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The Chevrolet Corvair is a rear-engined, air-cooled compact car manufactured and marketed by Chevrolet over two generations between 1960 and 1969. A response to the Volkswagen Beetle, [1] it was offered in 4-door sedan, 2-door coupe, convertible, 4-door station wagon, passenger van, commercial van, and pickup truck body styles in its first generation (1960–1964), and as a 2-door coupe ...
Reporters called the car "gorgeous." [5] In early 1963, the Chevrolet Corvair Monza GT coupe toured together with the related Monza SS (Super Spyder, XP-797), styled as a roofless version of the GT, making another public appearance at the New York International Auto Show. Although both cars were based on existing Corvair drivetrain components ...
The car started out as a 1965 Monza coupe. The engine code listed for the car when at auction in 2014 indicates that the unit installed was a 164 cu in (2.7 L) engine originally making 140 hp (104.4 kW). [66] Power was boosted to 170 hp (126.8 kW). [67] The bodywork was done in steel by Intermeccanica.
Other Opel models sold in the US were Rekord P1 and Rekord P2 (1956–1961), Kadett A (1964–1966), Kadett B (1967–1971), GT (1968–1973), and the Manta / Ascona A (1971–1975). The Ascona A was the saloon version on the Manta A chassis and was sold in the US under the "1900" name as a two- and four-door saloon, and as a two-door "sport ...
Introduced for the 1975 model year, the Monza 2+2 and Monza Towne Coupe competed with the Ford Mustang II and other sporty coupes. [2] General Motors' H-body variants, the Buick Skyhawk and Oldsmobile Starfire , were produced using the Monza 2+2's body with grille and trim variations and Buick 's 3.8 liter V6 engine .
Opel Monza GSE (1983–1986) Opel Monza convertible: Keinath C5 The last incarnation of the Monza was the GSE edition in mid-1983; [ 2 ] basically the A2 car, but a high-specification model which had Recaro sports seats, digital LCD instruments, firmer suspension, the Getrag five-speed manual transmission, an enhanced all-black interior, and a ...
The Monteverdi High Speed is a series of sports cars with different bodies produced from 1967-1976 by Swiss automaker Monteverdi. The High Speed series included several coupe models, a convertible and a sedan. In addition, the Coupé Berlinetta and the Cabriolet Palm Beach also belong to the model family.
Keinath Automobilbau was a car manufacturer based in Reutlingen, Germany owned and operated by Horst Keinath. The company began by producing a convertible variant of the Opel Monza, and the Vauxhall Cavalier Mark 2. Along with Hammond & Thiede and Voll, Keinath produced their convertible version of the Opel Ascona (badged C3) from 1983 to 1988.