Pontiac Tempest
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Pontiac Tempest | |
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Manufacturer | Pontiac |
Parent company | General Motors |
Production | 1961-1972 1988-1991 |
The Pontiac Tempest was an entry-level compact automobile produced by the Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors, introduced in September 1960 for the 1961 model year. It shared the new monocoque (unibody) Y platform with the Buick Special and Skylark, and Oldsmobile F-85 and Cutlass. It also appeared under the LeMans nameplate largely beginning with the 1962 model year, though a few 1961 LeMans coupes were built. For 1964, the platform was redesigned with a full frame, and renamed A-body. The Tempest name was discontinued after the 1970 model year in favor of LeMans, a nameplate previously used for upmarket versions of that series.
Contents |
[edit] 1961-1963
First generation | |
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Production | 1961-1963 |
Class | Compact |
Body style(s) | 4-door station wagon 4-door sedan 2-door coupe 2-door convertible |
Layout | RR layout |
Platform | Y-body |
Engine(s) | 195 in³ Trophy 4 I4 326 in³ V8 389 in³ V8 215 in³ Buick V8 |
Transmission(s) | 2-speed automatic 3-speed manual 3-speed automatic 4-speed manual |
Related | Oldsmobile F-85 Buick Special |
In its first iteration, though it used some of the Oldsmobile's sheet metal, underneath it was radically different. The Tempest's drivetrain employed an innovative tunnel (called a torque tube) that spanned almost the length of the car and housed a flexible steel propeller shaft (colloquially dubbed the "rope shaft") connecting the engine in the front to a unified differential and transmission in the rear. The combination of the rear-mounted transaxle and the front-mounted engine gave the car a weight distribution near an ideal 50/50 between the forward and rear wheels, enabled four-wheel independent suspension, and had the added benefit of eliminating the floor "hump" forward of the front seat needed to accommodate the transmission in conventional cars. The designer of this car was John Z. DeLorean, the division's chief engineer and a Packard veteran who would later become the division's head and still later famous for building cars bearing his own name. Since its Buick and Oldsmobile sister cars used a conventional Hotchkiss front engine and front transmission powertrain setup, the Tempest was truly unique. The Tempest was Motor Trend magazine's 1961 Car of the Year. Road & Track praised the Tempest as "exceptionally roomy" and "one of the very best utility cars since the Ford Model A."
Power came from a 194.5 in³ (3.2 L) straight-4, marketed as the "Trophy 4," derived from the right cylinder bank of Pontiac's 389 in³ V8, the standard powerplant Pontiac used in its larger cars, such as the Bonneville and Catalina. The engine was advertised as a gas-saving economy motor for thrifty consumers, but Pontiac also saved money because it could run the engine down the same assembly line as the 389. There were three versions of the engine: an 8.6:1, low compression, single-barrel carburetor; a 10.25:1 high-compression with single barrel; and a high-compression engine with a four-barrel carburetor. While the single-barrel version produced between 110-140 horsepower, the four-barrel was capable of 155 hp (82 kW) (SAE gross) at 4800 rpm and 215 ft·lbf (292 N·m) of torque at 2800 rpm. All three versions had a fuel economy ranging from 18-22 mpg, and the engine was generally reliable though it had a reputation as the "Hay Baler," a derogatory label applied by dealer mechanics (ostensibly from farm states) who experienced the violent kicks it could produce when out of tune.
Another departure, lesser but still notable from the Special/Skylark and F-85/Cutlass were the wheels. Both Buick and Oldsmobile had standardized their Y-body cars on an odd nine-inch brake drum with four lug studs on a 4.5 inch-diameter circle (a "four-on-four-and-a-half" bolt pattern), with 14-inch wheels, shared by no other GM cars at the time. Pontiac also went with a nine-inch drum but used five studs on the same bolt circle ("five-on-four-and-a-half") and 15-inch wheels. This was a second configuration shared by no other GM cars but would be identical to the wheels on the Ford Mustang when released some four years later in mid-1964. Perhaps only coincidentally the Pontiac plant that produced the Tempest's undercarriage was in Los Angeles, across the street from the Ford plant where the Mustang's was developed. Additionally the driver's side wheel lugs used a left hand threaded stud designed to tighten themselves with the wheels' rotation.
Of particular note is that the innovative aluminum Buick-built 215 in³ (3.5 L) V8 was optional in the Tempest in 1961 and 1962. It is estimated that just 3,662 Tempests were ordered with the 215 engine, or about 1 percent of production. This motor produced, in its various incarnations, from 155 to 215 hp despite weighing just 330 lb (150 kg) installed. The Pontiac 215 blocks are distinct from other Buick 215 blocks because in addition to the factory Buick markings they were hand-stamped at the Pontiac plant with the VIN numbers of the individual cars they were installed in. Thus in 1961 all Pontiac 215 blocks begin "161P"; the 1962 cars, "162P." Further code numbers told whether the car had an automatic or manual transmission. In 1961 this would have been either a three-speed column-shifted manual with a non-synchromesh first gear or a two-speed automatic controlled by a small lever on the dash to the right of the ignition. This automatic, called "TempesTorque" in company literature but unmarked on the unit itself, was a type of Powerglide similar to, but sharing very few parts with, the one in the Chevrolet Corvair. (The next year a floor-mounted, fully synchromesh four-speed manual was added.) At the introduction the Tempest was only available as a four-door pillared sedan and as a Safari station wagon. A pair of two-door coupes, one of which was named LeMans, were added at the end of 1961, both in the 1961 body style.
