When Chevrolet introduced its 350 cubic-inch small block engine in 1967, it started a phenomenon that lasts even today. Pontiac's 350, introduced in 1968, never saw the same success and was phased out ...
Admittedly, this would be a much shorter article if we focused on the similarities of the Chevy 350 and the Pontiac 350 — because outside of their displacement, these are, for all intents and purposes ...
The standard engine on the 1969 Pontiac GTO was the L78 400 V8, which used a Rochester Quadra-Jet carburetor to develop 350 horsepower. The L74, which Pontiac referred to as 400 HO before renaming it ...
The Pontiac Firebird debuted in 1967 during the classic muscle car era. With Chevy releasing their first-generation Camaro and Ford beefing up the popular Mustang with a big-block engine, the pony car ...
It's often said that you never really know what you have until it's gone. This applies to the Pontiac 350 because this smaller version of the PMD family of engines was plentiful back in the day and ...
In the 1960s and 1970s, Chevrolet and Pontiac both offered a pushrod V8 engine with an advertised displacement of 400 cubic inches. Considering that both carmakers are (were?) sub-brands of parent ...