1964 Banshee

Weather Man

Persistance Is A Bitch
Established Member
Joined
May 18, 2012
Messages
26,057
Location
MN
Interesting!
https://www.insidehook.com/
InsideHook
InsideHook
Follow

Built to Crush the Mustang, This 1-of-1 ‘60s Pontiac Is Up for Sale​

Story by Alex Lauer • 1h ago

A 1-of-1 1964 Pontiac Banshee coupe, codenamed XP-833, which is being sold by Napoli Classics
A 1-of-1 1964 Pontiac Banshee coupe, codenamed XP-833, which is being sold by Napoli Classics© Photo via Napoli Classics

Ask anyone to make a list of the most iconic cars of all time, and the Ford Mustang is going to be somewhere near the top. A hit since it debuted in 1964 and instantly recognizable even to people who don’t know a V8 from an I4, the Mustang continues to be one of the best-selling sports cars in the world to this day. The Pontiac Banshee, on the other hand, a vehicle built specifically to rival Ford’s original pony car in the ‘60s, will likely make no one’s list.

That’s because the Pontiac Banshee, originally codenamed the XP-833, never made it to production. Only four concept cars were made, only two of which were drivable prototypes, and only those two still exist today. The good news is that one, a silver coupe built in 1964, is currently up for sale courtesy of Napoli Classics in Milford, CT.

Ben Branch has the full story of the Banshee’s development and some details about this model specifically over at Silodrome. When Ford shocked the world with the unveiling of the Mustang, other automakers scrambled to respond. The XP-833 project at Pontiac, which was then a division of General Motors, was overseen by John DeLorean (yes, that DeLorean, who was a savant at GM before leaving to start his eponymous car company). A few concepts were made, including the coupe that still exists today with its inline-six engine, as well as a V8-powered convertible model and a four-door design.

“The performance of these cars, particularly the V8 version, became a major worry for GM executives,” Branch explains. “The V8 was significantly lighter than the then-current C2 Corvette and it was powered by an equally powerful engine – as a result it was notably faster. There was concern about the XP-833 cannibalizing Corvette sales, probably well-warranted, and as a result the project was cancelled.”
In other words, as the likely rose-colored history here would have us believe, the problem with the Pontiac Banshee was that it was just too damn powerful. But according to Bill Collins, former staff engineer of Pontiac’s Advanced Engineering group who worked on the car, and who was interviewed by MotorTrend about it in 2013, the problem was more that the XP-833 was designed as an affordable two-seat sports car, and it would have siphoned off lower-end Corvette sales, rather than being a direct top-performance competitor.

While most concept cars get sent to the junkyard, the two driveable Banshees were purchased by Pontiac employees — the V8 convertible went to Collins, and the straight-six coupe to Pontiac master mechanic Bill Killen. The latter was purchased for $214,500 by car dealer Len Napoli in 2006 at a Barrett-Jackson auction, according to Automotive News. Curiously, it seems to have changed hands a couple times since then, ending up back in Napoli’s hands by 2015, per the same publication.

The long and short of it is: it sold for around $200,000 in 2006, but now Napoli is asking $1.2 million for it. I know inflation has been high, but that jump seems a little preposterous.
But hey, this is a 1-of-1 DeLorean-led, Mustang-fighting, Corvette-inspiring (the Banshee design inspired a number of cars that actually made it to production) concept car. It’s less of an automobile than a piece of history. So if you’ve got $1.2 million to buy this drivable relic, by all means.
 

Tob

Salut!
Super Moderator
Joined
Mar 17, 2009
Messages
12,262
Location
The Ville
Hard pass.

fec926c71056bd2837d64d6226434728x.jpg
 

Riddla

It's for your own protection
Established Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2006
Messages
17,349
Location
Tx
Reminds me of the grand theft auto banshee
 

Attachments

  • 1F1C9E14-1104-4EA1-B9BE-7660BCD50B9D.jpeg
    1F1C9E14-1104-4EA1-B9BE-7660BCD50B9D.jpeg
    47.8 KB · Views: 37

CobraBob

Authorized Vendor
Established Member
Premium Member
Single Barrel Sirs
Joined
Nov 17, 2002
Messages
105,591
Location
Cheshire, CT
Napoli Classics is 30 minutes from me. It's part of the Napoli dealership (Kia and Nissan), and run by the owner, Len Napoli.

They have a 1965 Corvair Monza with 78.5K miles that caught my interest. My first car was a Corvair. This one looks nice, but unfortunately it's an 2-speed Power Glide and not the desired 4-speed. $26,750.
20dffd160086e7dcea27705cc4148c8ax.jpg


The Banshee at Napoli has 1,498 miles on the odometer. OHC 6-cylinder motor. 4-speed manual.
ec06ff0b576c4fabb9b42414668d5626x.jpg


b7aff8301067547f2a22f33ca69ffd8ax.jpg


af9ada7d02fb36fafd630d14c83687e4x.jpg


They also have a nice 1966 Shelby GT350 Fastback selling for $98K. 10,910 miles. Don't get too excited over the low price for this one. It's actually a GT350 tribute, built from a 1966 Mustang Fastback. Whoever did the conversion did a really nice job IMO.
84a83b7482c0fa10e9e699c7bd85f0e2x.jpg


7c3d0569760c0c14013cd0e1f32a58cax.jpg


bfa8dcfa8dc113c74440b5e7f683718bx.jpg
 

Users who are viewing this thread



Top