SKU: 12212757066

Goldvarg 1/43 GC-083 B 1948 Pontiac Silver Streak 4 Door Oyster & Belgian Grey

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Description

Goldvarg 1/43 GC-083 B 1948 Pontiac Silver Streak 4 Door Oyster & Belgian GreyAdult collectible, NOT a toy Scale: 1 43 Approx: 4. 5" in length. The Pontiac Streamliner is a full sized car that was produced by Pontiac from the 1942 to the 1951 model years. Streamliners used the larger B body and, except for the station wagons, used fastbackstyling. The 1941 Super Streamliner models with folding center armrest were known as Chieftains in 1942. All Pontiacs looked lower, heavier and wider. Extension caps on the front doors

Adult collectible, NOT a toy

Scale: 1/43

Approx: 4.5" in length.

The Pontiac Streamliner is a full-sized car that was produced by Pontiac from the 1942 to the 1951 model years.

Streamliners used the larger B-body and, except for the station wagons, used fastbackstyling. The 1941 Super Streamliner models with folding center armrest were known as Chieftains in 1942. All Pontiacs looked lower, heavier and wider. Extension caps on the front doors lengthened the forward fender lines. The hood extended back to the front doors, eliminating the cowl. The grille, bumper and hood were widened and headlamps were further apart. Long horizontal parking lamps sat just above the vertical side grilles. The horseshoe shaped center grille had horizontal bars and a circular emblem in the middle of the upper main surround molding.  The word Pontiac appeared on the hood side molding of six-cylinder models, while the moldings of the eight-cylinder cars said Pontiac Eight. After December 15, 1941, wartime "blackout" trim was used. All parts previously chrome plated were finished in Duco Gun Metal Grey.

1948 Pontiac Streamliner Deluxe coupe

With the end of the C-body Pontiac Custom Torpedo, station wagon production was transferred to the new Streamliner line. The final body work continued to be done at either the Hercules Body Company or at Ionia Manufacturing. The Streamliner station wagon ranged from $1,265 for a base Six to $1,340 for a Chieftain Eight, making it Pontiac's most expensive model. At 215.8 in (5,481 mm) in overall length the 1942 Pontiac Streamliner station wagon also set a record for the longest Pontiac, this would not be exceeded until the 1959 Pontiac Star Chief and Bonneville.

The first postwar Pontiac available (September 13, 1945) was the Streamliner coupe, which remained the sole product for a time. The Chieftain trim level of 1942 was renamed the Deluxe trim level in 1946. Styling highlights of Pontiacs were wraparound bumpers, a massive 14-blade grille, new nameplates and concealed safe-light parking lamps. Streamliners could be identified by straight back Indian moldings on the rear hood ornament chrome beltline moldings and bright moldings on the "speedline" fender ribs.  They also had longer front fender crown moldings and were generally larger in size. Lettering on hood emblems and badges placed forward of the "speedlines" identified Eights. Interior trim on passenger cars were in gray striped cloth. Station wagons had three seats in standard trim, two seats in Deluxe trim and used imitation leather upholstery and passenger car style interior hardware. Ranging in price from $1942 for a standard Six to $2,047 for a Deluxe Eight, Streamliner station wagons continued to be the most expensive Pontiac model. A total of 92,731 Streamliners were sold in 1946, accounting for over two thirds of all Pontiacs. 

In 1947 the "Silver Streak" styling theme was continued, now with five bands of chrome on hoods. All Pontiacs had new grilles with four broad gently bowed horizontal bars. Hoods and fenders were protected by an inverted steer's horn shaped bar incorporating a die cast plate with indianhead relief. Interiors for sedans and coupes were redesigned with Berwicke beige panels for dashboard and windows. Windshield, door and garnish moldings were finished in Autumn Brown with dado stripe border moldings. All coupes and sedans were fastbacks with full-loop around window moldings. Streamliner station wagons ranged in price from $1,992 for a standard Six to $2,111 for a Deluxe Eight, again making them Pontiac's most expensive model. Sales of Streamliners totaled 128,660 in 1947, or nearly 56% of all Pontiacs sold.