By the time the 1962 models arrived, LeMans, primarily a trim package upgrade featuring front bucket seats, also came as a new convertible. There were now a total of four models: station wagon, sedan, coupe, and convertible. All four came as Tempest; customers who wanted a more deluxe coupe or convertible could pay extra for Tempest LeMans. There was no LeMans station wagon or sedan. And although Oldsmobile and Buick had pillarless hardtops in the higher-option Cutlass and Skylark respectively, there was no pillarless hardtop LeMans. In 1963, the LeMans became a separate series, reaching nearly 50 percent of all combined Tempest and LeMans production.
The 1963 version, slightly larger and heavier than the previous two years (now designated a "senior compact"), and with a redesigned transaxle that improved handling, offered a high-performance option much more powerful than the scarcely ordered 215. The 215 was replaced by Pontiac's new 326 in³ (5.3 L) V8, a motor with the same external dimensions of the venerable 389, but different internals, designed to produce more torque. A new version of the automatic transmission (now officially stamped "TempesTorque" on the case) was designed with beefier internals to handle it; the four-speed was not, so few, if any, V8 cars were built with four speeds (the three-speed remained for both motors, however). The high-compression 326's output was 260 hp (197 kW) and 352 ft·lbf (477 N·m) of torque. The actual displacement was 336 in³, but according to lore, since no GM division was allowed to have a motor larger than the Corvette's 327, the advertised number was 326. The cast-iron mill brought weight up 260 pounds over a 194.5 in³ Trophy 4 and weight distribution changed only marginally to 54/46. Performance was strong enough that Car Life magazine stated; "No one will wonder why they didn't use the 389," and fuel economy with the 326 ranged up to 19 mpg. The V8 option proved popular: 52 percent of the 131,490 Tempests and LeMans sold in 1963 were ordered with the 326. The 326 sold in the 1963 cars is a one year-only motor; the next year the displacement was adjusted so that it was actually 326 in³.
[edit] Super Duty
Perhaps the most famous Tempests built were 1963 cars. Just 11 in number, they were built at the Pontiac plant in Michigan over Christmas 1962.[citation needed]
[edit] 1964-70
Second generation | |
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Production | 1964-1970 |
Class | Mid-size |
Body style(s) | 4-door station wagon 4-door sedan 2-door coupe 2-door convertible |
Layout | FR layout |
Platform | A-body |
Engine(s) | 326 in³ V8 400 in³ V8 230 in³ I6 |
Transmission(s) | 3-speed automatic 4-speed manual 3-speed manual |
Related | Chevrolet Chevelle Pontiac LeMans Oldsmobile Cutlass Buick Special |
In 1964, the Tempest was redesigned as a more-conventional vehicle and enlarged from a compact to an intermediate-sized car with a 115-inch wheelbase and an overall length of 203 inches. The unibody, torque tube and transaxle were gone in favor of the traditional front engine, front transmission, frame and solid rear axle design used by all of GM's other cars, with the exception of the Corvair. Together with its sister cars the Oldsmobile F-85/Cutlass and Buick Special/Skylark, the Tempest/LeMans moved to the new A body platform shared with the new Chevrolet Chevelle, and all three cars received updates and modifications standardizing them throughout - including the wheels - by GM edict. The LeMans name was discontinued as a separate series, so now the cars were, in ascending order, base Tempest, Tempest Custom and Tempest LeMans.
Replacing the previous half-a-V8 four-cylinder engine as standard equipment was a new 215 cubic-inch inline six-cylinder engine with one-barrel carburetor and 140 horsepower. This six was basically a bored out version of the Chevrolet-built 194 cubic-inch six and offered as Pontiac exclusive. Optional engines included two versions of the 326 cubic-inch Pontiac V8 introduced the previous year, a two-barrel 250-horsepower regular fuel option; or the 280-horsepower 326 HO engine with four-barrel carburetor and 10.5 to 1 compression ratio which required premium fuel. Transmissions included a standard three-speed manual with column shift, four-speed manual with floor-mounted Hurst shifter or a two-speed automatic - the latter being a version of Buick's Super Turbine 300.
The popularity of the high-performance V8 package the year before prompted Pontiac to make it available again on the Tempest LeMans and give it a name: Grand Turismo Omologato, or GTO, producing a watershed car of the 1960s and 1970s. Interestingly, the success of the GTO prompted Oldsmobile to rush out its own high-performance option package for the F-85/Cutlass called the 442 that year, and the next year, for Buick to release a high-performance version of the Skylark called the Skylark Gran Sport, or GS. Both cars would enjoy success and contribute to what in retrospect has become the "muscle car" era.
