Left untouched in a North Carolina basement since 1978, this 1969 Camaro has just been confirmed as a rare Z/28 with a potential six-figure value.
The 1969 ZL1 Camaro was not simply another muscle car option, it was a calculated act of quiet defiance from Chevrolet at the ...
The 1969 Camaro was the most prolific iteration of the first-generation Bowtie pony car (largely due to a cumulation of factors that forced Chevrolet into extending the production year by a trimester) ...
From 1967 through 2002, the Pontiac Firebird and Chevrolet Camaro were “twins” on GM’s rear-wheel-drive F-body platform, then diverged when the Firebird ended and the Camaro returned in 2010 on newer ...
*Estimated payments are calculated by Cars.com and are for informational purposes only. We’ve estimated your taxes based on your provided ZIP code. These estimates do not include title, registration ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
With modern muscle car hardware hidden under a subtly yet comprehensively redesigned body that somehow manages to retain every single line that made the first-gen Camaro an American icon, this ...
In the past, the purpose-built COPO Camaro factory drag cars have been limited to just 69 units. This is a reference to the original 1969 COPO Camaro, of which just 69 models were built with the ...
*Estimated payments are calculated by Cars.com and are for informational purposes only. We’ve estimated your taxes based on your provided ZIP code. These estimates do not include title, registration ...
As I pulled the last box off the hood of the '69, all hopes that it wasn't actually as bad as I recalled were dashed. It looked like hell. I'd been toting this Camaro around for more than 15 years, ...
After going out of production in 2002, the Chevrolet Camaro roared back onto the scene in 2010 in the midst of America’s muscle car revival. The car hit on what everyone loved best about the nameplate ...