More Pontiac G8 pics and info
More Pontiac G8 pics and info
This is a show car version of the G8 GT with larger wheels, leather dash, etc. It is going to be offered as 261 hp V6 and 362 hp V8 GT as detailed below.
http://www.autoweek.com/apps/pbcs.dl.../70205012/1063









http://www.autoweek.com/apps/pbcs.dl.../70205012/1063
Originally Posted by AutoWeek
2008 Pontiac G8
The return of the rear-drive Pontiac sedan
By BOB GRITZINGER
AutoWeek | Published 02/07/07, 12:16 am et
Ronald Reagan was president the last time Pontiac sold a rear-wheel-drive Grand Prix. The spiritual successor to General Motors’ performance sedan from the past arrives this week at the Chicago auto show, in the form of the 2008 Pontiac G8.
Due in dealerships early next year, the all-new performance sedan shares underpinnings with the Holden Commodore from GM’s Australian subsidiary. Commodore went on sale in Australia in August 2006.
Outside of some extravagant touches - including the leather wrapped dash and 20" wheels - the G8 shown here is production intent.
Pontiac is now confirming what we reported a few weeks ago (“G8 Summit: Rear-drive Pontiac G8 replacement spied in Australia,” Jan. 22): Pontiac will sell two G8s, a base model powered by a 3.6-liter 261-hp, 250-lb-ft V6 with a five-speed automatic, and a GT running a 6.0-liter 362-hp, 391-lb-ft V8 mated to a six-speed automatic. Both trannies will feature manual shift mode; a six-speed stick (shown on the Chicago show car) will be available with the V8 sometime after launch. The V8 also will be equipped with Active Fuel Management, GM’s system that saves fuel by deactivating four cylinders during low-load driving. The GT also gets a standard limited-slip differential for improved traction.
The Chicago show car, while representative of the production GT, offers a glimpse at some tuner touches: 20-inch chrome wheels (18s are standard, 19s are available), lowered ride height, high-performance brakes with painted calipers, custom interior trim with leather-wrapped dash, the Phantom Grey paint job and a conceptualized version of the Pontiac badge.
Some might argue GM vice chairman Bob Lutz didn’t stray very far from his BMW past for the G8s bold styling cues—and we’d argue most BMW styling is worth cribbing. Regardless of the inspiration, the clean muscular lines and wheels-at-the-corners stance make an impressive design statement in this latest take on the Wide Track Pontiac tradition. Inside, G8’s uncluttered twin cockpit is highlighted by large round gauges and Pontiac’s signature red lighting.
Underneath, all the good stuff developed by GM’s rear-drive experts at Holden carries over to this first North American application of GM’s new global rear-drive architecture. The four-wheel independent suspension uses MacPherson struts up front and a four-link coil-over shock setup at the rear. Stopping power comes from four-wheel antilock disc brakes with vented rotors. GT models get one-inch larger brake discs.
“The rear-wheel-drive engineering team has put together a simply spectacular car that captures the essence of Pontiac,” says Pontiac general manager John Larson. “We believe that the Pontiac G8 will rival competitors costing far more.”
Clean muscular lines and wheels-at-the-corners stance make an impressive design statement.
And just how much is that? When Lutz spilled the beans on the car back in January, sources suggested pricing starting at around $25,000—with just 30,000 to 50,000 copies available. If G8 can succeed where GM’s last Aussie import—the pricier Monaro-based Pontiac GTO coupe—couldn’t, maybe we won’t have to wait through two Bushes and a Clinton for Pontiac’s next rear-drive sedan.
The return of the rear-drive Pontiac sedan
By BOB GRITZINGER
AutoWeek | Published 02/07/07, 12:16 am et
Ronald Reagan was president the last time Pontiac sold a rear-wheel-drive Grand Prix. The spiritual successor to General Motors’ performance sedan from the past arrives this week at the Chicago auto show, in the form of the 2008 Pontiac G8.
Due in dealerships early next year, the all-new performance sedan shares underpinnings with the Holden Commodore from GM’s Australian subsidiary. Commodore went on sale in Australia in August 2006.
Outside of some extravagant touches - including the leather wrapped dash and 20" wheels - the G8 shown here is production intent.
