OMG! Not a small fortune / A BIG ONE! Probably one of the most sought after engines to this day along with the original Hemi engines with cross ram intakes. Those were sold with "no warranty implied - for race use only!" You knew exactly what you were paying for then. I never got to ride in one of those. I did have a ride that required me to clean my shorts after! When my buddy opened it up in his Mercury Cyclone Spoiler with the 428 SCJ "drag pack" engine. Yikes, those were monsters back then. You could almost see the gas needle going down in unison with your foot on the pedal. That is when I found out what "pinned to the seat" meant when that 4 barrel carb kicked in. You could hear it sucking wind from the cabin.'70 Chevelle CRR engine. That's the LS6 450 HP with TH400 transmission. I had no idea what I had at the time, but that engine must be worth a small fortune now. That car was crazy fast. 4 mpg.
I LOVE it....Yeah, that stings a little. lol. As best I can recall this is pretty close to what this one I missed out on, looked like.
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You know James Dean's "death car" was called the little bastard. (some type of foreign job, Porsche maybe? I think he named it. The car has gone missing many times. It is supposed to have brought great amounts of bad luck to the owners. As of this time I think people only know where the chassis is.It was James Dean's Mercury that he raced in Rebel Without a Cause. I saw it for sale in Hemmings sometime in the late 80s or early 90s for $17,000. I didn't have the cash, and at the time, I didn't know it could be financed, so, although I wanted it, I passed. A few days after seeing the car I learned that it could be financed ... leased, actually ... and I called to make the purchase. Unfortunately, it was sold.
A few years later I was exploring Bill Harrah's collection, and there she sat. Now Harrah's collection has been broken up, but various remnants of it can still be enjoyed.
WOW. Looks identical to a friends 1976 GP SJ model. I had bought a new 1976 Chevelle Type S3 and when I saw his Grand Prix a week later I was kind of sorry I didn't see them first. Another one I would love to grab these days is the 1977 Olds 442 with the one / two year only slopped front end for (of course) NASCAR after they banned GMs Chevelle S3.First car I ever bought, 74 Pontiac Grand Prix Model J, had the 400/400 drivetrain, great cruiser and freeway flyer. Traded it in for my 83 Silverado.
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I believe it was a 1955/56 Porsche 550 Spyder.You know James Dean's "death car" was called the little bastard. (some type of foreign job, Porsche maybe? I think he named it. The car has gone missing many times. It is supposed to have brought great amounts of bad luck to the owners. As of this time I think people only know where the chassis is.
Agreed, I just recently sold my LS6 so I could finance the dream Buick (1970 GSX) for me. This will likely be my last muscle car, so I want to get the right one. To this day, I still miss my 68 GS400 the most.LOVE them all but really lust over the 1970 Buick GS455 and Buick GSX Stage 1 or Stage 2. One of the few GM cars to beat Roadrunners and Super Bees at drag strips. The Buick GS were some of the highest cui and horse powered machines ever sold by the General.![]()
Really!? Did you actually find and buy the GSX yet? Oh man that is a major move. I first can't imagine and won't ask the price but would be afraid to drive one down the road. I am sure you know owning a GSX will be just like money in the bank drawing interest or buying gold or precious metals that will only increase in value. I would have no problem owning a GS that someone turned into a GSX clone. I always found that the Buick and Olds or even the Pontiac muscle cars just rode and drove better than their brethren Chevrolets. They even seemed to have a notch better quality of interior. Its been said the Buick GS from 1968 thru 1972 were some of the best handling / riding offerings from GMC at that time. Congrats on a big move and enjoy. Apollo white or the searing Saturn Yellow paint were the only offerings at first. I do know they began to offer more paint color choices after a few years.Agreed, I just recently sold my LS6 so I could finance the dream Buick (1970 GSX) for me. This will likely be my last muscle car, so I want to get the right one. To this day, I still miss my 68 GS400 the most.
Not yet, search is ongoing. It has been difficult, to say the least, recently. If you, or anyone else on this thread, knows of any 1970 GS455/GSX cars that may be for sale PM me. Just an up front note, only premium upper echelon candidates, no junk or over-restored cars. Most of the cars in my signature were typically low mileage original unrestored top tier condition cars and I am looking for the same going forward on the Buick.Did you actually find and buy the GSX yet?