Road Atlanta for SCCA National Runoffs Yenko Stinger 096 Putting a pass on a Porsche 911 Yenko Stinger 095, originally a Grady Davis car Also raced by our team along with street version 097 Currently in collection of Young Chevrolet
I swear : Buy ONE Corvair, park it in yer driveway, 6 more will appear within a year.. Those suckers are plentiful.... and cheap......
put a small mg windshield on that drag vair, ,and a street tire set-up,,,and you have a daily driver,,,,yee-haw
Speaking of camber... whenever I would set up a rally or fun run for the Corvair club here in SWMO, I would always make sure to run the club down "Camber Street" here in Springfield. It was only a bock long and buried in a subdivision, and the neighborhood didn't always get the joy from it that we did.
I came across this one today. It was too cool not to share. Nader Hater. https://fartcoinc.bigcartel.com/product/nader-hater-sticker
One of One LOL Not only did automotive giant General Motors launch a whole lineup of air-cooled, rear-engined, flat-six-powered cars, vans, and pickup trucks—two of its engineers tried to make an amphibious variant. The charmingly batty one-off that actually seems to have had a fighting chance at becoming a production model. Built by Chevrolet engineers Richard E. Hulten and Roger D. Holm, this seafaring Corvair was based on a brand-new Rampside pickup with a 65-horsepower engine and automatic transmission. They lengthened the Loadside's rear by two feet, making room for the hydraulic system hung off the rear of the engine that powered the twin propellers and electrically-operated rudders. They sealed off the undercarriage, installed engine and rudder controls in the truck bed, and got to floatin'.
Spotted this picture of a 65. Looks like a cool conversion but would like to have seen more details of the design.