The 1968 Chevrolet Nova SS 396 proved that big-block muscle didn’t have to come wrapped in a full-size body. By dropping ...
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 ...
This Chevy Nova SS sleeper build hides a massive 502 Big Block pushing around 730 horsepower and 950 Nm of torque beneath a ...
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 ...
Keeping in mind the Chevrolet and Mopar performance vehicles have been on hiatus for a few years (save for the ’Vette), deviating from build directives by mixing and matching key ...
According to Classic.com, the average sale price for a third-generation Chevrolet Nova (1968–1972) is $49,887, which puts this car almost exactly at the market average. The range is enormous, from as ...
This 1971 Chevrolet Nova took ages to complete, but look at it now. It features a hardtop, which took 900 hours to engineer and weld onto the car, a front end that took 600 hours to design and install ...
At one point in time, Shirley "Cha Cha" Muldowney was just an ordinary American child. Far more interested in street racing and hot rods than whatever her schoolteachers in Schenectady, New York, had ...