Proportion Perfection
Muscle Car Review|March 2017

1970 Trans Am: Great Styling and the Last of the High-Squeeze Ram Air 400s.

Barry Kluczyk
Proportion Perfection

Proportion is everything in automotive design, and GM’s second-generation F-bodies had it down like Julie Newmar’s curve-hugging Catwoman costume. Free from the design constraints that came with styling the first Firebird and Camaro models on an existing architecture, the second-gen cars would have a body structure shared with no other vehicles. GM Design chief Bill Mitchell’s affinity for European touring cars drove the overall design theme, with the F-body proportions radically reimagined, pushing the passenger compartment farther back on the chassis. The result was a longer nose and fast-sloping rear profile, though surprisingly, the basic exterior dimensions weren’t all that different from the 1969 models.

The first- and second-generation cars shared a 108-inch wheelbase, and while the second-gen cars were noticeably lower, they were only fractionally wider. That longer, lower look was also reinforced with loonngg doors and the elimination of the rear quarter-windows. Those doors made it difficult to squeeze out of the car in garages and parking decks, but such was the price of proportion perfection.

While the second-generation’s F-bodies’ future was ensured with the redesign, the Pontiac Trans Am’s was not. Plans for the second-gen were well underway when the comparatively paltry 697 Trans Am models were built for 1969. The car was intended as a homologation special for the popular SCCA racing series, just like the Boss 302 and corporate cousin Camaro Z/28. Unfortunately Pontiac’s Trans-Am racing engine program was never fully realized, so the production model had no ties whatsoever to its namesake racing series.

This story is from the March 2017 edition of Muscle Car Review.

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This story is from the March 2017 edition of Muscle Car Review.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.