’m currently sitting in a fancy-pants hotel room in Fort ...
*Estimated payments are calculated by Cars.com and are for informational purposes only. We’ve estimated your taxes based on your provided ZIP code. These estimates do not include title, registration ...
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 ...
The reputation of the Pontiac Fiero is a mixed bag. Some will tell you that it was impractical as a commuter car and inadequate as a performance car, while others admire it as a 1980s time capsule, ...
For many, owning a Lamborghini is the ultimate dream car. But, much like some folks who settle for fake Ray-Bans or sport a knockoff Louis Vuitton handbag, there’s a certain type of person who’s ...
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.
Kit cars are typically an inherently uncool subgenre of the enthusiast world. By driving a kit car you're living a lie, pushing a narrative that you can afford more car than you really can. Supercars ...
According to the seller of today's Nice Price or No Dice Fiero GT, the car was obtained as an inheritance, and now they don't know what to do with it. Let's see if it's priced well enough to pass on ...