Originally posted by Chris Hafner on Oct. 13, 2008.

Has there ever been a badder, more intimidating, more colorful name for a car than “Judge?” With apologies to Boss Mustangs and Plymouth Road Runners, I think “GTO Judge” is the unquestioned champion in this category.

Pontiac’s dead-serious GTO had kick-started the muscle car revolution in 1964. Big, fast cars were around before the GTO–the Chrysler 300 letter-series cars were among the most famous–but the combination of the 389-cubic-inch Pontiac V-8 with the attractive intermediate-size Tempest body proved irresistible. The Ford Mustang sparked the pony car class later that year, and suddenly performance cars were hot. Nearly every carmaker had a muscle car in its lineup–even AMC got into the game with the S/CRambler–but in a sea of Cyclones, Chevelles, and Chargers, the GTO stood out as the first, the most famous, and one of the best-selling.

When Pontiac revamped the Tempest and Le Mans intermediates for 1968, the GTO received the new body–and it was a knockout. The original GTO was perhaps a bit more distinctive, with its knife-edged creases and vertically stacked headlights, but the 1968 GTO grew some overtly muscular curves, an Endura body-color bumper, and natty hidden headlights. Improvements came under the hood, as well, in the form of 350 horsepower from the stock 400-cubic-inch engine and a freer-flowing Ram Air II package.


Read the rest of this post, its comments, and post your own comment here.
No comments:
Post a Comment