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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 ...
The Turbo-Air 6 engine was used in all Corvair car models in all trim levels, including the 500, 700, 900 Monza, Corsa, and Spyder coupes sedans and convertibles, as well as the Corvair and Lakewood station-wagons.
Chevrolet Corvair. Produced: 1960-69 Base Price New: ... The T-Bird gained rear seats for the '58 model year redesign, and by 1967, Ford had eliminated the convertible as an option. The 1957 model ...
Corvair: 1960 1969 GM Z: 2 Chevrolet's compact car Greenbrier: 1961 1972 GM Z 2 Chevrolet's van based on Corvair and station wagon based on Chevelle Chevy II / Nova: 1962 1988 X-body: 5 Chevrolet's compact (1962–1979) and subcompact (1985–1988) car. Nova was the top-line of Chevy II series Chevelle: 1964 1977 GM A: 3
Corvair Powerglide was an all-new design, but borrowed a couple small parts from Chevrolet Turboglide and its operating concept is very similar to conventional Chevy Powerglide. Aluminum Powerglide , introduced in the conventional Chevrolet models in 1962 (starting with Chevy II ) incorporated many features pioneered by Corvair Powerglide ...
1,003 in a single generation up to 1967. ... 1964 Chevrolet Corvair convertible: Chevrolet Corvair: 1960–69 1,835,170 in two generations. [98] 1958 Chevrolet Corvette.
The Tempest was the result of a decision by the Pontiac division to enter the compact car market following the success of the Chevrolet Corvair. [4] The division wanted to produce a clone of the Corvair, but instead GM gave Pontiac the lead to develop a new car in an interdivisional program coded named "X-100."
1967 Camaro convertible, base six-cylinder model. The 1967 styling was done by the same team that had designed the 1965 second-generation Corvair. The Camaro shared the subframe / semi-unibody design with the 1968 Chevy II Nova. Almost 80 factory-and 40 dealer-installed options were offered, including the RS, SS, and Z/28 main trim packages.