Bruno started at Top Speed in 2022 and now serves as Senior Editor for ICE while also training writers across CarBuzz, HotCars, and TopSpeed. A car and motorcycle enthusiast, he enjoys writing about ...
1969 witnessed several big changes for the Chevelle SS, including the return to the main Chevelle series. Chevrolet had a brilliant idea in 1966 when it decided to turn the SS 396 into a stand-alone ...
Theo has dedicated his life to cars. He has studied the only Automotive Journalism course in the world located at Coventry University and describes this passion as a clinical obsession. Give Theo four ...
At the end of the day, cars are just nuts and bolts and metal, and as such, fixing things is usually only a matter of time and money. That said, building a custom vehicle is a whole lot better if you ...
First introduced in September of 1963, the Chevelle nameplate was Chevy’s answer to the growing demand for midsize models, offering everything from sensible family sedans to performance-oriented ...
The Chevelle may have only lasted three generations, from 1964 through 1978, but it left its mark on the hot-rodding world, and was once touted as "America's most popular midsize car". Of the three ...
The 1969 Chevelle Malibu features SS396 badging but houses a larger 454ci V8 engine. The interior remains mostly original, while the exterior sports Garnet Red paint and distinctive SS branding. The ...
The 1969 Chevrolet Chevelle COPO did not start life as a showroom hero. It was a quiet corporate workaround that let a ...
When Bruce Springsteen sang "I got a sixty-nine Chevy with a three-ninety-six, fuelie heads and a Hurst on the floor" in his 1978 song "Racing in the Street" he didn't actually have a car like that. A ...
It is the ultimate New Jersey beach cruiser. A 1969 Chevrolet Chevelle SS convertible once-owned by Bruce Springsteen has been auctioned for much more than the car is typically worth. The Le Mans blue ...
Are what you wanted and what you got necessarily the same thing? Maybe. We envision the ideal and get real life instead. Sometimes it's a matter of ignorance and sometimes it's really a matter of time ...