In 1948 a new Pontiac styling included triple "Silver Streaks," a horizontal grille theme with vertical shaft, and round taillights. The word "Silver Streak" was carried on the sides of the hood with eights having an "8" placed between the two words.[2]Streamliners were again larger and more expensive than other Pontiacs. All Streamliners, be they 2-door or 4-door fastbacks, or station wagons, now came standard or Deluxe. Deluxe models were distinguished by spear moldings on front fender, bright gravel guards, and chrome plated wheel discs on all cars except wagons. Deluxe interiors had two tone trims with pillow-and-tuft seatbacks, quarter sawed mahogany dash and window trim, electric glovebox door clocks, Deluxe steering wheels and other rich appointments. Standard Streamliner station wagons had tan imitation leather seats and Deluxe wagons had red upholstery of the same type. Station wagon prices ranged from $2,364 for a standard Six to $2,490 for a Deluxe Eight, making them Pontiac's most expensive model. In 1948 160,857 Streamliners were sold, accounting for nearly 66% of all Pontiacs.

Perhaps the biggest story of 1948 for Pontiac was the addition of an imported engine and transmission out of Italy. This changed the name for General Motors perhaps because their cars were not made fully domestic. In 1950 they decided to go back to domestic-made motor and transmission as a result of people protesting about having a car from “Italy”   As of 1948 only General Motors sold cars with fully automatic transmissions and the only other way to get one was to buy a higher priced Cadillac, Buick or Oldsmobile. Chevrolet would not introduce Powerglide until 1950, Ford FordoMatic until 1951 (Lincoln would start buying Hydramatics from GM in 1949), and Chrysler, PowerFlite on Imperials, until 1953. Hydramatic proved very popular with a total of 171,946 Pontiacs sold with it, or about 71% of all Pontiacs, and with 122,327 Streamliners equipped with it, or about 76% of all Streamliners, in its first year. Since Hydramatic was still only optional on Cadillac and Oldsmobile, and Dynaflow optional on Buick Roadmaster, given the total sales of Cadillac (50,619), Oldsmobile (173,661) and Buick Roadmaster (80,071), and the fact that Dynaflow was only introduced in the middle of the model year, this implies that probably over 40% of all cars sold with automatic transmissions in 1948 were Pontiacs.

