Pontiac Marketing Makes a Big Mistake Regarding the 1966 Catalina 2+2 in its 1977 Campaign

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • Learn more about this mistake in the 1977 Pontiac brochure regarding the 1966 Catalina 2+2.
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Комментарии • 199

  • @jerelwright1665
    @jerelwright1665 Год назад +18

    I miss Pontiac

  • @jcookster74
    @jcookster74 Год назад +85

    I think one factor for 1978 being the biggest year for overall Pontiac sales may have been the Firebirds/Trans Ams production being high due to the release of Smokey and the Bandit in summer of 1977.

    • @ZEZERBING
      @ZEZERBING Год назад +4

      I was 48min. too late!!

    • @DinsdalePiranha67
      @DinsdalePiranha67 Год назад +2

      I was about to say this.

    • @allenwayne2033
      @allenwayne2033 Год назад +1

      I think that you are probably right!

    • @gregsayles9253
      @gregsayles9253 Год назад +1

      Didn't hurt! 😅

    • @manthony225
      @manthony225 Год назад +1

      Plus the Trans Am had no real competition from Ford or Chrysler Corp and the Z28 wasn't quite as cool looking.

  • @christopherkraft1327
    @christopherkraft1327 Год назад +48

    From the late fifties through 1970 my grandfather bought a new Bonneville every two years!!! He thought that they were the greatest cars!!! 👍👍

    • @Finnigan9
      @Finnigan9 Год назад +3

      Back in those days, I never saw a bad Pontiac...or any full size GM. The Fords and Chrysler products were good too. AND, if anything broke, you could fix 'em at home!

    • @randolfo1265
      @randolfo1265 Год назад +4

      He had good taste and he was Right!

    • @christopherkraft1327
      @christopherkraft1327 Год назад +1

      @@randolfo1265 Thank you.

  • @michaelkehm3663
    @michaelkehm3663 Год назад +17

    Again, thank you Adam for your documenting the iconic Pontiac brand. Having started my service career with Pontiac in 1972, those early Tin Indians and all the way through the early 1980's are still dear to my memories. Owned several beautiful Pontiacs including a 63 Grand Prix, 1968 GTO, a 1966 Catalina 2dr hardtop, and a 1978 Bonneville Brougham coupe. Loved each of them. Had dozens of company demos that I was too found of also. Old guy pleasant memories of the GM of days gone by I guess.

  • @The_R-n-I_Guy
    @The_R-n-I_Guy Год назад +16

    I absolutely love the 1977-1990 GM B-Body platform cars. My first car was a 1977 Impala. I've also had a Caprice Classic, Electra and Delta 88. Never had a Pontiac or Cadillac though. I currently have a 1996 Buick Roadmaster sedan. I love the LT1 engine, but I would much rather have the boxy body style and velour seats of the earlier cars

  • @allenwayne2033
    @allenwayne2033 Год назад +3

    Speaking of mistakes, reminds of when I worked in the print shop at Willow Run Hydramatic when the new calendar made it to press with the misspelling of Camero instead of Camaro! The pressman caught it! Good job Tim R!

  • @CharlesWiningham
    @CharlesWiningham Год назад +5

    The 1978-80 Pontiac Bonnevilles had bucket seats as an option. Would love to see one now.

  • @jamespolcyn8441
    @jamespolcyn8441 Год назад +17

    I miss Pontiac 😅

  • @geraldscott4302
    @geraldscott4302 4 месяца назад +1

    In 1979, I bought a 1972 Pontiac Catalina 2 door hardtop. It was green, inside and out, with a green vinyl top. I loved that car. I kept it till 1986, when I traded it for something as different as you could possibly get. A brand new 1986 Pontiac Fiero, base model, 2.5L 5 speed, in metallic gold, with a tan interior. Only options were alloy wheels, which were dealer installed, and a rear luggage rack.

    • @terry-zi7eh
      @terry-zi7eh 4 месяца назад

      My dad bought a new 1974 Catalina 2 door, all green with RTS and rally 2 wheels. It was very sharp.

    • @geraldscott4302
      @geraldscott4302 4 месяца назад +1

      @@terry-zi7eh Mine didn't have the Rally II wheels, it had full wheel covers. The Rally II is my all time favorite Pontiac wheel. I like it even better than the "honeycomb" style wheel.

  • @danielulz1640
    @danielulz1640 Год назад +7

    I think that Pontiac's biggest marketing error was discontinuing full size cars and renaming the Le Mans Bonneville. This fooled no one, and Pontiac was forced to import Parisiennes from Canada.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад +3

      There were quite a few questionable moves on the part of GM executive suite that era. That was certainly one of them.

  • @loveisall5520
    @loveisall5520 Год назад +17

    I never would've dreamed that the '78 sold the most. For me, in sixth grade at the time, the '66 was the pinnacle. Thanks, Adam!

