The end is here...

Pin Wizard

<font color=deeppink>I now have a new favorite at
Joined
Jan 8, 2002
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17,262
for Firebirds and Camaros. It makes me miss my 1995 Camaro for several seconds...




N.J. fans lament the demise of fabled Camaro, Firebird
Wednesday, August 28, 2002

By BRIAN ABERBACK
Staff Writer



David Fiorina of Wayne has sold this 1968 Pontiac Firebird and is buying another 1968 Firebird with more power. (BETH BALBIERZ/THE RECORD)

Everyone who was anyone at Bergenfield High School in the late Eighties and early Nineties drove a Chevy Camaro or Pontiac Firebird.

Sleek, fast, and powerful, they were the perfect cars for cruising the main drag or jetting to the shore, said Krista Merschrod, who could be seen around town back then in her bright red 1988 Firebird.

"It's a total adrenaline rush," said Merschrod, who today owns a 1967 black Camaro Super Sport. "When you're driving it you just feel the power. Everything else around you doesn't matter anymore."

For Merschrod and other enthusiasts, today is the end of the line. The last of these wild ponies, once among America's most beloved vehicles, will roll off the assembly line this afternoon at a plant in Quebec.

It brings an end to two models that became part of the essence of Jersey, and an end to the T-Tops with the removable glass panels that sold so well to the "Saturday Night Fever" set.

The Camaro roared onto the market in September 1966, and the Firebird followed five months later. They were Chevrolet and Pontiac's respective answers to the wildly popular Ford Mustang.

The cars' combined sales peaked in the late Seventies, a time when the Firebird was especially cool and was featured in the "Smokey and the Bandit" movies and the "Rockford Files" television show.

Although aficionados here lament General Motors' decision to halt production, for them the era isn't ending. Not when there are so many early model Camaros and Firebirds to polish and shine and take on a cruise down the parkway.

These are people like Dan Deutschman of Metuchen, who loves taking his 1976 "carousel red" Firebird Trans Am to car shows, darting into open spaces on crowded highways along the way. And Wayne resident David Fiorina, who said it's the mix of nostalgia and pride that makes riding in a '68 Firebird special. As the speedometer races forward and his stereo blasts The Doors and Led Zeppelin, the clock turns back to his favorite years, 1965-1975, a time when muscle cars ruled the road.

Merschrod so loves these cars, she even opted for her Camaro over a limo to whisk her away from her wedding two years ago.

Like many classic car owners, she doesn't use her Camaro for everyday transportation. It sits safely in the garage, taken out for rides on warm summer days or breezy fall afternoons.

Fiorina also plans to use sparingly the 1968 Firebird he just purchased. He can't imagine risking the chance of a scratch or dent at a parking lot.

"Who would want to take a car like that to Willowbrook [Mall]?" he asked. With excitement in his voice, Fiorina described his new Firebird, a convertible that boasts an eight-cylinder engine. His old Firebird had a six-cylinder, and on the mean streets of North Jersey, that didn't cut it.

"It was kind of cheesy with the six-cylinder," he said. "It's depressing when you have a car like that and you can't keep up with a Ford Probe."

Fiorina first saw his dream when he was a teenager growing up in Riverdale. It was parked across the street at a neighbor's house. It was, of course, a red 1968 Firebird.

"When I saw it I just wanted it," Fiorina said. "I was 14 or 15. I just said, 'Wow, someday I want to have one.'"

Two years ago, he got his dream car. "I drove it all last summer. I went down to Belmar [in it] every weekend." said Fiorina, 32.

"I feel pride driving something that's American-made," he said. These days, he said, you never know where parts on American cars were manufactured. But with a '68 Firebird, there's no question.

Deutschman loves speed and handling of his 1976 Firebird Trans Am. "When you step on the gas, it doesn't ask you when, where, or why. It just goes," he explains.

He's put more than $15,000 of work into his dream car, though he admits he "stopped counting for health reasons."

Deutschman said he had mixed emotions when GM announced it would stop producing Firebirds and Camaros.

"It was a shame to hear it, but on the other hand, [GM] priced them so far out of the range of the market they were aiming for," he said.

The prices of most newer-model Camaros and Firebirds start at around $25,000. And then there's the hefty insurance premium that comes with owning a sports car in the state with the highest auto insurance rates in the nation.

Twenty years ago, 182,848 Camaros were sold nationwide, according to statistics provided by Autodata, a Woodcliff Lake company that tracks automotive information. Through July, only 20,063 Camaros had been sold this year. Firebird experienced a similar free fall: 105,686 sold in 1982, 21,501 in 1992; 14,567 through July.

"The decision [to discontinue production] was pretty sad," said Larry Webster, technical editor of Car and Driver magazine. But "everybody's known it was coming for a while."