Pontiac is now confirming what we reported a few weeks ago (“G8 Summit: Rear-drive Pontiac G8 replacement spied in Australia,” Jan. 22): Pontiac will sell two G8s, a base model powered by a 3.6-liter 261-hp, 250-lb-ft V6 with a five-speed automatic, and a GT running a 6.0-liter 362-hp, 391-lb-ft V8 mated to a six-speed automatic. Both trannies will feature manual shift mode; a six-speed stick (shown on the Chicago show car) will be available with the V8 sometime after launch. The V8 also will be equipped with Active Fuel Management, GM’s system that saves fuel by deactivating four cylinders during low-load driving. The GT also gets a standard limited-slip differential for improved traction.
The Chicago show car, while representative of the production GT, offers a glimpse at some tuner touches: 20-inch chrome wheels (18s are standard, 19s are available), lowered ride height, high-performance brakes with painted calipers, custom interior trim with leather-wrapped dash, the Phantom Grey paint job and a conceptualized version of the Pontiac badge.
Some might argue GM vice chairman Bob Lutz didn’t stray very far from his BMW past for the G8s bold styling cues—and we’d argue most BMW styling is worth cribbing. Regardless of the inspiration, the clean muscular lines and wheels-at-the-corners stance make an impressive design statement in this latest take on the Wide Track Pontiac tradition. Inside, G8’s uncluttered twin cockpit is highlighted by large round gauges and Pontiac’s signature red lighting.
Underneath, all the good stuff developed by GM’s rear-drive experts at Holden carries over to this first North American application of GM’s new global rear-drive architecture. The four-wheel independent suspension uses MacPherson struts up front and a four-link coil-over shock setup at the rear. Stopping power comes from four-wheel antilock disc brakes with vented rotors. GT models get one-inch larger brake discs.
“The rear-wheel-drive engineering team has put together a simply spectacular car that captures the essence of Pontiac,” says Pontiac general manager John Larson. “We believe that the Pontiac G8 will rival competitors costing far more.”
Clean muscular lines and wheels-at-the-corners stance make an impressive design statement.
And just how much is that? When Lutz spilled the beans on the car back in January, sources suggested pricing starting at around $25,000—with just 30,000 to 50,000 copies available. If G8 can succeed where GM’s last Aussie import—the pricier Monaro-based Pontiac GTO coupe—couldn’t, maybe we won’t have to wait through two Bushes and a Clinton for Pontiac’s next rear-drive sedan.









Last edited by jrp4uc; Feb 7, 2007 at 08:25 AM.
AutoWeek's story has some:
http://www.autoweek.com/apps/pbcs.dl.../70205012/1063
http://www.autoweek.com/apps/pbcs.dl.../70205012/1063
There is a Flash website set up for the G8 on www.pontiac.com now with pics and info...
Curious about this... is the G8 showing an all-new Pontiac logo? Will this modernized arrowhead migrate to the rest of the lineup?
Curious about this... is the G8 showing an all-new Pontiac logo? Will this modernized arrowhead migrate to the rest of the lineup?
There is a Flash website set up for the G8 on www.pontiac.com now with pics and info...
Curious about this... is the G8 showing an all-new Pontiac logo? Will this modernized arrowhead migrate to the rest of the lineup?
Curious about this... is the G8 showing an all-new Pontiac logo? Will this modernized arrowhead migrate to the rest of the lineup?
Like the looks alot, and this will most likely be my next vehicle. I am disappointed that it only has 362hp, I was really hoping for the LS2 400hp. Since it says 6.0L, what is the difference between that motor and the LS2?
Last edited by Clean97Z; Feb 7, 2007 at 09:19 AM.
The back end looks very similar to the out-going Grand Prix ... and the front end almost has similar lines to the last Bonneville
.
Overall, I like it
. Interior looks pretty nice too. Now just don't F-up the pricing!!
.Overall, I like it
. Interior looks pretty nice too. Now just don't F-up the pricing!!
PS: I'd really like to see GM give us an affordable AWD option (RWD biased on the power split) on one of these bigger sedans sometime soon... I know CTS is getting it, but something bigger.
Ford Five Hundred offers AWD, Chrysler 300 offers it, among others...
Ford Five Hundred offers AWD, Chrysler 300 offers it, among others...
What is these idiot's obsession with ricer-*** taillights?!
Guess GM Australia can get ready for a few orders of the NORMAL lights.
Other than that, me dig. And hell yeah on the Arrowhead redesign!
Guess GM Australia can get ready for a few orders of the NORMAL lights.
Other than that, me dig. And hell yeah on the Arrowhead redesign!




