I'd heard people say, "Oh, Harry still has that car in his parent's barn. I'd just never seen it," Kris Smith said. Of course, in high school glory days, class of '76 in northern Indiana, Smith knew ...
Just before the classic American muscle car era came to a close, this rare, big-block Corvette stormed the streets for one last hurrah.
We'd love to see a Motorious reader win this Stingray! Owning a big block Chevy Corvette would be really cool for any collector, but what if you won it for a donation as little as three bucks? This ...
The Chevrolet Corvette took its time to convince the buying public that its price tag was actually worth anything (namely, their money as well as their attention). It wasn’t until the second ...
The massive auto industry strikes swept the American economy in 1969 and 1970 with a tidal wave of brute force impacted deep into 1971. GM decided to treat that model year’s Corvette as an extension ...
There are few Chevy Corvettes as rare as the 1971 Corvette ZR2. It’s dubbed “Zora’s Racer” for Zora Arkus Duntov, the Belgian-born lead engineer who is ofttimes referred to as the “Father of the ...
These days Chevrolet uses the ZR2 badge for off-road trucks, but it once adorned a rare Corvette variant. Scheduled to cross the block at a Mecum auction in Indianapolis on May 20, this 1971 Corvette ...
When a Chevy has the nickname "Zora's Racer" you know it must be a pretty special piece of GM performance machinery. Such is the case with this 1971 Corvette ZR2. Named after Corvette Chief Engineer ...
An extraordinarily rare 1971 Chevrolet Corvette ZR2 Convertible is expected to sell for between $1 million and $1.2 million when it crosses the auction block at a Mecum sales event from May 13-21.
Mecum Auctions are legendary for the wide selection of Chevy Corvettes available, and last week’s 35th Annual Indy Spring Classic was no exception. There were numerous historically significant Vettes ...
I’d heard people say, “Oh, Harry still has that car in his parent’s barn. I’d just never seen it,” Kris Smith said. Of course, in high school glory days, class of ’76 in northern Indiana, Smith knew ...