Elite Dealer

1963 Chevrolet Corvair

$16,495

1963 Chevrolet Corvair

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Corvair

Year

1963

Mileage

8,000 miles

VIN

AMS38550

Body Type

Convertible

Transmission

Manual

Description

1963 Chevrolet Corvair Classic complete car. Manual. Original engine. Runs and drives. Does need rear vinyl window, have a convertible top if you need one. Would be a super fun car for summer. Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Classic Chevrolet Corvair Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1960–1969
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Expert buyer's guide to the Chevrolet Corvair 1960–1969. Cooling tin inspection, engine seal diagnosis, Corsa turbo identification, suspension generations, and 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 Corvair Market Overview

Based on 48 Chevrolet Corvair listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

48
Listed Now
$16,110
Avg. Asking Price
1960–1968
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $16,495
Low: $3,495 High: $41,500
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 35%
Manual 42% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 4%
Good 21%
Fair 8%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 48 listings →
💰

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Classic Chevrolet Corvair Buyer's Guide

The Chevrolet Corvair was the most technically adventurous American car of the 1960s and the most politically controversial. Air-cooled, rear-engined, and available with a turbocharged engine two full decades before turbos became mainstream, the Corvair offered genuine European sports car character at Chevrolet prices. Ralph Nader painted it as dangerous; independent government testing largely exonerated the design. Today the Corvair is a legitimate collector car with a devoted community, excellent club support through CORSA, and one of the most engaging driving experiences in the classic American market — but its unique air-cooled engineering demands a buyer who knows what to inspect.

What to Check Before Buying

Cooling Tin Audit — Open rear decklid and verify every piece of cooling shrouding is present, correctly installed, and undamaged. Missing tin = overheating risk.
Push-Rod Tube Inspection — Check all 12 push-rod tubes for oil seepage. Light weeping is common on old engines; heavy oil loss means O-ring replacement needed.
Engine Cradle Rust — Inspect the engine cradle crossmember from underneath for rust. Structural rot here requires welding repair.
Turbo Shaft Play — On Spyder/Corsa turbo cars, check turbocharger shaft play with engine off. Excessive play indicates center section bearing wear.
Carburetor Sync — Start the engine and listen for even running. A badly-synchronized 4-carb setup runs rough; a properly tuned one is smooth.
Floor Pan Condition — Probe floor pans from underneath. Rust at seat mount areas and forward of the rear axle is common on unibody Corvairs.
Rocker Panels — Check rockers with a magnet. Filler is non-magnetic. Check for perforation at the rocker-to-quarter junction.
Trim Level Verification — Locate the firewall data plate and verify the original trim level: 500, 700, Monza, or Corsa. Corsa cars command a premium.
Rear Suspension Condition — On 1960–1964 cars, inspect the camber compensator bar. On 1965–1969 cars, check the fully-independent U-joints for wear and play.
Convertible Top Operation — Operate the top through a full raise-and-lower cycle. Check the header seal and side seals for leaks and smooth operation.

Common Issues

Missing or damaged cooling tin is the most serious reliability issue — overheating causes cracked cylinders, a very expensive repair ($3,000–$6,000). Push-rod tube O-ring failure causes oil seeping; budget $200–$400 for O-ring replacement. Engine cradle rust is structural and requires welding. Carburetor synchronization on 4-carb cars is a skill — a badly-tuned setup runs rough and deters buyers. Early swing-axle cars (1960–1964) reward understanding of the suspension geometry. Turbocharger center section bearing failure is repairable but requires a Corvair specialist.

What to Look For

Inspect the cooling tin around the rear engine before anything else — every piece of shrouding must be present and correctly fitted. Missing tin causes cylinder overheating and cracking. Check the 12 push-rod tubes for oil seepage. Inspect the engine cradle crossmember underneath for rust — structural. On turbo cars, check turbocharger shaft play with engine off. Inspect body for unibody rust points: rocker panels, floor pans, lower quarters, and rear valance. On convertibles, inspect the top mechanism and header weatherstripping. Verify trim level via the firewall data plate to confirm Corsa or Monza designation.

Price Guide

First-gen 1960–1964 base coupe driver: $7,000–$14,000. First-gen convertible: $15,000–$28,000. Monza Spyder turbo: $14,000–$22,000. Second-gen 1965–1969 base coupe: $10,000–$18,000. Corsa 4-carb: $16,000–$26,000. Corsa turbocharged: $20,000–$35,000. Second-gen convertible: add $5,000–$10,000. Rampside pickup: $18,000–$32,000. Greenbrier van: $12,000–$25,000. Corvairs remain a significant value relative to contemporary Mustangs and Camaros.

Did You Know?

Ralph Nader published "Unsafe at Any Speed" in 1965 primarily targeting the Corvair — the same year Chevrolet introduced the fully revised second-gen with independent rear suspension. A 1972 NHTSA study found the 1960–1963 Corvair's handling "not significantly worse" than contemporary vehicles. The Corvair was the only American car built simultaneously as a sedan, coupe, convertible, station wagon, van, and pickup truck on the same platform.

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