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SKU: 12212757066

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Verified Purchase
Dave
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
Works good, looks nice. Chews through batteries
Size: Standard
I'm not a huge gamer, but in general it's a pretty nice mouse. The mouse movement is rather fluid and it glides smoothly on my mouse pad. Don't have any issues with connectivity, but I do have the dongle very near the mouse. You can customize how the colors rotate with the Razer program on your desktop. There are several buttons you can customize as well and change how long before it goes to rest mode. I also like that I can accidently bump it and it won't wake my pc from sleep mode (though sometimes I do have to jiggle it around a bit for it to wake my pc up). I love the shape of it alot and the thumb rest, very comfortable in my hand. My only complaint is that I am chewing through batteries like crazy. I feel like I have to replace them about once a month. Will probably invest in rechargeable batteries. But this is a great option for anyone who is looking for a better quality gaming mouse without spending $100+
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Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2026
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Verified Purchase
Paul
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Smaller, ergonomic, lightweight, VERY quiet and soft click
Color: Grey
I'm about a month into using this mouse, and so far it checks every box besides being rechargeable. in other words, I preferred battery operated ones as I have no way to use this while its plugged in unless I reroute my whole PC setup just to be able to have access to a USB C cable. I purchased a second mouse for backup. Anyway, its a great mouse, thats extremely lightweight and responsive. the button click is EXTREMELY light, which I love, (similar to a new model macbook pro touchpad click, possibly even lighter) and the overall feel is ergonomic/small which i prefer, since I like to be able to move the mouse around with my fingers rather than my wrist. I use it for my main home PC while using my DAW for music production. The DPI feature is cool I suppose, but I don't really need a quick-access setting to change mouse responsiveness on the fly. My only gripes are two; that I wish the side thumb buttons were moved back toward the wrist a bit more. I can only effectively reach the rear button with my thumb, but the forward button requires me to shift my hand around the mouse each time to click it. Its actually easier to slide my index finger off to the side and press that button if I need to which is weird. My second gripe is the charging: I used it for the whole month (8+hours a day work) and I needed to charge it by the end of the month. Which is not bad, but nowhere near the 6+ months of battery life using a single AA. It does not have an energy saving feature similar to mice I've used in the past (click to wake up), also the little battery indicator doesn't make sense. It only goes off when theres no connection to a PC i.e the PC is turned off. It did not indicate when the battery was low, charged, or charging. I plugged the mouse in when it finally died (which was unforgiving, its not like it died, and I could pop the battery in then out to pause a game, or stop music playing, etc.) and it was underneath the clickers that illuminated red (im assuming that was charging, since instructions weren't clear) and then it was green at some point. Simple enough to figure out, but strange that the battery indicator itself didn't function that way it was supposed to. Charging was fairly quick ~an hour or so? We'll see how it fairs in the long run. Overall, Im happy with this mouse in the short term
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Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2025
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briandb
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Super Nice Mouse for the Price
Color: Grey
I've been using this mouse as my primary mouse for 3 months now. I bought it as a backup for a more expensive mouse that was showing its age but I like this one SO well, I've kept using it. In my opinion, it has a nice feel and works very well. It's lightweight, glides smoothly, is responsive and quiet, and the battery lasts at least a month with several hours a day of use. Connectivity has been seamless. I did download some third-party software to increase the functionality of the side button. Just be aware that if you like a larger, heavier mouse, this one may feel cheap to you. But I really like it a lot.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2026
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Verified Purchase
D
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Marvelous, Versatile Mouse
Color: Grey
I was torn between getting a wireless or a Bluetooth mouse, but this product eliminated the dilemma altogether. It paired painlessly with my MacBook and synced seamlessly with the wireless dongle plugged into my Windows machine. No noticeable lag, but I did not test with games. The mouse feels comfortable in my hand and has just the right amount of heft so that it doesn't feel like a cheap dollar store mouse. The feel of it rivals my more expensive Logitech mouses. Buttons are extremely quiet and provide satisfying tactile feedback. But I think the clincher is all the thoughtful details. I love that I can stash the dongle inside the mouse via a slot on the bottom. The switch to toggle between Bluetooth and wireless, or to shut off the mouse in order to preserve power, is a nice touch. And the recharge capability is as advertised. So far I've been using the mouse for two weeks straight and don't foresee it dying anytime soon. And if it does, it's nice to know I don't need to worry about batteries. Overall, this is the perfect portable mouse to stash in my laptop bag and break out in just about any situation.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2025
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Verified Purchase
Heather Murray
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Very natural to use in hand. Easy setup.
Color: Lavender
I love this mouse! I wear a size small in women's gloves (USA). This fits perfectly in my hand. The shape is so natural and restful. The color a is a clear pastel purple, a lilac, but not too bright or overly soft. It is a little darker than my screen showed, as the picture appears to have a bright light and reflections. Connectivity has been a breeze. No issues at all connecting to a Surface Pro 11. We'll see how it goes connecting to the 12 ... Doesn't fit in the Smatree brand hard carrying case for laptops...too tall. But I am keeping it for home use anyway. Eve I though I have one of those surface pro lays flat mice coming. Only time I needed a mousepad was one time when I tried to use it outside of my picnic table and there seemed to be little grit so I had to clean that off, and just I have a really loose really thin picnic table cover for the winter that I hadn't taken off yet and it did not like that. But it went on my tablecloth and my kitchen table. It worked on my kitchen counter. It worked on my office desk and it also worked on a mouse pad. I have only used it for about 3 days. Sometimes I would remember to turn it off when I wasn't using it and overnight. Sometimes I didn't. Haven't had to recharge it yet. Update: returned the refurb 11 and bought a new 12. my surface pro mouse came in. I paired it, used it for about fifteen minutes. turned it off. and paired this one. I had to cycle it through since it had been previously paired. This was no trouble at all and only a minute to do. it's too tall for some pockets, but my hand stopped hurting, so I'm going to try to use a separate storage case for accessories. it's radius for moving across the screen is helpfully small.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2026

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