The Grand Am was the best-selling Pontiac model in the United States for every year of the 1990s, and it outsold most of its N-Body
This is an SE Coupe
The Grand Am was the best-selling Pontiac model in the United States for every year of the 1990s, and it outsold most of its N-Body
This is an SE Coupe
The factory-issued Monroney sheet
The ’96 Gr and AM SE buyer had to pay extra for cruise control, air conditioning, power windows, rear glass defogger and other features we now take for granted on new cars.
The base engine was the 2.4-liter Twin Cam four cylinder, a member of the screaming Oldsmobile Quad 4
If you got the V6 in your ’96 Grand Am, however, you couldn’t get a manual transmission. This car has a proper five-speed manual, which made for fun driving with the high-revving Twin Cam engine in a machine weighing just 2,802 pounds (which is quite a bit less than what the current Honda Civic
It traveled just over 160,000 miles during its 27 years on the road.
The body and interior were still in fairly good condition when the car arrived here, so we can assume that some expensive mechanical problem doomed this car. Perhaps the original clutch wore out and the owner didn’t consider it worth replacing. After all, a mid-1990s Detroit two-door with a transmission most people can’t drive isn’t worth much these days.
Though nobody knew it when this car was new, the Grand Am would be gone in nine years and Pontiac itself would get the axe five years after that.
It makes the ordinary extraordinary.
Husbands and wives would argue for 12 hours over who got to drive the Grand Am, if we are to believe this ad.
Proud sponsor of the 1996 Olympic team.