    • @pcno2832
      @pcno2832 Год назад +1

      '79, the year of he second gasoline crunch, was the peak model year for Cadillac sales, though I don't think that was considered a good thing. The buyers were getting older and older and the price premium for the cars was getting smaller and smaller; a perfect example of the expression, "selling them as if they were going out of style" .

  • @kittycorner8526
    @kittycorner8526 Год назад +4

    As a teenager I was drooling over the Catalina 2+2 hardtop with the 421, 4-speed, bucket seats and center console. It was way cooler than the Impala SS.

  • @paulotoole989
    @paulotoole989 Год назад +3

    Another mistake in that same catalog. It mentions the first Grand Prix in 1963, we all know it came out in 1962. Great video.

  • @jamesblair9614
    @jamesblair9614 Год назад +3

    The Woodward Avenue reference was to a big GTO ad showing the green GTO in a traffic circle heading off in the direction of Woodward, in it’s day, it was an incredibly bold reference to street racing, and it wasn’t lost on anyone who knew anything about cars, it was and is a landmark piece of advertising.

  • @IMRROcom
    @IMRROcom Год назад +2

    When I lived in Hawaii we drove a White 1966 Pontiac 2 Door Bonneville Convertible. I still remember having to wave off F-14 Tomcats trying to land on the trunk.

  • @tombrown1898
    @tombrown1898 Год назад +2

    I haven't heard you mention the Chevrolet advertising slogan/jingle for the downsized B-body cars: "Now, that's more like it, the new Chevrolet!". It was that way with all GM divisions, apparently. But to tell you the truth, that burgundy 2+2 on the video title card was the best-looking car in the whole presentation. Great show!

  • @amandab.recondwith8006
    @amandab.recondwith8006 Год назад +4

    The '66 Catalina is my favorite car of all time. Elegant, modern, luxurious and fast! Our family loved it!

  • @29madmangaud29
    @29madmangaud29 Год назад +2

    Oh, all of those large GM's from '76 and before,,,,,, to me, so very BEAUTIFUL!

  • @AlexanderWaylon
    @AlexanderWaylon Год назад +3

    I have nothing but love and adoration of the 1977-1981 Pontiac. I think the fact that 83 Parisienne Brougham was a parts bin Caprice was a huge disgrace, and it’s reflected in their current market value. Unwanted by Pontiac or Caprice buyers. I’ve seen things like this in posters where an Astro van has whitewall on the rear and black wall on the front, or a Cadillac Brougham commercial filming the hood ornament driving down the road with the hood latch out of adjustment.

  • @CORVAIRWILD
    @CORVAIRWILD Год назад +2

    A good friend of mine has a 1965 Grand Prix with 389 3x2 barrel, the last year for the 389 3x2, full size, except in the '66 GTO. The original owner who ordered the car didn't want a 421, because his '64 Grand Prix 421 burned oil. Thus a very rare combination of a 389 GP 3x2 factory 4 speed survivor

  • @Sedan57Chevy
    @Sedan57Chevy Год назад +7

    I can believe it. Pontiac had a sizeable lineup in 1978, and had a good market position at the time. Popularity from Smokey and the Bandit surely helped too. It's easy to forget cars like the sunbird but they played a (albeit small) part.
    Marketers making mistakes? I think it's easy to forget just how easy it is to find and check information now a days. I'm far more willing to forgive a relatively minor technical mistake from the late 70s. I wouldn't overlook the same mistake today.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад +1

      Le Mans and Grand Prix (both volume sellers), along with Sunbird, Firebird, Bonneville and Catalina represented the 1978 lineup for Pontiac.

    • @mikee2923
      @mikee2923 10 месяцев назад

      Perhaps it was because the 455 was gone after 1976 and the 400 was gone after 1978 (except in the limited 79 10th anniversary Trans Am).

  • @gregt8638
    @gregt8638 Год назад +3

    Another thoroughly entertaining and educational video! Thank you, Adam!
    Your information and presentation are amazing.
    I love how you almost read your followers' minds as when you stated that 1978 was Pontiac best sales here, and you knew we would question that in our minds thinking would be mid-60s.

  • @charlesdalton985
    @charlesdalton985 Год назад +3

    Well done as always - thank you. The combination of the downsized cars, while still offering 350 and 400 cubic inch engines (Chevy and Pontiac respectively) gave much better fuel economy and performance. The interiors were actually more spacious than their predecessors as well. Over all, the economy was doing well in 77 and 78 (discarding inflation). In short, mix all that together and I’ve no trouble believing 78 was a peak year. Again, thank you ~ Chuck

    • @allenwayne2033
      @allenwayne2033 Год назад

      Hey Chuck! What are you doing here instead of "What it's Like"? Ha!

