GTO’s gotta go

  • Los Angeles Times
  • Wednesday, February 22, 2006 9:00pm
  • Business

Little GTO, you’re really lookin’ fine

Three deuces and a four-speed, and a 389. …

Ronny &the Daytonas had it right back in 1964 when Pontiac’s GTO was king of the muscle cars.

But far from lookin’ fine, today’s GTO is lookin’ pretty dead.

General Motors Corp. reintroduced the GTO in December 2003 after a 30-year hiatus, but the struggling automaker said Tuesday that it will stop importing the car in June.

Company executives say the $32,000 GTO’s day is done because redesigning it to meet federal air bag rules for 2007 would be too expensive.

Pontiac’s classic muscle car was affectionately known as “the goat” when it was launched.

With three deuces – a reference to the trio of two-barrel carburetors – the original 389-cubic inch, 360-horsepower GTO model immortalized in song delivered just 10 miles per gallon around town and 17 mpg on the highway. That mileage dropped precipitously when a driver would, as the song urged, “turn it on, wind it up, blow it out GTO.”

The GTO’s high performance and rugged looks inspired other muscle cars. The vehicle lasted a decade before being dropped from GM’s roster in 1973 amid slumping sales. By then, federal emissions controls had sapped the GTO’s power, and the first OPEC oil crisis was spurring a national U-turn toward fuel-efficient, four-cylinder compacts from Japan.

Today’s GTO delivers more punch, 400 horsepower, and better fuel economy at 16 mpg in the city and 21 on the highway.

But instead of the eye-catching muscular design that made the original stand out, today’s version has the bland styling of a standard passenger car. And the latest GTO isn’t even made in the U.S. – it’s a modified Holden Monaro CV8, made by GM’s Australian subsidiary.

“It’s got the name and the performance, but not the look, and in today’s market you need all three,” said Rebecca Lindland, auto industry analyst at Global Insight in Lexington, Mass.

Last year Pontiac sold 11,590 GTOs. The pace slowed in January to 594 cars.

So the real reason GM is ending production is that this GTO, unlike its predecessor, never scored a hit – in showrooms or on Billboard’s top 10.

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