Elite Dealer

1970 Chevrolet Chevelle

Addison, Illinois

$54,995

1970 Chevrolet Chevelle

Video

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Chevelle

Year

1970

VIN

13662639493430000

Body Type

Coupe

Exterior Color

Blue

Interior Color

Black

Transmission

Manual

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

454ci V8 and four-speed manual transmission were

Condition

Excellent

Description

This 1971 Chevrolet Chevelle sport coupe was fitted with 1970-style bodywork in 2013 before a repaint in blue with white stripes, and the 454ci V8 and four-speed manual transmission were also rebuilt at that time. Additional equipment includes an aluminum radiator, a PosiTraction differential, 15"³ Super Sport-style wheels, power-assisted four-wheel disc brakes, a domed hood, a black grille and taillight panel, locking hood pins, and long-tube headers that link with Pypes mufflers. The cabin features a Comfort Grip steering wheel, SS-style door panels, a Hurst shifter, a Bluetooth stereo, and bench seats trimmed in black vinyl.

The exterior was fitted with 1970-style details including a revised front grille, taillight panel, bumpers, and quad headlights, and the car was repainted in blue with white stripes in 2013. Details include a domed hood with locking pins as well as dual side mirrors, rectangular exhaust outlets, and SS badging. The 15"³ Super Sport-style wheels are mounted with 235/60 BFGoodrich Radial T/A white-letter tires, and a full-size spare is stowed in the trunk.

The car is equipped with power steering, and braking is handled by power-assisted four-wheel discs. The front and rear bench seats are upholstered in black vinyl, and lap belts are fitted for all occupants. The dashboard and headliner were replaced in 2022 according to the seller, and details include SS-style door panels, a retro-look Bluetooth stereo, and a Hurst shifter.

The Comfort Grip tilting steering wheel frames a 120-mph speedometer, a 7k-rpm tachometer, and an analog clock in addition to readouts for amperage, fuel level, and coolant temperature. The five-digit odometer shows 536 miles. The 454ci V8 was rebuilt and installed in 2013, and machine work included boring and honing the block, polishing the crankshaft, and resurfacing the cylinder heads and flywheel.

It was assembled with forged Speedpro pistons, Clevite main and rod bearings, ARP fasteners, and an aluminum radiator. Power is routed to the rear wheels through a four-speed manual transmission and a PosiTraction limited-slip differential. The transmission was rebuilt in 2013, according to the seller.

Long-tube headers flow to an X-pipe midsection and Pypes Violator mufflers. Financing available $6000 down pmt Text zip code for delivery quote 847-848-1850 Check out our video! All cars are sold in as is condition Shown by appointment ONLY! MGM CLASSIC CARS LLC 150 S. CHURCH STREET ADDISON, IL 60101
Trim: 454cid 4 SPD 12BOLT NICE PAINT
Body Style: 2
Fuel Type: Gasoline

Classic Chevrolet Chevelle Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1964–1977
~5 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Definitive buyer's guide for classic Chevrolet Chevelle 1964-1977. SS variants, COPO and LS6 authentication, A-body frame inspection, engine code verification, 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 Chevelle Market Overview

Based on 262 Chevrolet Chevelle listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

262
Listed Now
$62,468
Avg. Asking Price
1964–1977
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $54,995
Low: $2,500 High: $379,970
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 59%
Manual 32% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 21% ◄
Good 8%
Fair 1%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 262 listings →
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Classic Chevrolet Chevelle Buyer's Guide

The Chevrolet Chevelle launched in 1964 as Chevrolet's mid-size A-body entry, and within two years it had become the foundation of one of the most successful muscle-car lineages in American automotive history. The 1970 LS6 SS454 Chevelle remains the high-water mark of factory muscle-car horsepower from the entire era — a rating of 450 horsepower from a stock 454 that put GM's Chevelle definitively at the top of the 1970 muscle-car hierarchy. Across fourteen model years (1964-1977), the Chevelle market is one of the deepest and most active segments in the entire American collector hobby — with documented original SS454 cars commanding six-figure money and clean driver-quality cars remaining attainable. This guide covers what every buyer should verify before paying premium money for any Chevelle SS variant.