Webster noted that GM hasn't redesigned the Camaro in nearly a decade, choosing to put its resources into trucks and sport-utility vehicles. Today's SUVs, like yesterday's muscle cars, embody youth and sportiness, he said. They're also more practical.

"People think, 'I can be cool in this and fit all my junk in it,'" he said.

Some car dealers say it may be premature to mourn the death of the dynamic duo of pony cars. After all, Ford recently reintroduced its Thunderbird line, and Pontiac plans to bring back its classic GTO in 2004.

"I think they'll be back with a new car in the future," said Ron Barna, general manager of Chevrolet Hummer in Paramus, where four Camaros remain on the sales floor.

Die-hard Camaro and Firebird lovers say they realize their cars may rise in value now that no new models are coming out. But don't expect a "for sale" sign to appear in their windshields anytime soon.

"This one's a keeper," Fiorina said of his new Firebird.

Merschrod, who now lives in New Milford, also has no plans to sell her Camaro. And, in 17 years, she hopes the next generation will share in the special excitement that comes from sliding into a pony car, hitting the gas, and taking control of the road ahead.

"I'll let her take it for a spin one day with her mommy," Merschrod says of her 7-week-old daughter, Amber Rose. "People will know those Merschrod girls know how to drive."

***
Twenty years ago, 182,848 Camaros were sold in the United States, according to statistics provided by Autodata,

a Woodcliff Lake company that tracks automobile sales. That number dropped to 56,909 a decade ago. Through July, only 20,063 Camaros had been sold.

The Firebird experienced an even worse freefall: 105,686 sold in 1982, 21,501 by 1992; 14,567 through July.

Highlights:


SEPT. 26, 1966: Chevrolet introduces the Camaro with a base price of $2,466. Thirty five years later the top-of-the-line

anniversary editions sell for a base price of $30,000.


FEB. 23, 1967: The Pontiac Firebird goes on sale.


1970s and 1980s: The Firebird becomes the car of choice for "The Rockford Files," "Smokey and the Bandit," and

"Knight Rider."


1979: Combined Camaro and Firebird sales peak at 494,025.


TODAY: The last of the Camaros and Firebirds roll off the line.

Source: Chevrolet

Staff Writer Elena Matsui contributed to this article.

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Copyright © 2002 North Jersey Media Group Inc.
 
If you had a Camaro when I was in Highschool...you were somebody. Sad to see an icon go :(
 
I remember when I was in high school, I got to use my sister's Camaro for 2 weeks while she was on a ski trip in Europe. That was when I fell in love with that car and just had to have my own at some point! I remember the first time I drove my own on the highway. As I accelerated, I felt like I was taking off in an airplane. It was great! I don't get that feeling in my mini-van. LOL! :p
 
I drove a station wagon to school..:rolleyes:
I did have a camaro though with t-tops...so much fun...:(
 

My first car was a Mustang, my second a Camaro, my 3rd a Camaro. I drive a F150 now. A few months ago I tried to find a 67-69 Camaro but they were out of my price range so I bought a 70 El Camino from my brother in law. Good car but not the same as a Camaro.
 
A friend of mine had a Camaro that I spent a lot of time riding back and forth to college (6 hour drive) in.
 
The end of an era...
<img width="200" src="http://www.indycamaro.com/images/Sheffield35.jpg">
Dodie's "ride";)
 
I LOVED my blue Camaro! I am sad to see the end of this era....(I hate to admit this, but I also dated a guy *because* he had a Camaro...how sad is that!) :)
 
:(

I don't think we'll be parting with ours (84 Camaro & 80 Trans Am) anytime soon...... :o
 
I finally traded my Camaro in for a van because DS was REALLY cramped in the back seat. He's not big enough to sit in the front with the air bag. The back quarter panel had a small dent and a scratch from me attempting to back it into the garage. :rolleyes: (I'll never do THAT again!) When I was trading it in and the salesman pointed it out to his boss, his boss said..."Who cares! It's a black Camaro!" :teeth: But now with knowing they are no longer manufacturing them, I want to run out and buy a new one! :confused:
 
I had a 1976 Firebird Esprit. I loved that car. We finally sold the car 10 years ago. My DH of almost 15 years is 6' 3" and he hated the car. He said he felt like he was sitting on the ground. I wish I had that car today.
 
Oh no. Rednecks all over the country will be crying their eyes out.

I dated someone DESPITE the fact that he had a Camaro.
 
Originally posted by CindyKansas
I had a 1976 Firebird Esprit. I loved that car. We finally sold the car 10 years ago. My DH of almost 15 years is 6' 3" and he hated the car. He said he felt like he was sitting on the ground. I wish I had that car today.
LOL! Sounds like something my dad would say to us along with "It's a death trap!" He wasn't the sports car type.
 












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