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The Chevelle was the U.S. auto industry's only all-new car for 1964, and was positioned to fill the gap between the small Chevy II and the full-sized Chevrolet models. [7] Introduced in August 1963 by "Bunkie" Knudsen, the achieved sales of 338,286 for the year. [8] 1964 Chevrolet Chevelle 300 station wagon
Beaumont was a make of mid-sized automobiles produced by General Motors of Canada from 1964 to 1969. These cars were based on the Chevrolet Chevelle, but the line had its own logo and nameplate, and was neither marketed nor actively sold in the United States.
A police package Chevelle 300 (pillared 4 door sedan) was available for the 1969 model year which came with the L35 code 396 - it was built in few numbers when the Chrysler Corporation held the market for its law enforcement orders. Some 1964 and 1965 Chevelle 300s came with the BO7 police package but was powered with the inline six.
A custom car that originated as a 1951 Mercury Eight. [51] [52] 1963 Chevrolet Corvette: $1.5 million Schaumburg, 2013 A customized vehicle once owned by General Motors executive Harley Earl. [53] [54] [55] 1963 Pontiac Catalina: $530,000 Indianapolis, 2014 One of 14 built by Pontiac for drag racing. [56] 1964 Ford GT40 prototype $7 million ...
Chevrolet reintroduced the El Camino four years later based on the mid-size Chevrolet Chevelle. The 1964 model was similar to the Chevelle two-door wagon forward of the B-pillars and carried both "Chevelle" and "El Camino" badges, but Chevrolet marketed the vehicle as a utility model and the Chevelle's most powerful engines were not available.
Fewer than 98,000 examples were produced. Regular production ended on December 22, 1978, but some cars badged "Nova Custom" were built on special order with luxury amenities in early 1979. The final Chevrolet Nova (Custom) built on special order would roll off the line on March 15, 1979, and this would be the end of the rear-drive Nova for good.