Chevrolet’s most extreme muscle car of the 1960s was so powerful, so rare, and so unhinged, it barely survived the streets ...
This past weekend autoevolution ran a story on “a car that had no business going extinct.” It was all about the Chevrolet Impala, of course, one of those products of the automotive industry that ...
The year was 1960, and the Impala was already a hit. Launched in 1958, the Impala was originally offered as the top Bel Air version, eventually becoming a stand-alone series a year later. The ...
Unlike Super Sport versions of Chevrolet's Camaro, Nova, and Chevelle, which all have indisputable muscle car and hot rod cred, Chevy's Impala—although iconic in its own right—is positioned in a weird ...
View post: Which EV Has a Better Standard Feature Set, the Hyundai Ioniq 9 Calligraphy Design or the BMW iX xDrive60? 04 – 1960 Chevrolet Corvair in Colorado junkyard – photo by Murilee Martin 24 – ...
Heavily modified 1960 Bel Air Kingswood with 409 V8 and air suspension heads to auction in North Carolina.
Since World War II, there has only been one new American car that was a huge leap forward from what had been built before its debut in 1959, and that car was the 1960 Chevrolet Corvair. No other car ...
For the 1960 model year, the Chevy Corvette had only minor cosmetic changes, carrying on much as it had the previous year. Seat pleats were oriented vertically rather than horizontally as the previous ...
The 1960s was a golden era for American car culture with Chevrolet leading the charge in style, power and innovation, producing some of the most iconic and sought-after cars of the decade. Classic car ...
The Chevy Impala debuted in 1958 as part of General Motors’ fiftieth anniversary. Riding on the Safety Girder X-Frame that had underpinned the 1957 Cadillac models, the Impala was the prestige ...
It came, it conquered, then it drove home. A 1960 Chevrolet Corvette that finished second in its class in the 1960 24 Hours of Le Mans is coming up for auction and expected to sell for a championship ...
Last week, My Favorite Ride was a story about a 1990 Ford fire truck used as a hearse for a firefighter's funeral. This week's step-back-in-time column from 2021 features another unlikely hearse. This ...