Don's 1968 Chevelle
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These are pictures of the '68 Chevelle I used to own.
History:
This was technically my fourth Chevelle (Malibu).
My first one was a '68 Chevelle body I got for $100. I was planning to
fix it but that never materialized. My second Chevelle was a 1969
Malibu
I bought from my sister's ex-husband (financé and soon to be
husband
back then). I wrecked that one after spending all night at a bachelor
party.
I then bought another '68 Chevelle that was in good shape, but could
use
a new interior and new paint. Instead of spending $3000 to fix up that
one, my wife found this car for me instead.
I bought this one from a son of a body shop
owner (for $2800.00) who bought it from an older woman who had it
sitting
in her garage for a long time because it was damaged in an accident and
fixed it up and painted it. It had something like 80K original miles on
it. It used to be a metallic gold judging from the trunk hinges that
didn't
get completely painted. It had a small block 307 with air conditioning
and power steering, but no power brakes. . The side markers on the
front
fenders were not stock (I think they were recessed yellow reflectors
from
a Ranchero) and it had rally rims which I replaced with mag wheels
(like
the ones shown on the right, except the center caps were the knock-off
style). I think it made the car look a lot better. The interior
was
redone with nice velour in silver-gray and black. It had a center
shifter
console for a 3 speed automatic transmission.
About two or three months after I bought it, I was
taking a few co-workers out to lunch, and as we approached the off-ramp
for our exit, the motor quit. We pushed it to the parking lot of the
Carl's
Jr. and called another co-worker to pick us up. I later towed it home.
What I had thought turned into what was for sure. The timing gear had
the
nylon teeth that cracked, and slipped the chain so the pistons were
smashing
into the valves. I had purchased a 1968 or 1969 small block 327 engine
out of a Camaro a while earlier that I was planning on rebuilding at my
leisure, so instead of waiting, I started right away. After rebuilding
the engine in my garage, it was swapped with the broken one. I found
out
that a Camaro oil pan doesn't fit in a Chevelle, so me and my friends
(thanks
Dan, Tom, Serge, and Jacques - sorry if I missed anyone) did a quick
swap
of the oil pan and bolted the rebuilt into the compartment. After
running
it for about 20 minutes to break in the new cam and adjusting the
valves,
I took it for a spin around the neighborhood. Ten minutes later, the
transmission
stopped working. Apparently, when you bolt the engine onto the
transmission,
you have to get all the splines on the shaft to engage, or you ruin the
torque converter. Since I messed up, I decided to let a professional
repair
the transmission for $1500.00.
After that, I pretty much had a new car. I didn't
like the manual brakes, so I went to a 'Pick-A-Part' and got a power
booster
and proportional valve out of a 1968 Cutlass, or Nova (something GM)
and
installed that into my Chevelle. Ah, power brakes! It was too touchy
though
and I never did fix it right.
One day, at the car wash, it was being pushed
through
the automatic car wash, and before my eyes, it jumped the rail and went
sideways through the car wash, being scrapped by the side spray nozzles
and soaping equipment. I almost had a heart attack. They finally
stopped
the conveyor and pushed the car back into the tracks. They said the
tires
were too wide and offered to repair the car at one of their 'sources'.
I just let my insurance company handle it. It was fixed, but it was
never
the same. It still looked good, but up close, you could see where the
damage
was done, and the paint job hiding it all.
NEVER park a classic car (or one that looks
like this one did) at a park-n-ride. One day, I car-pooled with a
co-worker,
parking this car at a Park-n-ride lot. I even had a 'gorilla bar' on
the
steering wheel. When we came back , it was gone. I filed a report with
the police, and waited. A couple of weeks later, I got a call from the
Ontario Police Dept. saying they found my car and I could get it from
the
impound yard. They didn't say what shape it was in, but I was
optimistic.
After paying the impound charge (I think it was like $120.00) they let
me see it. It was stripped. No engine, no transmission, no interior.
The
mag wheels were replaced with junk rims and bald tires. I was
heart-broken.
I rented a trailer and towed it home. I don't know why. There wasn't
anything
left. I guess I couldn't see just leaving it in a junk yard. I
eventually
sold the shell to a nephew of a friend. I don't know what happened to
it
after that.
So now, I'm looking for another 1968 Chevelle to
fix up or possible restore after I finish with the '66 Mustang.