Chevy Classics!

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Chevrolet used to have an advertising campaign that touted, Baseball, apple pie, and Chevrolet. Supposedly, Common Motors biggest division attempted to indoctrinate consumers into believing that a Chevrolet was as mainstream as Main Street, USA. In several ways this campaign worked. For generations now the Chevrolet division has been serving up cars that have been slotted rotors snapped up by Americans, especially those seeking their 1st vehicle. Lets take a look at 3 Chevy classics that have shaped the respected US automaker.

Corvette In 1953, the Chevy Corvette was released and the auto industry hasnt been the exact same because. This two seat ragtop paved the way for better and lesser cars to enter the US market like Chevys own Camaro and Chevelle Pontiacs Firebird and GTO Fords Thunderbird and Mustang the Dodge Charger Plymouth Cuda AMC Javelin Datsun 240Z and a host of other vehicles. For more than 50 years, the restricted production Corvette has been the halo car for Chevrolet and vortex generator carbon fiber hoods is now a preferred of the child boomer set.

Camaro One of the original pony vehicles was the Camaro which, along with the similarly developed Pontiac Firebird, was GMs answer in 1967 to the Ford Mustang. Following the 1964 introduction of the Mustang, GM required a responseand badly! Pony cars were well-known for compact size, speed, and 2+2 seating. Add in a convertible and you had a accurate California cruiser. Right after 35 years of production, Chevy discontinued the Camaro while the Mustang is nonetheless getting made. Excellent news for Camaro fans: A new Camaro is reportedly set to debut for the 2009 model year.

El Camino Is it a car or is it a truck? How about: auto/truck? Half automobile and half truck, the El Camino is basically a automobile with the rear section converted into a truck bed. Introduced in 1959, the original El Camino was based on the Impala platform, then on the Chevelle, and later on the Malibu chassis. The El Camino was Chevys response to the 1957 introduction of the Ford Ranchero, the very first production automobile/truck. Although not meant for heavy duty truck use the El Camino, when equipped with adjustable shock absorbers, was able to carry its share of weight in its bed.

Other cars from Chevy that have been memorable include: the Venture, Nova, Caprice, and Chevelle while some truly forgettable models incorporate the Chevette, Monza, and Vega.

Chevrolets present line up is a far cry from yesteryears fleet, but with over 25 automobiles, trucks, vans, and SUVs models getting marketed nowadays, the Chevrolet name continues to impact and shape the American automotive sector.