Engine offerings for the 1965 Tempest were the same as 1964, except the 326 HO was uprated to 285 horsepower. Styling changes included a new split grille with vertical headlights similar to the larger Pontiacs, revised tailights and a more slanted rear deck. A two-door hardtop coupe was added to the Tempest Custom line, while the LeMans got a four-door sedan with a plush interior done in Preston Cloth trim similar to the full-sized Bonneville Brougham.
A major facelift was made on the 1966 Tempest that included more rounded bodylines with a Coke-bottle effect similar to the full-sized Pontiacs. New four-door pillarless hardtop sedans were added to the Tempest Custom line. Under the hood, the Chevy-derived 215 six was replaced by a new Pontiac-built 230 cubic-inch overhead cam six, the only such engine found in an American production car at that time. The base OHC had a one-barrel carburetor and was rated at 165 horsepower, designed for economy buyers. Optionally available as part of the Sprint option package on two-doors was a four-barrel, high-compression 207 horsepower version of the OHC six, marketed as an alternative to higher-priced European sport sedans, which had similar OHC engines. For those wanting V8 power, the 326 and 326 HO options continued with horsepower ratings of 250 and 285 horsepower, respectively.
Only minor changes were made to the 1967 Tempest, Custom and LeMans models. Engines and transmission offerings were the same as before except the four-barrel OHC six was uprated to 215 horsepower. Front disc brakes were a new option along with a stereo 8-track tape player and hood-mounted tachometer.
A restyled Tempest was introduced for 1968 with more rounded styling cues, concealed windshield wipers, a return to horizontal headlights and a split-wheelbase mode of 112 inches for two-doors and 116 for four-door models. The OHC sixes were enlarged from 230 to 250 cubic inches with horsepower ratings unchanged while the 326 V6 was replaced by a new 350 cubic-inch V8 with horsepower ratings of 250 with two-barrel or 320 with four-barrel carb. The same lineup of models including the base Tempest, Tempest Custom and LeMans continued as in previous years.
Other than elimination of vent windows on hardtop coupes, styling only received minor revisions for 1969, when the Tempest Custom was renamed the Custom S for this one year. However model offerings were the same as 1968. A new three-speed Turbo Hydra-matic 350 transmission was introduced and available with all engines as an alternative to the older two-speed automatic. Engine offerings were the same as before except for the 350 HO V8 getting a five-horsepower jump to 325. A new locking steering column with relocated ignition switch was introduced and front seat headrests became standard equipment.
Minor styling revisions highlighted the 1970 Tempest, which would be the final year for the nameplate in the U.S. Initially the line was down to just two- and four-door sedans but expanded at mid-year with the introduction of the low-priced T-37 hardtop coupe, billed as GM's lowest-priced hardtop coupe.[citation needed] The Custom S became the LeMans this year and the previous LeMans series was renamed the LeMans Sport. The Pontiac-built OHC six-cylinder engine was replaced by a Chevy-built 250 inch inline six while the 350 V8 was down to a two-barrel 255-horsepower version. New engine offerings included 400 cubic-inch V8s rated at 265 horsepower with two-barrel carburetor and 8.6 to 1 compression ratio or 330 with four-barrel and 10.25 to 1 compression.
The Tempest nameplate was phased out after the 1970 model year. For 1971, it would be replaced by a new T-37 series that included each of the three bodystyles offered on the '70 Tempest and T-37. After this year, the T-37 would be dropped and for 1972 all Pontiac intermediates took the LeMans nameplate except the GTO.
[edit] Revival
Third generation | |
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Production | 1988-1991 |
Assembly | Linden, New Jersey Wilmington, Delaware |
Class | Compact |
Body style(s) | 4-door sedan |
Layout | FF layout |
Platform | L-body |
Engine(s) | 2.0 L 122 I4 2.2 L 2200 I4 2.8 L LB6 V6 3.1 L LH0 V6 |
Transmission(s) | 5-speed manual 3-speed automatic 4-speed automatic |
Wheelbase | 103.4 in (2626 mm) |
Length | 183.4 in (4658 mm) |
Width | 68.0 in (1727 mm) |
Height | 56.2 in (1427 mm) |
Related | Chevrolet Corsica |
For Canada only, a rebadged version of the compact L-body Chevrolet Corsica was sold as the Pontiac Tempest starting in 1988. This car slotted between the Grand Am and 6000. It was discontinued in 1991, and this car (along with the 6000) was replaced by the Pontiac Grand Prix sedan.
[edit] References in popular culture
In the motion picture My Cousin Vinny, a key argument in the murder trial is linked to the technical similarities and differences between a 1964 Buick Skylark and a 1963 Pontiac Tempest. Though the body styling and most features of the two cars are similar, the notable difference is that the '63 Tempest had "Positraction" (the GM term for a limited-slip differential) and independent rear suspension, while the '64 Skylark did not. (The car ran over a hump leaving the crime scene, yet the tire tracks remained level on both sides; this could only happen if the car had both features noted, and since the Skylark did not, the case was dismissed.)
[edit] External links
- 1963 Pontiac Tempest rendering by Ted Nasmith