    • @charlesdalton985
      @charlesdalton985 Год назад

      @@allenwayne2033 Uh oh, busted! 😳 Seriously - enjoying great content on both channels. Take care Allen ~ Chuck

  • @andrewg.spurgeon1736
    @andrewg.spurgeon1736 Год назад +6

    Not surprised 78 was Pontiac's top sales year. While the full size cars were downsized for 1977, the Grand Prix was downsized for 78 (along with the Monte Carlo, Regal and Cutlass and they were all a huge sales success for their respective divisions). Plus a certain movie released in 1977 called "Smokey and the Bandit" caused a run on Trans Am's and Firebirds in 77, 78 and even 79 after they facelifted the car and S&TB 2 came out helping sales of the facelifted car. For those 3 model years they couldn't build those cars fast enough to satisfy the demand.

    • @mikee2923
      @mikee2923 10 месяцев назад

      As far as individual model sales records, 1977 was the top selling year ever for the Grand Prix. Would guess that’s because everyone knew the downsizing was coming in 78. The best sales year for the Firebird/Trans Am was 1979. That was the last year of the availability of a 400. Similarly 77 was the last year a 400 would be available in the Grand Prix. People could see the way GM was going. 75 was the last year the 400 was the standard Grand Prix engine. In 76 it became the 350 and was down to the 301 in 77. True Pontiac enthusiasts are fans of the Pontiac V8. Especially the 400 and 455.

  • @ScottALaFollette
    @ScottALaFollette Год назад

    Excellent proofreading Adam.
    In 1978 Pontiacs were everywhere.
    Smokey and the Bandit helped the Trans Am/Firebird sales.
    Pontiac marketing slogan “We build excitement” was timely genius.

  • @gordtulk
    @gordtulk Год назад +2

    My father had 78 laurentian (Catalina trim in US I think) decent. Reliable.
    Lots of fun in snowy Western Newfoundland winters.
    Horrible understeer and had the soft cam 305 but fortunately he sold it at about 50,000 miles for a Subaru wagon.

  • @steven.l.patterson
    @steven.l.patterson Год назад +7

    I think the “mistake” was deliberate, they didn’t want ‘77 buyers to be nostalgic for bigger engines so they conveniently downsized the ‘66.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад

      Are you suggesting they were ashamed of it? I heartily disagree. This was simple ignorance and/or laziness on the part of the people putting the brochure together.

    • @steven.l.patterson
      @steven.l.patterson Год назад

      @@MarinCipollina I’m suggesting they wanted as little difference in size between the biggest engine available in ‘77 versus ‘66.
      The actual 4xx in ‘66 would’ve been too big of a difference, risking ‘77 buyers holding off on their purchase because they couldn’t get as big of an engine as they could a decade earlier.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад

      @@steven.l.patterson Do you know people that actually think like that? That they would "hold off" until 421 Tripower engines returned? There was zero reason for anyone to think that in 1977.. Engines were only getting smaller, along with the cars they were placed in.

    • @steven.l.patterson
      @steven.l.patterson Год назад

      @@MarinCipollina they weren’t going to hold off because it was clear at the time the biggest engines weren’t coming back.
      But they would be upset if they saw in a brochure a reference to the big engines they had just a decade earlier.
      If the ad copy was slightly inaccurate they’d avoid upsetting a segment of new car buyers.

  • @tomdelisle8955
    @tomdelisle8955 Год назад +2

    I couldn't pick a favorite of the down sized GM full size models. All of them had great designs. The 77 Bonneville looks great with the rear fender skirts.

  • @michaelwitas9482
    @michaelwitas9482 Год назад +7

    I remember having a copy of that brochure in 1977. Like most readers, I never noticed the mistake noted in the video. Probably some writer on the team said "I once had a big Pontiac with a 389" and that was the basis for the error.
    To me, the downsized Catalina and Bonneville were nice family cars, that were right for the times. They had adequate power available, at least as an option. But the thought among some brochure readers was undoubtedly that Pontiac's past was better in some ways than the future. That's the downside of writing new product promotional materials which also reflect on a brand's proud legacy.
    However, during the mid to late 1970''s, the baby boomers were largely focused on starting families and building their careers. Muscle cars (such as the Trans Am) were still available, but it had already been 7-8 years since such cars of all makes peaked in popularity and horsepower. And, the shock of the oil crisis had somewhat subsided, but was still in the back of many carbuyers' minds.

  • @damianbowyer2018
    @damianbowyer2018 Год назад +2

    Yep, practical reasons to reduce the size of The Pontiacs in '77, but the new smaller cars, did look really nice, Adam😊🤲

  • @JohnnyAloha69
    @JohnnyAloha69 Год назад +3

    That brochure had some other errors, the main one being that 63 (rather than 62) was the first Grand Prix and claiming that the GTO was the first car offered with tripower triple two barrel carburation when in reality it had been offered nearly a decade before the gto even came to exist. As for 78 being the high water mark for Pontiac production that is true, but there are a few points to consider; first is that this was not the high water mark in terms of market share, two is that the Grand Prix and Firebird were big sellers. However the real reason for 78 being the peak year was because Pontiac had a plethora of badge engineered little econoboxes that represented much lower sales dollars per car and even less profit per car. The reality was that the bread and butter full and mid sized Pontiacs had gone from being very popular to being the runts of GM in sales. The loss of the 400 powered Trans Am in 80 killed Firebird sales and the GP never regained its popularity once it was downsized. The fullsized line evaporated in 1982 and the midsized models become shadows of their previous sales volume.
    Pontiac enjoyed a short renaissance in the 80’s and 90’s with good marketing and a sporty branding before again falling apart in the late 90’s. Rest in peace.

