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1974 Chevrolet Camaro

$55,895

1974 Chevrolet Camaro

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Camaro

Year

1974

VIN

AMS37629

Body Type

Coupe

Engine

350 sbc

Description

AWARD WINNING 1974 CAMARO SHOW CAR No expense spared show car build known as 'Texas Magic' Thousands of man hours were invested into creating this car Built by custom car fabricator Shown over a period of 10 years, racking up many show wins across the country Refreshed by RBJ Kustoms of Utah in 2019 Featured on the cover of Super Chevy Magazine (magazine included in sale) Featured on the cover of Popular Hot Rodding Magazine (magazine included in sale) Winner of Best Custom & entered in the Utah Top 10 at the 2020 Salt Lake City Autorama (awards included in sale) Shown again at the 2022 Salt Lake City Autorama, winning Best Hand Built Custom & Best Display & again entered into the Utah Top 10 (awards included in sale) Winner of Best Custom at the 1990 Boise Roadster Show Finished in Viper Red with ghost pearl gold side stripes Countless custom body modifications 5-inch chopped top Molded Corvette side scoops Molded widebody flares Custom molded rear spoiler with Firebird rear valance and taillights Handmade polished aluminum grille Custom hood with exposed injection stacks and smoothed underside Custom one-off windshield Front & rear bumper delete with rolled front and rear pans Custom fabricated & smoothed inner fenders Smoothed cowl & firewall Custom billet hood hinges Completely wire tucked engine bay Hand fabricated suspension pieces front and rear Jaw dropping engine presentation 350 SBC with Hilborn injection Engine was disassembled & block was smoothed / sharp edges radiused Block has been painted candy apple red metallic Hundreds of hours of hand done engraving on almost every piece under the hood Hand engraved brake master cylinder, injection velocity stacks, water pump, cooling fan, pulleys, pulley brackets, suspension, door handles, wheels and exterior trim Custom chrome plated aluminum valve covers hand engraved with 'Texas Magic' GOLD PLATED CYLINDER HEADS! Gold plated water pump Chrome plated injection stacks, intake manifold, steering assembly, pulleys, water pump, master cylinder, radiator, radiator support, oil pan, alternator and headers B&M Transmission Braided lines throughout engine bay with hand engraved fittings 4-wheel independent suspension Every piece of suspension has been chrome plated Chrome plated Halibrand quick change rear end with custom uprights & half shafts Inboard Corvette disc brakes with drilled rotors and chrome plated brake calipers Chrome plated & custom engraved coil over shocks front and rear Polished Mr. Roadster wheels with engraved wheel lips and custom spinners wrapped in Pirelli tires Chrome plated headers & stainless exhaust Immaculate undercarriage with smoothed floors finished in body color Extensive subframe modifications (all frame welds have been ground smooth & molded Smoothed wheel wells finished in body color Fully custom black velour interior with silver & red stripes with custom steering wheel Custom headliner Matching finished trunk Optima Red Top battery mounted in trunk ***PLEASE NOTE - This is a pure show car and the motor has not been fired for quite some time ****

Classic Chevrolet Camaro Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1967–2002
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Everything you need to know about buying a classic Chevrolet Camaro — from 1967-1969 first-generation icons to the third-gen IROC era. VIN authentication, common rust hotspots, engine identification, and current market pricing.
This guide covers
✓ 10-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 5 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Chevrolet Camaro Market Overview

Based on 360 Chevrolet Camaro listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

360
Listed Now
$46,743
Avg. Asking Price
1967–2001
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $55,895
Low: $4,995 High: $259,900
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 63%
Manual 28%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 14%
Good 8%
Fair 2%
Poor 1%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 360 listings →
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Classic Chevrolet Camaro Buyer's Guide

The Chevrolet Camaro launched in September 1966 as Chevy's direct response to the Ford Mustang, and for over five decades it has defined American performance for an entire generation of enthusiasts. Whether you're hunting a numbers-matching first-generation Z/28, a survivor split-bumper second-gen, or a clean third-gen IROC-Z, the Camaro buyer's market is deep, varied, and full of pitfalls for the unprepared.

