A $225K Trans Am Is The One-Of-None 1969 Ram Air Iv Convertible Pontiac Never Built

The title will have Pontiac ultra-fundamentalists manning their battle stations and arming the keyboards with historically accurate facts about their beloved primordial Trans Am. And we couldn’t agree more, but one Pontiac fan didn’t like this history. Or, at least, he wasn’t very fond of how GM wrote this Firebird chapter.

In 1967, Pontiac – the “performance division” of General Motors – set free a new muscle car: the Firebird. The first generation lasted for three model years, with 1969 marking the last iteration of the original Firebird. However, 1969 also marked the debut of the Trans Am special package offered for the ‘Bird.

The first version of the Trans Am lived in 1969 only (as the second generation debuted in 1970, together with the standard Firebird, and spanned eleven years). So, with such a short-lived production run – just 689 cars built – the 1969 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am stirs interest in collectors’ circles.

Out of the 689 examples, 681 had solid metal sheets over the driver and passengers. The remaining eight are some of the rarest and sought-after end-of-the-rainbow V8 treasure chests in the automotive universe. There is just one convertible ’69 Trans Am for each finger a Pontiac gearhead has, and each of those cars came with the Ram Air 400 engine.

Colloquially, the power plant is dubbed “Ram Air III,” but GM official literature never coined that name. Also, the Michigan giant never built a Ram Air IV first-gen Trans Am with a cloak roof (but it probably should have done). And hardcore brand fans will agree that it would have been worth even more than the over-one-million-dollar existing convertible trim Trans Am.

1969 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am Ram Air IV phantom

And one such dedicated enthusiast took it one step further and wrenched out what Pontiac missed out on – a Ram Air IV convertible Firebird “Trans Am” phantom. It can’t be considered a tribute since its homage namesake does not exist.

But call it what you will; the car is one striking appearance. Correct in most visual aspects – white with blue stripes – the car takes a keen connoisseur scrutiny to tell the difference between the originals and this very well-executed honorary custom.

The car is based on a ’69 Firebird Californian convertible with only 32,000 original miles and a list of authentic gear in it: “a four-speed manual transmission, power steering, power front disk brakes, power windows, power top, power trunk, power rear antenna, tilt wheel, center console, folding rear seat, factory gauges with tachometer, and factory air conditioning.“

However, the heart of the matter – the V8 piston keystone – has a different story. It is period correct – a ’68 400-CID (6.6-liter) block over-bored and stroked to a 462 displacement (7.6 liters), with Ram Air IV heads (mildly ported to feed the wild flames).

1969 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am Ram Air IV phantom

A hydraulic roller camshaft (230°/236°) and 1.65:1 rockers up the lift of stainless-steel valves to .561/.572 inches (14.25 mm/14.53). In diameter, the taps are 2.11/1.77 inches (53.6 mm/44.96 mm). Add the aluminum Ram Air IV intake manifold and restored 1969 Quadrajet carburetor, and the bottom-line power output reads 550 hp (558 PS).

Forged rods and pistons keep the stud in check and steer them to the six-speed Tremec T-56 Magnum gearbox. The manual miles-per-hour randomizer has a .83 overdrive to keep the V8 monster cool on the highway. The 8.2-inch 3.55 differential puts the spin on the 15-inch wheels (custom-made to look like the stock 14-inch originals).

The list goes on and on, but the fiery Pontiac worshiper that built this car paid every last grain of attention to details, and nothing was left to chance. Whatever is out of place was intended so from the very beginning.

The air-conditioning was not available with the Ram Air IV, and that’s why the air cleaner pan is from a Ram Air “III.” Scroll through the gallery and see how many other out-of-place checkboxes you can tick.

1969 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am Ram Air IV phantom

This phantom Trans Am received seven awards from seven different car shows in the last three years, and that’s saying something about the car that “doesn’t exist.” Furthermore, the price tag of nearly one-quarter of a million Washingtons is tangible, material, and deep-pocketed – courtesy of Pro Market Connections sellers. Then again, this is not an original. It is better…

Related Posts

Resilient Yet Rusty: 1964 Chevy Impala Reveals Detroit Metal’s Fragility

Chevrolet Impala was already enjoying the time of its life in 1964, with sales going through the roof every year. The GM brand was giving the finishing…

Rediscovered: 1960 Chevrolet Biscayne Wagon Emerges as a Unique Ex-Government Find

Full-size cars will probably be replaced entirely by SUVs by the end of the decades, but these rigs were quite popular back in the day. Specifically, Chevrolet sold more…

Dynamic Duo: 1964 Chevy Impala SS Sold Alongside Its Standard Sibling

With Chevrolet already giving the finishing touches to a new-generation Impala due in 1965, the 1964 model year witnessed only subtle occasional improvements. One of the most notable was…

Surprise Powerhouse: 1961 Chevy Impala Rescued From a Tennessee Barn Unveils a Massive Secret Beneath the Hood

1961 was the big year that brought us the Impala SS, paving the road for a superstar that eventually brought its performance goodies to many other Chevrolet…

Rediscovered After 50 Years: 1960 Chevrolet Impala Unearthed in Garage with Only 14K Miles

Chevrolet Impala came to be in 1958 as the top-of-the-line Bel Air, but it was only a matter of months before the GM brand realized its new…

1961 Chevrolet Impala: A Testament to the Enduring Spirit of Detroit Metal

The Impala was already a superstar when Chevrolet introduced the 1961 model year, but the GM brand knew the increasing sales could only be maintained with further polishing and…