    • @thoughtballoons
      @thoughtballoons Год назад +1

      I was 10 in 1977, and had to unlearn a couple of things later in life that I read in that brochure. Your comment reminds me that, for years, I thought 1963 was the first Grand Prix.

  • @Victor-Lag
    @Victor-Lag Год назад

    Adam, excellent as always! The guilty for the incorrect engine information was the treinee, of coutse.

  • @TonyM132
    @TonyM132 Год назад +14

    It is technically incorrect to call the car a "Catalina 2+2" for 1966 or refer to 2+2 as an option package that year, as Adam does many times in this video. 1966 was the lone model year in which 2+2 was its own standalone model, not a Catalina (which it was in 1964, 65, and 67).

  • @fredanddebramacdonald2445
    @fredanddebramacdonald2445 Год назад +1

    To put things in perspective, I have a 1977 Buick Electra 225 that I’ve owned for 30 years. The original Electra was 225 inches long and that’s where the 225 comes from. Over the years the Electra grew to over 230 inches long. My downsized 1977 is a little Buick, as it’s only 222 inches long. (about eighteen and a half feet) We were looking at a condo, and the Buick wouldn’t fit in the garage which was made for a Prius!

  • @stevespatola763
    @stevespatola763 Год назад +1

    I had an 84 Pontiac 6000 STE. Avery sporty and quick czr with lots of bells and whistles. Those special pallex cloth, STE only manually adjustable lumbar backs, now rest in my 65 Chevy C10 show truck. I miss that starwars dash display, long before Dakota Digital graced the aftermarket scene.

  • @dansmusic5749
    @dansmusic5749 Год назад +1

    My dad bought a brand new ’78 Bonneville. It was a really nice driving car that had an extremely smooth and quiet ride. But my dad, economy minded as ever, opted for the 301 V8 which was a bit of a dog on acceleration. Our previous ’73 Catalina 400 was a smooth and powerful runner so even my dad was a bit disappointed in the Bonneville's power. That engine spun a main bearing at 77,000 miles, and it had this strange lightweight two counterbalance weight crankshaft. It was very smooth, though.

  • @rovervitesse1985
    @rovervitesse1985 Год назад +2

    1:49. That's one hell of a nice car

  • @volktales7005
    @volktales7005 Год назад +3

    The '60's Pontiacs especially the '65"s, will always be the best cars they ever made...

    • @allenwayne2033
      @allenwayne2033 Год назад

      Totally agree! I think the 65 model year was the best of GM styling across the board! Didn't think the Buick and Olds of that year was so much, but they've grown on me since then.

  • @billdescoteaux
    @billdescoteaux Год назад +1

    For the US market, only the 1964 Catalina 2+2 used the 389, as 2+2 was then merely a trim package for the Catalina. The 2+2 badge was a much more discrete squarish black badge, I believe the numbering was chrome within it. For '65, he 421 became standard for the 2+2 package, with the new "out of the box" red-numbered badging. That would grow to 428 for '67, which was the final year for the US 2+2. Canada, which were Pontiac-skinned Chevys in those years, kept the 2+2 going for a few more years, but with more pedestrian Chevy power. I'm not sure the V8 was even standard in the Canadian 2+2s.

  • @2001rams
    @2001rams Год назад +3

    I remember this brochure. I think this was also the one that stated that the first Grand Prix was 1963 (when in fact it was 1962). I thought that the 77-78 Bonneville coupe with the tutone paint (especially the gray and silver with red pinstripes and red interior) was a great looking car. Did not include the 79 Bonneville because the Pontiac 400 engine was no longer available in that car. I believe the full size Chevy was MT car of the year in 1977 but I thought the 77 Pontiac was so much better, especially in looks.

    • @randolfo1265
      @randolfo1265 Год назад

      The 1977 Chevy 2 door was distinctive for the interesting rear window, but yeah, the 1977 Pontiac was so much better looking

  • @kennixox262
    @kennixox262 Год назад

    Excellent points that you make on the downsizing of American sedans of that era. Oddly enough, a few years later started the era of the SUV. Seems as if the car industry skated by the rules governing cars as these luxury SUV's were considered to be "trucks" not cars. Lengthwise, some of these large vehicles dwarf the luxury boats of the 1970's and earlier.

  • @pauljanssen7594
    @pauljanssen7594 Год назад +3

    The older Pontiac for gorgeous and beautiful, like the T-Birds in the late 50s and early 60s.

  • @fourdoorglory
    @fourdoorglory Год назад +2

    Love my ‘79 Bonne.