What to Check Before Buying

Order PHS Documentation Report ($50-$80) — Pontiac Historic Services maintains Chevy A-body records too. Confirms original engine, trans, axle, options.
Verify SS option code on cowl tag — 1964-1969: RPO code in cowl tag. 1970-1972: SS is stand-alone model — verify VIN body code.
Read engine stamp code (front pad below head) — KL/KK = 1969 SS396/375. CRV/CRW = 1970 LS6 SS454/450. CSU = 1970-1971 LS5 SS454/360.
Cross-reference engine casting number — Casting on back of block. 396 (3855961, 3902406), 402 (3963512), 454 (3963512, 3999289).
For LS6/Z16 claims, demand specialist authentication — Re-stamped blocks and cloned cowl tags are well-documented forgeries. $200-$500 specialist inspection mandatory.
Inspect perimeter frame at body mount points — Body mount bushings collapse and water pools above. Frame rust here = $1,500-$3,500 repair minimum.
Probe frame at front kick-up — Behind front wheels. Solid steel resists; rotten metal flakes.
Check trunk drop-offs and rear quarters — Magnet test for filler. Lift trunk mat to inspect drop-offs and rear pan.
Verify 12-bolt rear end (SS cars) — SS Chevelles use 12-bolt; base cars use 10-bolt. Check casting and verify gear ratio against PHS report.
Compression test all eight cylinders — Should read 145-185 PSI uniformly. Variance >15% = head gasket or worn rings.

Common Issues

Chevelle rust follows the GM A-body pattern: lower rear quarters, trunk drop-offs, frame rails (especially under the rear seat where the body mounts to the frame), floor pans, cowl seam, lower fenders ahead of the doors, and rear window channels on coupes. The 1964-1967 cars use a perimeter frame; the 1968-1972 cars use the same basic perimeter frame with revisions. Both rust at the body mount points and at the rear frame kick-up where the body mount bushings collapse and water pools. Mechanically, the small-block 327 (1964-1968), 350 (1969-1977), and the big-block 396 (1965-1969), 402 (1970-1972), and 454 (1970-1973) V8s are all bulletproof when maintained. Common issues include worn timing chain on tired engines, leaky oil pan and valve cover gaskets, broken motor mounts (a Big Block specialty), and tired Quadrajet or Holley carburetors. The Muncie M20/M21/M22 four-speeds are robust; the Powerglide, Turbo 350, and Turbo 400 automatics are equally durable. The Chevelle's 12-bolt rear end (Chevelle SS-specific) is strong; the 10-bolt (base cars) is weaker but still durable. Differential whine on deceleration indicates worn pinion bearings — $1,500-$2,800 to repair properly. Electrical issues are universal classic-car concerns: brittle 50+ year-old wiring, failed voltage regulators, worn ignition switches, and failed cowl tag retainer rivets. Many cars have been restored with reproduction wiring; verify the harness routing and connector quality before purchase.

