I'm going to go out on a limb here and state that I think the Pontiac Fiero is a national treasure. Today's Nice Price or Crack Pipe V8-Archie edition is even more so, but we'll have to see if its ...
For about five years is the late 1980s, the now-defunct GM brand Pontiac built and sold the Fiero. Envisioned as a sports car with American DNA, the Fiero never even came close to the Italian ...
The Pontiac Fiero was positioned as a cheaper alternative to General Motors’ mainstay sportscar, the Chevy Corvette. Unlike the Corvette, though, the Fiero was never offered with a soft top roof, so ...
A reader named Dan reached out to me recently asking if I could help him get his late father's V8 Pontiac Fiero back on the road. I said sure, and drove to his house, only to find what is certainly ...
Building the Only Turbine-Powered Batmobile The Story of the Retro Endurance Race Car Driving One of the Surviving Chrysler Turbine Cars This heavily modified 1984 Pontiac Fiero has been rebuilt from ...
When manufacturers in the kit car industry started cranking out Lamborghini and Ferrari replicas based on the Fiero platform, designers knew the chassis needed a stretch to achieve a more accurate ...
This week, we featured the very rare and little known 1980 Corvette America on the site – a custom, coach built four-door Corvette that was officially commissioned by General Motors. The Corvette wasn ...
This is a flaming spike of maybe. The Fiero challenged US citizens to re-think everything about American cars. It was mid-engined. It had either a four-banger or a small displacement 2.8L V6. The ...
The oil crisis of the 1970s had well and truly taken its toll on the American automobile industry. Gone were the powerful muscle cars of the 1960s, and in were the inefficient, low-powered, and just ...