  • @SeaTravelr123
    @SeaTravelr123 Год назад +3

    Love this... shame on the copywriter for that oversight... Even though I always loved the huge cars and I have a soft spot for the 70's models, even though they got so sluggish, I was excited and proud as a 14 year old when the downsized cars came out.. Pontiac didnt disappoint with the styling.. I really loved the coupes especially, with the landau roofs. Every brand was really a big hit, and although similar, they retained their brand distinctions enough to make them beautiful and interesting. My favorite year though was probably the 80/81, with a lean to the 81 for crisper lines and less fussy tail lamp treatment. Those dash boards, combined with the Sheer backlight, were my dream car for my high school graduation.. Thanks for a wonderful video.. I'm out working on my 74 currently (Grand Ville 4drHT) BTW.. check your spam folder.. sent an email!!! Thanks again Adam!!! You keep me inspired with all the frustrations I run into with my projects..

  • @frankdeboer1347
    @frankdeboer1347 Год назад +1

    Makes sense that 1978 was their best year with both the recent redesign of the full-size lineup, the introduction of the 1978 new midsized lineup, and the popularity of the TransAm with the Smokey and the Bandit movie.

  • @Lousybarber
    @Lousybarber Год назад +2

    I remember GM doing very well in the late 70's. They were on a roll with the downsized full and mid sized cars along with the new X-bodies. And then came the hangover caused by poor build quality, over stressed automatic transmissions and the numerous X-body recalls.

  • @jeffshadow2407
    @jeffshadow2407 Год назад

    I sourced the better taillamps off a 2005 Pontiac Bonneville GXP for my 2003 SLE. Now I no longer have the plastic delamination problem. You only need to trade the reverse and turning lamp wires to match the lense placement.

  • @fleetwin1
    @fleetwin1 Год назад +1

    It's like you say, the ad was written by some marketing firm, but you would think that Pontiac folks would have read it over and catch the error. But, I'm sure that most of the Pontiac folks in their inhouse marketing department weren't around in 1966 so know next to nothing about the 2+2. So much history is lost when long time employees retire/leave. Same is true for engineering. The engineering department of most companies should be required to have an ongoing "history class", so mistakes are not repeated, and important innovations/discoveries are not forgotten.
    All this reminds me of a real blunder by our marketing department at OMC/Evinrude/Johnson. Some genius decided to mimic the springtime basketball championship going coming up with a sales promotion, calling it the "fast break" promotion! How friggin stupid can one/many get. I can understand some marketing company coming up with such a stupid promotion, but the fact that management approved it is mind boggling. Needless to say, our competition had a field day with this campaign....

    • @donk499
      @donk499 Год назад

      For sure, history tends to repeat itself, usually the bad over the good...

  • @lorenzobeckmann3736
    @lorenzobeckmann3736 Год назад +1

    musta had a large barrel of that burgundy paint; a co-worker's '65 GP & my '73 GP carried that very color

  • @markreibson7030
    @markreibson7030 Год назад +1

    fun fact: the 376hp 2+2 held Car and Driver magazine 0-60 record for Decades. 3.9 seconds hand timed. The secret was optional Hd tires off the station wagon combined with a 3.42 posi. This allowed the test car to wind out 1st gear (with a slight over-rev) to 60 mph. Car and Driver was often accused of turning a blind eye to Pontiac test car shenanigans, (Royal Bobcat, 428 swaps into GTO etc.)
    But still, 3.9 seconds with a huge car is badass.

    • @mescko
      @mescko Год назад +1

      That car has more or less been debunked as a full-out Bobcat ringer.

  • @jayweiss4378
    @jayweiss4378 Год назад

    Historically speaking this is amazing…. Keep it going 👍🏻

  • @nlpnt
    @nlpnt Год назад +2

    IMO the only mistake Pontiac made was continuing with the fender skirts on Bonnevilles, especially 2-doors. They made a crisp and elegant design look ponderous and awkward. A revived Catalina 2+2 for '77, with bucket seats in an otherwise Bonneville-grade interior, open rear wheelwells with styled road wheels and no vinyl top option would've been a sharp car even with the "economy" engine (a Chevy 305 that year?)

  • @OLDS98
    @OLDS98 Год назад

    Thank you Adam. It is so nice you bring forth the interesting videos and facts and designers and more. You keep things quite interesting. I have this brochure in my home. Pontiac was doing something right in the 1970's it seems. I like the 1980-1981 Pontiac Bonneville and 1985-1986 Pontiac Parisienne. The 1977 downsizing at GM was quite successful. The one that took place in the 1980s( 1985-1986) was not. It took GM years to recover from that.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад

      Parisienne wasn't a true Pontiac. It was a rebadged Canadian Caprice.

    • @OLDS98
      @OLDS98 Год назад

      @@MarinCipollina The 1980-1981 Pontiac Parisienne was the exact same car that was sold as the Pontiac Bonneville in the United States. I know because I have the brochure here in the house. The 1982-1984 Parisienne were based on Chevrolet Caprice as you stated. The 1985-1986 was a combination of 1980-1981 Pontiac Bonneville and Chevrolet Caprice. Please feel free to go online and look. There are several here on You Tube in videos and there is information online as well.

