The Trans Am was already a money-making machine for Pontiac in 1978. The car started the decade slowly with only 3,196 units sold to buyers in the States. The next few years were concerning from a ...
In the spring of 1978, Pontiac was on a roll. Television character Jim Rockford drove a Firebird into America's living rooms every Friday night on The Rockford Files, and everybody had Trans Am fever ...
The Trans Am was already the best-selling model in the Firebird lineup in the late '70s, with Pontiac approaching an achievement that nobody thought was possible one decade earlier when this nameplate ...
When it comes to GM’s most iconic vehicles, the Pontiac Trans Am is right up there with the best of them, especially if it’s a second-gen in black and gold. Made famous in the movie Smokey and The ...
Serious collectors increasingly chase rare Trans Ams because these cars combine low production numbers with powerful ...
It's been said that a salesman is paid exactly what he's worth. Whether it's cars or real estate or anything else, sales professionals are rewarded for their efforts with financial compensation ...
Black and gold tend to be the colors most commonly associated with the “Smokey and the Bandit” Pontiac Trans Am produced from 1977-1978. However, the stylish Martinique Blue paint option, which was ...