derek0609
New member
- Oct 25, 2011
- 714
- 0
I remember the one in 1979 well................
I was 8 in 1979! I remember my dad drove a burgandy 1974ish Pontiac LeMans with a 400 two-barrel.
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I remember the one in 1979 well................
The increased cost of gas is what killed the muscle car
I`m hoping thats fiberglass!!!Feed back please
I think I see small dents in it, and if there are small dents, it isn't fiberglass, because fiberglass doesn't dent. It cracks or breaks.I`m hoping thats fiberglass!!!Feed back please
how much longer do we have to wait???? lol
More clues guysHere's a teaser shot of the car Yancy took...
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Viva Super Premium gas, 102 octane at the pump. That is how you could have a high compression muscle car. The Corvette L 88 required 103 octane, and still does. GM claimed 430 hp, by rating it at a lower rpm than the maximum hp rpm, which made 550-600 hp. It made the cars easier to insure.The increased EPA emissions standards killed the muscle car, with it's lower compression and valve timings to compensate for the lower C/R. Then the phasing out of leaded fuels in 1973 that required catalytic converters mandatory in all vehicles... the muscle car era (as we knew it) was dead. Then to add insult to injury the octane ratings fell. This made it tough to hammer down the throttle on the real muscle cars of the 60's-70's, then hearing that death rattle of spark knock (detonation). The fuel crises didn't help with Detroit's engineers trying to breath some kind of performance back... this would come many years later.
BTW: got my drivers license in 73 along with my first "Muscle Car"![]()
Could these be one of the same????
(without the sound deadening materiel)
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Mystery Car
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Different.Could these be one of the same????
(without the sound deadening materiel)
![]()
Mystery Car
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