
The manner in which the Pontiac Fiero was sold to the unimaginative Roger B. Smith-era GM management (now thankfully long gone)—a generation of inbred, know-nothing dullards, who nearly killed GM—speaks volumes about how obtuse they were.
One sports car, the Corvette, was enough for Smith’s beady-eyed bean counters, so the mid-engine, two-seater “P-car” (as the Fiero was known internally) was billed as an efficient “commuter car.” While the term brings to mind something appliance-like, the resulting Fiero looked quite similar to other mid-engine sports cars of the era, particularly the elusive AC ME3000, a still-born English design.
The sports car similarities ended there, as the developed-on-the-cheap “commuter car” shared suspension pieces from lackluster GM cars of the era. Front suspension was initially Chevette-derived. And following the practice of mid-engine cars of the time, the drivetrain was a cleverly relocated front-wheel-drive engine...
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Keith Martin's Buyer's Guide: Pontiac GTO 1964-67 $8.95 |
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Road and Track on Pontiac, 1960-83 $19.95 |
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Pontiac Muscle Cars $14.95 |