1965 Gto Pontiac’s Greatest Muscle Car

#PontiacGTO #ClassicCars #MuscleCarHistory In 1964, a Pontiac engineer named John DeLorean found a loophole in a General Motors corporate directive, borrowed a name from Ferrari, and created a car that the American automobile industry had no category for. The result was the Pontiac GTO -- a mid-size car with a massive engine, sold at a mainstream price through a regular dealership, capable of performance that cars costing twice as much could not match. When Car and Driver pitted it against the Ferrari GTO in a head-to-head comparison test, the result sent shockwaves through every boardroom in Detroit. By 1965, Pontiac had refined the formula into something fully realized -- restyled bodywork, stacked vertical headlights, a 389 cubic inch V8 producing up to 360 horsepower through the legendary Tri-Power carburetor setup, and production numbers that more than doubled the debut year. The muscle car war that followed produced an entire decade of American performance legends, but it all traces back to one option package on a Tempest LeMans order form. This video covers the complete story of the 1965 Pontiac GTO -- the GM displacement ban, the corporate loophole DeLorean and Pete Estes exploited, the Ferrari name controversy, the famous Car and Driver comparison test, Jim Wangers and the Tiger marketing campaign, Royal Pontiac and the Bobcat performance package, the technical specifications of both the standard and Tri-Power engine configurations, and the broader industry domino effect that gave birth to the Chevelle SS, the Oldsmobile 4-4-2, the Buick Gran Sport, and the entire muscle car era. If you are into classic American muscle cars, Detroit performance history, or the engineering and business stories behind the cars that defined an era, this one is for you. Comment the classic car you want us to cover next. The comment with the most likes becomes our next video. Sources Ackerson, Robert C. Pontiac GTO: The Complete History. Motorbooks International. Wangers, Jim. Glory Days: When Horsepower and Passion Ruled Detroit. Motorbooks International, 1998. Lamm, Michael and Holls, Dave. A Century of Automotive Style. Lamm-Morada Publishing, 1996. Car and Driver. "Pontiac GTO vs. Ferrari GTO." Car and Driver Magazine, January 1964. Gunnell, John, ed. Standard Catalog of American Muscle Cars 1960-1972. Krause Publications.