  • @chriscadman6379
    @chriscadman6379 Год назад +2

    Did they put it in cold water? That causes shrinkage for me.

  • @jamesengland7461
    @jamesengland7461 Год назад +1

    It makes perfect sense that Pontiac's best sales year was 1978, as the population was growing, baby boomers began buying cars, and this was right before the imports really began to take market share.

  • @KenZahner-g8t
    @KenZahner-g8t Год назад +1

    1978 must have been the year for medium priced cars...I believe 1978 was Mercury's all time best sales year too...

  • @NorlandBoxcar
    @NorlandBoxcar Год назад

    Although I was a kid, I still remember that transition from 76 to 77 GM cars. It was huge and I recall my father (who worked at GM) telling me that the new models were in a for a big change. As for 1978...yes quite understandable it was a good year. Just look at all the models sport and sedan and station wagon. All nice..

  • @jamesbrewer-lk8te
    @jamesbrewer-lk8te Год назад +1

    Miss the Pontiac's. Had a 73 Lemans good car.

  • @sasz2107
    @sasz2107 Год назад

    I remember the 1978 Pontiac sales brochure saying "1978 - Pontiac's best year yet!" They were doing well, and at the time, they had every reason to expect to do better. (Oldsmobile was also doing extremely well in 1977 and 1978 - they sold over 1 million Oldsmobiles in those years.) But Pontiac marketing making a mistake in its own brochure - that is pretty sad.

  • @rexradar9297
    @rexradar9297 Год назад +1

    The 1966 Canadian 2+2's could come with a 396 chevy engine instead of the 421 American engines as they were not standard equipment in Canada. This engine restriction was across the Pontiac linup as the OHV straight 6 was also very rare in canadian pontiac cars which were basically Chevrolets with Pontiac front an rear styling. However the rest of the BOP lineup remained in tact on both sides of the boarder.

  • @nlpnt
    @nlpnt Год назад +1

    'American cars' track widths had been pretty much standardized going back to the brass era - look at London-Brighton run pics and the American cars stand out for having axles *significantly* wider than their bodies, so they could fit the ruts made by Conestoga wagons - by '59 that had evolved into the elephant-on-roller-skates look every domestic '59 had except Pontiac (and the Studebaker Lark and senior Ramblers). Exceptions had always been narrower - the rounded Ramblers that had been engineered for skirted front fenders and the increasingly popular small imports led by VW. Early on, '59 Pontiacs didn't fit a lot of car washes because they were over "standard tread".

  • @thoughtballoons
    @thoughtballoons Год назад +1

    What do you think about doing a video on the similarities/differences of the outgoing (in 1977) A-Bodies and the incoming B/C-Bodies? Were these new cars riding a chassis similar to the Colonnades or earlier? As always....LOVE your videos! I've loved Pontiacs since I was a kid in the 70s....and this brochure has always been a favorite of mine.

    • @mikee2923
      @mikee2923 10 месяцев назад

      I’m pretty certain that the full size B and C bodies from 77 up to when GM eliminated full size RWD cars rode the colonnade platform that debuted in 73. It would’ve debuted in 72 if not for the big labor strike. That platform has to be one of if not the most successful in history.

  • @rightlanehog3151
    @rightlanehog3151 Год назад +3

    Adam, I enjoy the use of the word 'egregious' as much as anybody, are you absolutely certain there was never a specially ordered 2+2 with a 389? 🤔

  • @HamJamming
    @HamJamming Год назад +1

    Adam, could you please address the question of which Pontiac V8s had forged connecting rods, and which ones had only cast rods?

    • @paulbourgeois4491
      @paulbourgeois4491 Год назад +3

      I used to forge GM connecting rods, steering spindles and crankshafts for GM when I was a Union Blacksmith at Interstate Drop Forge in Milwaukee WI, back in the 80s through 2002. (Plant shutdown and sold in 2002). A lot of truck parts, but we also forged for passenger cars. It was interesting work, and the pay was decent. I don't know the break down between forged & cast, maybe Adam will.
      Cheers. And remember;
      FORGED STEEL IS THE METAL YOU CAN TRUST!

    • @markreibson7030
      @markreibson7030 Год назад +1

      typically early sixties era Pontiacs had forged crank rods and pistons if they were multi carbed like 405 hp/421, 360hp/389 etc.
      the name "Trophy" also included forged parts. also anything Nascar related.

  • @jimeditorial
    @jimeditorial 4 месяца назад

    I went from a 74 to a 79, and there is no question that the downsized cars handled better, but the bigger car had a smoother ride and towed better. Gas mileage was much improved, however

  • @garyruark9506
    @garyruark9506 Год назад +2

    Pontiac's downsized cars style were better than some other GM divsions. Not as gracefull as 1976 Pontiacs but okay. What really hurt Pontiac and other divisions were small V8 engines. But Pontiac full size cars were handsome in 1977 - 1979.

