Friday, November 12, 2010

Pontiac is no more and has ceased being

Pontiac has formally ceased to occur, after being planned for shut down last year. GM had to get rid of the underperforming brand names it held, and Pontiac unfortunately went the way of the Dodo. General Motors also laid Saturn, Hummer, Opel, and other brands to rest along with it. Pontiac had more than 70 years of history. Pontiac, once the near symbol of Detroit automotive muscle, was heralded for its serious performance at seriously great prices. Source for this article – Pontiac has officially ceased to exist by Car Deal Expert.

Pontiac is no more

During its bankruptcy, General Motors got rid of some car brands. Pontiac had been one of these. The brand had been suffering as of 2008, and GM decided to allow Pontiac to pass away. As of Sun, Pontiac no longer exists as a corporate entity, as outlined by USA Today. General Motors wasn't doing anything right when it came to the car since Pontiac was simply being put into Chevrolet and Buick models. The muscle cars known and loved are often Pontiacs as there is a lot of raw horsepower in them within the last 1950s and 1980s.

Cars in the past

Working class families were targeted with the Pontiac within the first place. They were launched in 1926. By the 1950s, sales were struggling and General Motors decided it had been time to rethink the brand. The Pontiac GTO, which is the epitome of Detroit muscle cars, had been introduced in 1965 after Pontiac cars began to be known for racing. The GTO, or “Gran Turismo Omolagato,” was inspired by Italian sport tour cars. John DeLorean got a small team together which put a 389-cubic-inch engine under the hood with a Tempest frame. The car became very popular. This is why, in 1968, 17 percent of GM sales originated from this car. By the 1980s the brand lost the horsepower focus although there were other successes like the Pontiac Trans Am of the Firebird line.

Then it went down

Sales showed that Pontiac had left the performance it was known for from the 1980s to the 2000s. As of 2008, fewer than 275,000 were selling annually. Most are sad to determine Pontiac go. It wasn't living up to its legend anymore anyway.

Articles cited

USA Today

usatoday.com/money/autos/2010-11-01-pontiac-vanishes_N.htm



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