This Chevy Nova SS sleeper build hides a massive 502 Big Block pushing around 730 horsepower and 950 Nm of torque beneath a ...
Paxton kit includes the belt-driven (three special 7mm Poly-Flex steel-braided V-belts that "tighten like a guitar string" and are good for handling about 13 hp apiece) centrifugal supercharger ...
The Chevrolet Chevy II debuted for the 1962 model year as a Ford Falcon competitor. One of the suggested names for the Chevy II prior to production was the Chevy Nova, but that was rejected as it was ...
Over the years, even before World War II, hot rodders would generally fall into two camps of constructing—they either built cars that looked fast or cars thatwerefast. The fast lookers ultimately ...
Bowing for the 1962 model year, the Chevy II would eventually evolve to be the Chevy Nova. A Ford Falcon competitor, the Chevy II was a semi-unibody compact economy car. Available engines included a ...
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The compact Chevys that shocked the muscle world
In the late ’60s, Chevrolet’s Nova proved that muscle didn’t have to be massive, with the SS 396 and wild dealer-tuned variants like the Yenko Nova S/C 427 pushing compact performance to extremes.
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