  • @samiam5557
    @samiam5557 Год назад +1

    I also like the earlier Pontiac Indian logos too.....😀

  • @coyotehater
    @coyotehater Год назад

    There is always the possibility that it was a deliberate mistake by the marketing department. The target buyer was someone in their late 30’s-early 40’s, who had owned or wanted a GTO. And without a doubt, the 389 would have been the most recognizable engine. Even today, if you ask what was Pontiac’s best engine, most people are going to say either a 389 tri-power or SD455. People just don’t remember the 400, 421 or 428.

  • @MostlyBuicks
    @MostlyBuicks Год назад +1

    In 1986 the Fleetwood was based on the FWD DeVille. That which HAD been RWD Fleetwood is now a Brougham (or Brougham De Elegance). People mistakenly call 1987-1992 Broughams Fleetwoods.

    • @andrewg.spurgeon1736
      @andrewg.spurgeon1736 Год назад +2

      Yes, it was confusing. Actually the full size, rear drive Cadillac indeed still used the Fleetwood name in 1986. It was called the "Fleetwood Brougham" while the front drive Fleetwood variant never used the Brougham moniker. Since It was confusing for consumers and dealers, they ultimately dropped the Fleetwood name from the rear drive car in 1987. At that point the Brougham became the model designation for the rear drive car and the Fleetwood name was exclusive to the top trim of the front drive model. I have a triple white 1986 Fleetwood Brougham with blue carpet and dash in my collection and it is indeed badged "Fleetwood Brougham" right on the quarter panel and it also has the d'Elegance package. It's also called "Fleetwood Brougham" right on the original 1986 window sticker, which I have. Ironically in 1993 when the Buick Roadmaster debuted along with the redesigned Chevy Caprice, they revived the Fleetwood name for the redesigned full size rear drive car and the Fleetwood Brougham was again the top of the line rear driver. The Brougham package replaced the d'Elegance package from 93-96. Cadillac also killed the front drive Fleetwood model after the 91 model year due to poor sales.

    • @MostlyBuicks
      @MostlyBuicks Год назад

      @@andrewg.spurgeon1736 I got it off by one year, but corrected myself later in the post.

    • @MostlyBuicks
      @MostlyBuicks Год назад

      @@andrewg.spurgeon1736 The Roadmaster debuted in 1991 as a Station wagon. The Sedan debuted in 1992. The Caprice sedan and station wagon in this new body also came out for 1991.

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад

      @@andrewg.spurgeon1736 I always thought that "Brougham" was just too generic to be a proper Cadillac model name. By 1980 nearly ever car made in Detroit had some sort of "Brougham" version. The 1980s RWD big Cadillac was the true inheritor of the "Fleetwood" moniker.

  • @juddgurganus6060
    @juddgurganus6060 Год назад +1

    the 2+2 sentence in the ad lacks a verb- it's an "incomplete sentence"

  • @danr1920
    @danr1920 Год назад +1

    Had a '76 Astre, so not a Pontiac fan, sorry. The downedsazed cars of 77 were a huge (pun intended!) improvement of the cars they replaced. They needed more brand identity however.

    • @allenwayne2033
      @allenwayne2033 Год назад +1

      Yeah, I can see why owning an Astre would leave a bad taste in your mouth for Pontiac. A buddy of mine felt the same way about Buick after owning a Skyhawk! It was a POS!

  • @dueljet
    @dueljet Год назад

    I am sure that the 1977 release of Smokey and the Bandit helped sales a lot!

  • @manthony225
    @manthony225 Год назад

    Did the 77 Pontiac have a more sloping trunk than the other B bodies or do the fender skirt just make it look that way?

  • @SuperCommando60
    @SuperCommando60 Год назад +2

    I was so disappointed when the downsized GM cars came out, felt they had lost of lot of their raison d'être but after driving the new smaller cars, they were superior in every way. I own a 75 Grand Ville, but it just isn't as nice a car as the downsized models

    • @allenwayne2033
      @allenwayne2033 Год назад +1

      I agree, initially, they seemed like a big letdown stylistically but they seemed more solid than the early 70's GM cars with those terribly floppy doors and hoods.

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Год назад

      Yep. The downsized cars were beautiful drivers.

  • @UberLummox
    @UberLummox Год назад +1

    That sentence doesn't even make sense in context to the previous one. Weird!
    Comparing a '77 to a '66 Pontiac is like comparing a apple to a doughnut.

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Год назад

    Reminds me of some company's attempt to revive the "Burma Shave" brand, maybe 20 years ago, to sell old fashioned shaving kits, the kind that came with a brush. If they had done their research, they'd have known that one of the selling points of the original Burma Shave cream in the 1940s was that, unlike old fashioned shaving creams, it didn't need a brush.

    • @allenwayne2033
      @allenwayne2033 Год назад +1

      Being A "Route 66er" I had a Burma-Shave razor about 20 years ago. I think it was Schick that reintroduced it as it used Schick blades. Was bummed when it bit the dust!