What to Check Before Buying

Verify VIN against cowl tag and build sheet — Cross-reference all three for matching production date, paint, trim, and option codes. Mismatched cowl tag = body swap.
Check engine block partial VIN — Stamped on driver-side block deck near cylinder head. Must match dashboard VIN for "numbers matching" claim.
Inspect rear window channel and trunk pan — Rust here is hidden but ruins structural integrity. Pop the rear seat and look at the rear window inner channel.
Magnet test rocker panels and quarters — Body filler is non-magnetic. If the magnet doesn't stick, the panel has been filled — meaning underlying rust.
Verify Z/28 RPO code on cowl tag — Genuine Z/28s carry the "Z28" code. Without it, the car is a clone, regardless of badging.
Inspect 12-bolt rear end (first-gen) — Z/28s and SS396s used the 12-bolt. Check for original gear ratio code stamped on axle housing.
Check transmission stamp and ratio — Muncie M21 close-ratio four-speed in Z/28s. Stamping on the side of the case identifies original.
Examine motor mounts and frame rails — Big-block cars are notorious for breaking motor mounts. Look for cracked rubber, lifted engines, or aftermarket safety chains.
Test drive on highway and parking lot — Listen for differential whine, transmission slip, brake pulsation, steering wander. Drive at least 20 minutes.
Document with HD photos before purchase — Photo every panel, every stamp, every sticker. Document VIN, cowl tag, engine, transmission, rear axle. Build the case before you wire money.

Common Issues

Rust is the silent killer of every Camaro generation. First-gen cars (1967-69) hide rust under the rear window, in the trunk pan, around the rear wheel arches, and at the cowl seam where the windshield meets the firewall. Second-gen cars (1970-81) are notorious for rotten quarters, rocker panels, and floor pans — many cars on the market have been patched poorly or filled with body filler. Mechanical issues vary by generation. First-gens commonly suffer from worn 12-bolt rear ends, leaky Muncie transmission seals, and broken motor mounts (a Big Block specialty). Second-gens add tired steering boxes, crumbling vacuum lines, and EGR issues post-1972. Third-gens (1982-1992) are plagued by failing TPI sensors, sloppy T-tops that leak, and worn front coil-over-shock units on the IROC-Z.

What to Look For

Always start with the VIN. The first character tells you the country, the third tells you the model line, and the eighth (on 1972-and-later cars) tells you the engine. Cross-reference the VIN against the cowl tag and the trim tag — mismatches mean somebody swapped a body or a clip. For first-gen cars especially, find the partial VIN stamped on the engine block (driver's side, near the head, on Big Blocks) and on the transmission. Original drivetrains can add $15,000-$30,000 to a Z/28 or SS valuation versus a date-coded replacement. Look closely at the rocker panels, lower quarter panels, and the rear wheel arches with a strong magnet. Body filler is non-magnetic. If the magnet doesn't stick, you've got Bondo — and that's the cheap fix being hidden, not the expensive metal repair.

Price Guide

First-generation Camaros (1967-1969) are the gold standard. A driver-quality 1969 SS396 in good condition runs $55,000-$85,000 today. Z/28 prices range from $60,000 for a clean driver up to $200,000+ for documented, numbers-matching, low-mileage examples. Base 1967-1968 small-block coupes start around $28,000 for project cars, $45,000-$65,000 for nice drivers. Second-generation cars (1970-1981) have appreciated significantly in the last decade. 1970 Z/28 LT-1 cars are the high-water mark at $60,000-$120,000. Split-bumper 1970-1973 base coupes run $25,000-$45,000. Mid-second-gen cars (1974-1977) are the bargain entry point, often available for $15,000-$30,000 for solid drivers. Third-generation IROC-Zs (1985-1990) have entered serious collector territory. Clean L98 IROC-Zs sell for $18,000-$35,000, with low-mileage 1LE and B4C cars commanding $45,000+.

Did You Know?

The original 1969 Z/28 was conceived purely to homologate the Camaro for SCCA Trans-Am racing — the 302 V8 (a destroked 327) was built specifically because Trans-Am rules required engines under 305 cubic inches. The Mustang outsold the Camaro throughout the entire first generation. The Camaro did not outsell the Mustang until 1977, during the second generation. Only 69 ZL1 Camaros were built in 1969 — they were essentially a factory drag racing special with an all-aluminum 427 big block, and they cost more than a new Corvette. A documented original ZL1 sold at Mecum's Indianapolis auction in 2018 for $1.05 million.

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