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June 23, 2009

CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot: the Beaumont SD

By Jim Brennan

UDMan

Welcome to the CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot, a regular feature which aims to expand the notion of what a muscle car is, and to discover hidden treasures while doing so. General Motors Canada produced a few rather unique vehicles during the 60s, specifically for their customers who lived in the great white north. Full sized Pontiacs looked virtually the same as those built for the US, but were built on Chevrolet chassis and powered by Chevrolet engines. They had unique model names like Laurentian, and Parisienne. The Chevy II was built with different trim, a Pontiac-esque grill, and renamed the Acadian. However, the subject of this posting is the mid-sized offering called the Beaumont, and during muscle car period of 1964-1970, Pontiac offered a performance version of the Beaumont that offered something different. Introducing the Beaumont SD.

Continue reading after the jump!

The Beaumont was introduced for the 1964 model year as the Acadian Beaumont, and it utilized the new Chevrolet Chavelle body and drivetrain. The major styling difference between the Chevelle, and the Beaumont is the Pontiac inspired split gril, distinctive tail lamps, and the use of pontiac wheel trims. The interior utilized the Pontiac Tempest instrument panel, and door trim. Almost any engine and transmission combination that was available for a Chevelle, was available for the Beaumont. As with the Chevelle SS package, the Beaumont could be ordered as a Beaumont SD (For Super Deluxe, not Super Duty as many magazined of the day published). Though they were sold through Pontiac dealerships, there is little reference of mention of the nameplate Pontiac in the manual or instruction booklet.

For 1966, the Beaumont was based on the all-new GM intermediates, and car became a make in its own right by not using the Acadian name. The SD became more of a hybrid combination, with Chevelle SS and Pontiac GTO elements combined in one package. In 1967, with big block muscle cars popular on both sides of the border, the Beaumont could be equipped with Chevy’s 350-horsepower, 396-cubic-inch V8 along with a Muncie M20 4-speed manual transmission. However, the SD396 didn’t offer the 396/375 like its American counterpart.


For 1968, the Beaumont was once again re-designed, adopting the sloping rear look of the Corporate GM Intermediates, while becoming less distinctive. The changes between the Beaumont and it’s Chevelle twin were subtle, as only the Grill and tail lamp lenses were changed. GM Did continue utilizing the Pontiac LeMans dashboard, to give it a distinct Pontiac flavor. The SD was still available with the 396, 4 Speed combo, so it was still quite a performer. By 1970, the trade laws were relaxed; the unique Beaumont became superfluous and was discontinued.

CarDomain Members Rides

Did you know that there are over 47 Beaumonts showcased within the CarDomain community? Take a look at them here. In the meantime, lets take a look at an example from each of the three different versions. Here is a classy 1964 Acadian Beaumont Coupe, owned by Chris of Kincardine, Ontario. He’s got quite a ride page, so check it out.

Here is Linda and Jerry’s 1967 Beaumont SD 396, one of only 451 made. They hail from Taylorsville, Kentucky, so it must be a rare sight to spot a Beaumont so very far away from where it was produced in Oshawa, Ontario. It really is a unique ride!

And here’s Jesse’s 1969 Beaumont, from Windsor, Ontario. Jesse has been working on this car for the past 7 years, and it looks great. Notice the differences between this car and it’s cousin, the Chevelle. Go over to his ride page, and leave a comment.

This is really nothing but a Canadian Cousin of the Chevrolet Chevelle, and in it’s hottest form, it can compete with any muscle car from this time frame. However, I think it’s also obscure enough that it belongs in the Obscure Parking Lot. Tell me what you guys think? Of course it’s muscle, but does it follow the guidelines I set up for this feature? Let me know.

Read Rich Truesdell’s excellent article on the1967 Beaumont SD396 at Automotive Traveler.

Comments

The CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot Year End Wrap-up: The 1960s Unknowns – CarDomain Blog
Jan 4, 2010 at 10:18 am

[...] Hot Rod! – The Turbocharged Corvair, an unusual choice, and the second Turbocharged American Car. – The Beaumont SD, and mix of Chevrolet and Pontiac for our Canadian Neighbors. – The 1968 Mercury Cougar XR7-G; A [...]

CarDomain Obscure Muscle Car Parking Lot: the Beaumont SD | Muscle Advance - Health and Beauty Products
Jun 24, 2009 at 11:07 pm

[...] post: here Tags: beaumont, chevelle, [...]

PhilR
Jun 24, 2009 at 7:33 pm

The Chevy II based Acadian was also available as a Beaumont Sport Deluxe (that’s what SD stands for on later models).

A friend of mine used to have a 1962 Beaumont Sport Deluxe convertible which was all but Sporty or Deluxe! It had a Chevy inline 6.

Back in the sixties, the rare sight here was the GTO, not the Beaumont!
I don’t know why Canadian Pontiacs were built with Chevy powertrains and many other Chevy parts, as other GM cars like the A body Buick Skylark and even full size Buicks and Oldsmobiles that were built in the same plant had the same powertrains as the US models. There were still some differences like 12 bolt Chevy axles in Buick A bodies, different interior trim in some models like my ‘65 Wildcat but the differences with the US models were still minor compared to the canadian Pontiacs…

moparornocarman
Jun 24, 2009 at 9:03 am

Oh yeah, these are definitely muscle cars. Very nice pick for the lot.

simon_r_gris
Jun 24, 2009 at 5:52 am

Those are nice peel out cars.

wsbob
Jun 23, 2009 at 4:45 pm

This epitomizes the “Obscure”, a Canadian special that resmembles strongly a Chevelle, but wears different markings. I like this car a lot, and it definitely is a strong example

PureBusiness
Jun 23, 2009 at 9:52 am

I think these cars are just as cool as the(same)ones we have here!

SouthernGuy8503
Jun 23, 2009 at 8:20 am

of course its a muscle car, 2 door with a V8 from the 60s and 70s, its a muscle car period, it just wasn’t as well known thats all

dgaf88
Jun 23, 2009 at 7:41 am

Read the article, excuse my forwardness, yeah they’re obscure as shit, this car fits perfectly on the lot.

dgaf88
Jun 23, 2009 at 7:39 am

I’m not even going to read the article to make my decision, its a mutant GTO-Chevelle combination…DUH MUSCLE CAR.

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