What to Look For

PHS Documentation is the gold-standard verification for any Chevelle SS claim. PHS (Pontiac Historic Services) is misnamed — they actually maintain documentation for Chevrolet, Pontiac, Buick, and Oldsmobile A-body cars. The PHS Documentation Report ($50-$80) confirms the original equipment of the car: engine code, transmission code, axle ratio, paint code, options, and dealer destination. For any Chevelle SS priced over $45,000, PHS documentation is mandatory. For 1964-1969 cars, verify the SS option code on the cowl tag. The 1965-1969 SS cars used specific RPO codes (Z16 for the 1965 SS396, L78 for the 1966-1969 396/375 hp). For 1970-1972 cars, the SS package was an actual model designation — the second character of the VIN identifies the body style and the engine code is in the fifth digit. Engine verification by casting numbers and stamping is essential. The 396 (casting 3855961, 3902406, others), 402 (casting 3963512), and 454 (casting 3963512, 3999289) big-blocks all have specific casting numbers that verify originality. The two-letter stamp code on the front of the block (just below the cylinder head, on a flat pad) identifies the specific engine type. The most desirable codes are KL/KK (1969 SS396/375 hp), CRV/CRW (1970 LS6 SS454/450 hp), and CSU (1970-1971 LS5 SS454/360 hp). Frame inspection is the second non-negotiable. Crawl under the car with a flashlight. Probe the perimeter frame at the rear body mount points and at the front kick-up. Body mount bushings collapse over 50+ years and water pools above them, rotting the frame from inside the boxed sections. Replacement is $2,000-$5,000 per side if needed. For LS6 SS454 claims (1970 only), demand specialist authentication. The genuine LS6 has the CRV (manual transmission) or CRW (automatic transmission) engine stamping, the COPO-route documentation, and specific build sheet entries. Forgeries exist with re-stamped blocks and cloned cowl tags.

Price Guide

Base Chevelles (1964-1977) remain the bargain entry into A-body ownership. Driver-quality 1964-1967 base cars run $22,000-$40,000. 1968-1972 base cars (the most popular era for cosmetic restomod builds) run $25,000-$45,000. 1973-1977 Colonnade-body Chevelles are dramatically cheaper — $15,000-$28,000 for solid drivers. SS Chevelle pricing varies dramatically by year and engine. 1965 SS396 Z16 (the rare launch-year SS396, only 200 built): $95,000-$220,000+ for documented examples. 1966-1967 SS396 cars: driver-quality $45,000-$75,000, documented L78 SS396/375 hp $80,000-$140,000. 1968-1969 SS396: driver-quality $50,000-$85,000, documented L78 cars $95,000-$160,000. 1970 SS454 cars are the high-water mark. LS5 SS454/360 hp: driver-quality $70,000-$120,000. LS6 SS454/450 hp: $120,000-$280,000+ for documented numbers-matching cars. The 1970 LS6 SS454 convertible (rarer than the hardtop) is $220,000-$450,000+ for documented examples. 1971-1972 SS454 cars have appreciated dramatically since 2018. Driver-quality 1971 SS454/365 hp: $55,000-$95,000. Documented 1972 SS454 cars: $60,000-$120,000. The 1971-1972 cars represent the smart-money entry into SS454 ownership. Project cars (running but rough) start around $15,000-$28,000 for base Chevelles and $30,000-$60,000 for SS variants. Stripped roller candidates: $8,000-$18,000 for base cars, $20,000-$40,000 for SS variants.

Did You Know?

The 1965 Z16 SS396 was Chevrolet's launch of the 396 cubic inch big-block in the Chevelle, and only 200 cars were built — making them among the rarest production muscle cars ever produced. The Z16 package included the 375-horsepower L37 396 V8, four-speed manual transmission, heavy-duty suspension, special wheels, and unique trim. Documented Z16 cars now command $95,000-$220,000+ depending on condition, and require specialist authentication through the National Z16 Registry. The 1970 LS6 SS454 was the high-water mark of factory muscle-car horsepower from the entire era. The LS6's 450-horsepower rating (gross horsepower) was the highest factory rating Chevrolet ever applied to a passenger-car engine through that point in history. Only 4,475 LS6 cars were built across 1970 production (hardtops, convertibles, and El Caminos combined). Documented numbers-matching LS6 cars now trade for $120,000-$450,000+ depending on body style and equipment. The Chevelle was discontinued after the 1977 model year, replaced by the Malibu nameplate that had originally been a Chevelle trim level. Total Chevelle production across 14 model years exceeded 5.7 million units, making it among the most successful mid-size GM nameplates of the era.

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