Rare Rides: This Pontiac From 1990 Has All-Wheel Drive and 6000 Buttons

Corey Lewis
by Corey Lewis

Deep from the catacombs of General Motors history comes this all-wheel-drive Pontiac 6000. While the 6000 was a fairly pedestrian car, this SE example seems in great condition and has the added rarity of a drivetrain not found in other vehicles from the General.

It’s only a good idea to keep reading if you like gold-tone alloys, many identically shaped buttons, and copious amounts of ribbed cladding.

Yeah, I thought so! The Pontiac 6000 was the mid-size, front-wheel-drive offering from Pontiac, first offered all the way back in 1981.

The interesting stuff started happening in 1984, when the STE (Sport Touring Edition) trim was added as the pinnacle of the model range. Using a 2.8-liter carbureted V6, this trim of the 6000 was intended to compete directly with European offerings from BMW and Audi. I’m not joking. I wish I were.

1985 saw the replacement of the carb with actual fuel injection (the wonders!), with buyers offered the choice of a three-speed automatic or five-speed manual transmission. In 1988, all-wheel drive was added as an option, in STE trim only.

This sort of mechanical, transverse witchcraft was uncommon for the General Motors of 1988. This is doubly so when you consider the other (rather sedate) front-wheel-drive-only vehicles sharing the A-body platform: the Buick Century, Chevrolet Celebrity, and the Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera. If not for that “SE All Wheel Drive” logo up there, I’d be drifting off right now.

The 3.1-liter GM LHO V6 was made available in the STE AWD in 1988, and the 6000 was the first car with that particular engine under the hood. It would go on for the next few years to power Buick, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, and Chevrolet models without complaint.

In a quick changeup, 1989 6000 STE models had all-wheel drive as standard. The following year, STE was dropped in favor of the SE trim you see here. Pontiac had reserved the STE trim for the newer, more sporty successor in the wings — the 1990 Grand Prix.

This tidy example appears to have minimal rust and is available on the Minneapolis Craigslist site. I suspect it has not been exposed to many Minnesota winters. Those three-spoke gold-tone wheels are a lovely example of what Pontiac brought to the wheel design table — arguably better than wheels offered by any other GM division at the time.

Pontiac added these wheel-mounted audio controls to the 6000 for the 1986 model year, and they became a market first. The rest of the dash area is awash in tiny buttons, grey plastic, and small gauges with needle-thin… needles. I wouldn’t have it any other way. Somewhere in there, a little green display will show you just over 96,000 miles on the clock.

An AWD steal at just $3,500.

[Images via Craigslist]

Corey Lewis
Corey Lewis

Interested in lots of cars and their various historical contexts. Started writing articles for TTAC in late 2016, when my first posts were QOTDs. From there I started a few new series like Rare Rides, Buy/Drive/Burn, Abandoned History, and most recently Rare Rides Icons. Operating from a home base in Cincinnati, Ohio, a relative auto journalist dead zone. Many of my articles are prompted by something I'll see on social media that sparks my interest and causes me to research. Finding articles and information from the early days of the internet and beyond that covers the little details lost to time: trim packages, color and wheel choices, interior fabrics. Beyond those, I'm fascinated by automotive industry experiments, both failures and successes. Lately I've taken an interest in AI, and generating "what if" type images for car models long dead. Reincarnating a modern Toyota Paseo, Lincoln Mark IX, or Isuzu Trooper through a text prompt is fun. Fun to post them on Twitter too, and watch people overreact. To that end, the social media I use most is Twitter, @CoreyLewis86. I also contribute pieces for Forbes Wheels and Forbes Home.

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  • Sgtjmack Sgtjmack on Oct 18, 2017

    Ah yes, the '80's... But hair bands, Madonna, Depech Mode, great movies like E.T., The Goonies, Top Gun, Back to the Future, excitement abound. But when it came to American auto makers, they all fell flat on their faces. To me, there were a few nice looking, great performing cars from that era. Although the trucks, oh the trucks,... Chevrolet 454SS and the Chevy Blazer, Ford Bronco and I'll even let the Dodge Power Wagon eek a position in there as fun, exciting and good looking. But the cars, eh. Although the later 80's Camaro, Firebird and Mustang finally hit the mark, albeit a little higher an the low mark, did start to look nicer and perform a little better. Even the imports were bread boxes on wheels. Only the Supra and maybe the RX7 was hitting the mark for me.

  • TransAm85 TransAm85 on Nov 09, 2017

    Wow I haven't seen this one in a long time! When I was about 13 or 14, I'd say '99 or 2000, my mother had to trade in her junk Chrysler 6000 and got a Bonneville SSE that was similar to this, but had more electrical operative things instead of the old manual. We thought it was fancy! But, eventually, that car had to be junked and she got an '88 Plymouth Reliant K! :)

  • Lou_BC Hard pass
  • TheEndlessEnigma These cars were bought and hooned. This is a bomb waiting to go off in an owner's driveway.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Thankfully I don't have to deal with GDI issues in my Frontier. These cleaners should do well for me if I win.
  • Theflyersfan Serious answer time...Honda used to stand for excellence in auto engineering. Their first main claim to fame was the CVCC (we don't need a catalytic converter!) engine and it sent from there. Their suspensions, their VTEC engines, slick manual transmissions, even a stowing minivan seat, all theirs. But I think they've been coasting a bit lately. Yes, the Civic Type-R has a powerful small engine, but the Honda of old would have found a way to get more revs out of it and make it feel like an i-VTEC engine of old instead of any old turbo engine that can be found in a multitude of performance small cars. Their 1.5L turbo-4...well...have they ever figured out the oil dilution problems? Very un-Honda-like. Paint issues that still linger. Cheaper feeling interior trim. All things that fly in the face of what Honda once was. The only thing that they seem to have kept have been the sales staff that treat you with utter contempt for daring to walk into their inner sanctum and wanting a deal on something that isn't a bare-bones CR-V. So Honda, beat the rest of your Japanese and Korean rivals, and plug-in hybridize everything. If you want a relatively (in an engineering way) easy way to get ahead of the curve, raise the CAFE score, and have a major point to advertise, and be able to sell to those who can't plug in easily, sell them on something that will get, for example, 35% better mileage, plug in when you get a chance, and drives like a Honda. Bring back some of the engineering skills that Honda once stood for. And then start introducing a portfolio of EVs once people are more comfortable with the idea of plugging in. People seeing that they can easily use an EV for their daily errands with the gas engine never starting will eventually sell them on a future EV because that range anxiety will be lessened. The all EV leap is still a bridge too far, especially as recent sales numbers have shown. Baby steps. That's how you win people over.
  • Theflyersfan If this saves (or delays) an expensive carbon brushing off of the valves down the road, I'll take a case. I understand that can be a very expensive bit of scheduled maintenance.
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