Curbside Conundrum: Is This 1968 GTO A Royal Bobcat 428? – You Be The Judge

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

Growing up in America, you hear all about various legendary cars.  Well, legendary American cars, that is.  You’ve got your Shelbys, your 442s, Charger Superbirds, Yenko Camaros and so on, blah blah blah.  But the one that may arguably be the most legendary is the Pontiac GTO, often nicknamed the Goat.  You’d think it was pretty rare.  I know I did, but then was surprised and had to doublecheck that they really produced over 87,000 in the 1968 model year, the first year of the second generation and not even the best selling year at that.  There are a lot of extremely mainstream cars that sell a lot fewer every year nowadays.  Maybe everyone and their mother DID drive a GTO or SS or Shelby in the ’60s after all…

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

I rarely see them nowadays, then again 1968 is one model year older than I am.  I know they’re out there, generally in garages, being waxed with a diaper, cautiously driven or being trailered to car shows on grassy fields or going for an even longer drive across the block at a Mecum or Barrett-Jackson auction near you.  And we’ve even featured at least a dozen which surprised me as well when I started looking.  But ones like this?  With a few warts, maybe some creaky joints, perhaps an accidental rude noise every once in a while?  Nope, they aren’t out there.  Or not out here anyway.  And this one seems to be advertising something that never really was.  But actually was for those in the know…

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

The GTO was never officially offered with a 428.  But Royal Pontiac, a dealer in Royal Oak, Michigan who sold racing and performance parts would also, in conjunction with Pontiac, offer the “Royal Bobcat” option to swap out the ’68 GTO’s stock 400 cu.in. engine for a 428.  Cost prohibitive?  Not really, unless $650 (about $5,500 today) or about 20% more than the base price ($3,101) of the car itself seems huge.  Most people likely added at least that much in other options.  So for $650 you’d up the power from 350hp and 400lb-ft of torque to appreciably more than 390hp and 465lb-ft of torque.  And the bragging rights?  Priceless.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

In actually those stated numbers were supposedly low, as Royal Pontiac (pictured above on a magazine cover around the time the subject car was built installing one of the 428s) would fiddle with the engine to boost the power over the official ratings by increasing the compression ratio through skimming the heads and installing thinner gaskets along with various other changes to help the motor last through the owner taking advantage of the car’s newfound zest.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

But does this car really have that?  The unfortunate symbolism of the shadow falling across the hood seems to say no.  This car also doesn’t seem to have a few other options that seem pretty ubiquitous for a GTO (but were in fact options).  Such as the hood mounted tachometer.  Or the hideaway headlights.  Hmm.  Maybe someone spent their wad on the only thing that really matters.  And symbolism shouldn’t tamper with our deliberations.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

The hood callouts seen earlier seem correct, or at least old and well positioned, could be from Royal or from any other parts department.  Or a junkyard!  The one back here on the trunk lid surely seems to have been added later, or at least doesn’t line up well.  Of course many things on a 1968 car from Detroit didn’t line up well when they were new.  Not all of my own bits and pieces line up that well anymore either.  Well, the ones that matter do.  But this bit is kinda like that too, no?  You’d want it to line up.  Still, many an owner has added extra badge credentials to whatever their ride is, sometimes to emphasize an actual fact and sometimes just…The jury is still out.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

They did get the shape right for ’68.  Everything seems there for a reason and sized more or less correctly.  The vent windows would disappear for ’69 but the arguably most famous variant of the GTO would appear that year as well, usually in that resplendent overall orange color.  That Endura bumper though, that seemed to endure.  This one’s obviously had a nose job transplant from another car.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

I’m kind of digging the wear on this one, no matter its provenance.  It’s been used.  And is still being used  And shows no signs of not continuing to be used for a long time to come.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

The interior is sending the right vibe too…Hurst T-handle shifter – check!  Black vinyl buckets, nothing frilly – check!  Extra gauges below the dash – check!  Flame job seat cover for yet another 5hp – check!  Wood rimmed and chrome spoked/holed steering wheel – check!  Vanillaroma and what looks like an IV bag dangling from the rear view…just never mind that.  This interior does one thing – kicks ass and takes names.  Okay, that’s two things but still.  Surely there’s a Gas, Grass, or (I forgot the last thing), nobody rides for free policy in place too.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

Maybe it’s me, and while I can appreciate the hermetically sealed splendor of most surviving GTOs, this one’s just a lot more real.  Back when I was in high school in the ’80s I think I remember this is what many late ’60s cars looked like.  Now, many decades later, this one seems to have stayed that way.  It’s also refreshingly not green, gold, brown, orange or white.

1968 Pontiac GTO Royal Bobcat 428

Perhaps even better, whether it sports a 428 from Royal or the stock 400 or if the owner him or herself dropped in a 428 at some time in the past, it’s here in the parking lot while the owner’s doing some Sunday grocery shopping.  Just another car, doing the things cars help people do.  So dig deep into your inner Judy or Wapner, whichever your pleasure, and deliver the verdict once you’re done deliberating with yourself.  Go ahead and sequester yourself, this is important stuff.  Someone’s doing life with this thing, no matter what it really is.

Related Reading:

1965 Pontiac GTO – How To Create A Legend And Build A Brand by PN

1967 Pontiac GTO – No Supplements Needed by Joseph Dennis

1966 Pontiac GTO – The Perfect Childhood? by JPC

1967 Pontiac GTO – Ta Daaaaah! by Tatra87

1966 Pontiac GTO – A Goat Or A Mule? by JPC

1969 Pontiac GTO Convertible – Hi-Ho Silver! by JPC

1969 Pontiac GTO Convertible – Fresh Air by Joseph Dennis

1976 Pontiac GTO – Insurer’s Special by Gerardo Solis

1968 Pontiac GTO – Redpop! by Joseph Dennis

1972 Pontiac GTO – The Last “Real” GTO by PN

1969 Pontiac GTO The Judge – Here Come Da Judge! by JPC

1964 Pontiac GTO Post Coupe by PN