1973 Monte Carlo Landau Edition-low Reserve on 2040-cars
Winchester, Massachusetts, United States
1973 Motor-Trend "Car of the Year"! 1973-Chevrolet stunned the car industry with the dramatic European styling of the Second generation Monte Carlo and received the Car-of-the Year Award. Own a piece of history with this low production number (12,496) survivor. This driver comes with factory ac, am-fm 8 track and rare cruise control. The buyer will also get a full set of original turbine wheels with the factory Monte Carlo center "poverty hubs", see picture. I've installed new rear brakes and lines and had the carburetor rebuilt. It has had a newer vinyl roof , repaint and refreshed interior in the past. The 350 engine with dual mufflers sounds and drives strong. This car runs and drives great, ready for crusin'! The car is available for inspection during the bidding phase only. Please email me for any questions. An immediate non-refundable deposit of $500. through Pay-Pal is due upon winning the bid. Any bidders with under 5 purchases or with poor ratings will be deleted until they contact and converse with me. There are no implied warranties. Please bid to win and ok it with your significant other if necessary so as to not get a poor rating. I am listing locally and reserve the right to end early. |
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Junkyard Gem: 1987 Chevrolet Turbo Sprint
Sun, Feb 6 2022Fifteen years ago, I wrote my first-ever automotive article under the name Murilee Martin, and it didn't take me long to start writing about one of my favorite automotive subjects: the junkyard. Before I'd refined my system for documenting discarded vehicles, however, I shot a lot of boneyard photos that never got used. For today's Junkyard Gem, I have four shots from early 2007 of one of the rarest turbocharged machines of the 1980s: the Chevrolet Turbo Sprint. The Chevrolet Sprint was really a rebadged Suzuki Cultus, from the pre-Geo era when General Motors sold the Isuzu Gemini as the Chevrolet Spectrum, the Daewoo LeMans as the Pontiac LeMans and the Toyota Corolla as the Chevrolet Nova (soon enough, the Spectrum became a Geo, and the Nova became the Prizm). The second-generation Cultus appeared in 1988, becoming the Geo Metro on our shores the following year. The Turbo Sprint was available for just the last two years of the Sprint's 1985-1988 American sales run, and it appears that just a couple of thousand were sold; if I'd known at the time just how rare they were, I'd have shot more photos of this one at the now-defunct Hayward Pick Your Part. The turbocharged 993cc three-cylinder produced 70 horsepower, 22 better than the naturally-aspirated version. Since the Turbo Sprint weighed just 1,620 pounds (that's about 500 pounds lighter than a barely more powerful '22 Mitsusbishi Mirage), it was plenty of fun to drive. For 1988, the regular Sprint hatchback cost $6,380 while the Turbo Sprint listed at $8,240 (that's about $15,375 and $19,855 today, respectively). Believe it or not, a Turbo Sprint actually raced in the 24 Hours of Lemons 10 years ago, though it didn't end well. This ad is for the regular Cultus, not the Cultus Turbo, but the screaming guitars sound reasonably turbocharged. For the most part, Chevy Sprint marketing was all about cheap purchase price and stingy fuel economy… at a time when gasoline prices were cratering. Related Video:
Callaway debuts its new C7 Stingray at National Corvette Museum
Fri, 02 May 2014Callaway showed off its first tuned version of the 2014 Corvette Stingray at the National Corvette Museum last week, giving the rampant enthusiasts of America's sports car a look at the roughly 620-horsepower, supercharged rocket.
Unlike the Corvette SC610 we showed you back in January, this Stingray packs a fair bit more oomph. Horsepower is only up ten ponies, but torque has jumped from 556 pound-feet to "at least" 600 pound-feet. Neither horsepower nor torque is official quite yet, although Callaway is expecting to know just what its creation can do once testing and validation is completed later this month.
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Before Chevrolet's Redline, there was the Saturn Red Line
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