  • @dave1956
    @dave1956 Год назад

    I bought a new 1978 Pontiac Bonneville Brougham 2 door coupe. It was a nice car but the quality just wasn’t there. Much of the chrome trim started to pit after only a couple of weeks of ownership. The hood outer panel separated from the inner and when driving down the highway it looked like the hood was ajar. I had to do some tall talking to get the dealership to replace the hood. I drove it 78,000 miles in just under 4 years and didn’t have a lot of mechanical issues unlike the car that replaced it, a 1980 Oldsmobile Delta with a diesel engine. What a total piece of junk.

  • @paulhunter6489
    @paulhunter6489 Год назад

    My suspicion is they were confusing it with the GTO that had its last year with the 389.

  • @ralphl7643
    @ralphl7643 Год назад

    Wasn't 1978 Cadillac's best selling year, also? There was considerable (but not yet peak) inflation, but the Fed hadn't yet begun raising interest rates to stop it, so buying cars with borrowed money made more sense than saving it.

  • @robertwright5487
    @robertwright5487 Год назад +1

    The designers left the room during these years.

  • @MarkCordell
    @MarkCordell Год назад

    I learned how to drive with my grandfather’s ‘63 Catalina.

  • @garygerbino3171
    @garygerbino3171 Год назад

    The Bonnevilles and Catalinas had unique to Pontiac dashboards. Can you explain with the later Parisienne used a Chevy Caprice dashboard?

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina Год назад +1

      The Canadian built Parisienne was simply a rebadged Chevrolet. I don't consider it a true Pontiac.

  • @auteurfiddler8706
    @auteurfiddler8706 9 месяцев назад

    I have to figure that they did not want a bigger engine than 400 since it would appear the car they were selling in 1977 was a downgrade. Which it was.
    Looking at the brochures from the mid 70's , few if any mention the horsepower or torque of any of the engines offered. This is from all American car makers.

  • @HAL-dm1eh
    @HAL-dm1eh Год назад

    2:09 that is gorgeous!

  • @aarontd3538
    @aarontd3538 Год назад

    Something to note. Most all materials prepared by marketing agencies must be approved by the client. So double mistake on Pontiacs part.

  • @CSltz
    @CSltz 4 месяца назад

    I remember these times when gas was.35 and just kept going up to way over $1.50.
    You couldn’t hardly give these away. But a lot of people were still very happy with there older Pontiac.. And would have preferred the big comfortable ride. If Uncle Sam would have just let the consumer decide. And keep there cafe standards to themselves.

  • @tonymaglio9376
    @tonymaglio9376 Год назад

    Hey man I watch all your videos. Was the pontiac parisian canadian thing?

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Год назад

      Yes. Except for the one they imported to the US in the 80s

  • @arevee9429
    @arevee9429 Год назад

    GM hits an occasional "home run" and the '77 downsized full cars were one of them.

  • @Marius_vanderLubbe
    @Marius_vanderLubbe Год назад

    I love my 64 two door coupe.

  • @JasonKent-n3j
    @JasonKent-n3j 11 дней назад

    A lot of Catalina‘s had 389’s two barrel’s It was an option to have a 421

    • @JasonKent-n3j
      @JasonKent-n3j 11 дней назад

      2+2 was considered the GTO’s big brother. So a lot of them had 421’s But it was not mandatory

  • @Srvease1631
    @Srvease1631 Год назад

    1978 TransAm helped make that a good selling year for Pontiac.

  • @steve20118
    @steve20118 Год назад

    1977 Bonneville was a beautiful car.

  • @revgee93
    @revgee93 Год назад

    2:20 😏 Sweet Skylark. 🤘🤣

  • @choward5430
    @choward5430 Год назад

    My uncle Willie had a '65 Catalina.

  • @marko7843
    @marko7843 Год назад

    Adam, I always wondered if Wide-Track was real, considering the platform sharing...?

    • @RareClassicCars
      @RareClassicCars  Год назад

      It was

    • @marko7843
      @marko7843 Год назад

      @@RareClassicCars Thank you for the reply, but how did they do it?

  • @davemachoukas6175
    @davemachoukas6175 Год назад

    They were great cars

  • @tomwilliams5933
    @tomwilliams5933 Год назад

    Consider yourself lucky if you ever get a hold of a 1962, 421 super duty, Pontiac, V8.

  • @tenfourproductionsllc
    @tenfourproductionsllc Год назад

    Pontiac in 1977 tried to be everything. Either bare budget car or luxury cars that shared a Cadillac platform, Pontiac had it all.

  • @joemazzola7387
    @joemazzola7387 Год назад

    The error I'm sure was made by the advertising agency
    That's why they have proof readers

  • @rpsmith2990
    @rpsmith2990 Год назад

    It sounds to me like Pontiac's ad agency, which would likely have done the brochure, needed to do some homework. Also, from what someone else has pointed out, some study of English would be recommended. The error of an incomplete sentence is not uncommon in automotive literature.