1965 Chevrolet El Camino
$37,495
Vehicle Details
Chevrolet
El Camino
1965
43,000 miles
Pickup Truck
Blue
Black
Manual
RWD
Gasoline
Is A Balanced 350 LT-1 4 Bolt Main 2482 Main Cap Block
Excellent
Description
This is a serious 1965 El Camino with 45 years of single-owner history and meticulous garage storage. The star here is the built 350 LT-1 engine: balanced with a 4-bolt main block, steel crank, Speed Pro pistons, and 202 Fuelie heads. Topped with a chrome Edelbrock tunnel ram feeding dual Holley 660 carbs, it breathes through headers and California Turbo mufflers.
The ignition is Accel Super Coil, fuel delivery via Holley electric pump, and cooling handled by a new aluminum radiator with electric fans. Power goes through a Muncie 4-speed with Hurst Super Shifter and Zoom clutch to a 12-bolt rear end. Cragar S/S knock-off wheels wear Mickey Thompson Indy tires.
The chassis features chrome sway bars front and rear with a chrome driveline. Interior highlights include bucket seats, custom black trim, all Stewart Warner gauges, Grant oak steering wheel on chrome column, and custom tonneau cover. New master cylinder, rear brakes, wheel cylinders, and battery.
Corvette Sapphire Blue paint. Runs and sounds excellent. Clean title in hand.
Classic Chevrolet El Camino Buyer's Guide
Chevrolet El Camino Market Overview
Based on 157 Chevrolet El Camino listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com
Classic Chevrolet El Camino Buyer's Guide
The Chevrolet El Camino has lived two distinct lives across nearly thirty years of production. The original 1959-1960 cars were full-size Brookwood-based station wagon-pickup hybrids that competed directly with the Ford Ranchero. The El Camino disappeared for three years before returning in 1964 as a mid-size A-body car-pickup based on the Chevelle, and that's the El Camino most enthusiasts know and want today. From the 1968-1972 SS396 cars to the 1970 SS454 LS6 (yes, the El Camino was available with the 450-horsepower LS6 in 1970) to the smooth Colonnade-bodied 1973-1977 cars and the squared-off 1978-1987 final-generation, the El Camino market is one of the most underappreciated segments in the entire classic GM hobby. The truck guys love them, the muscle car guys love them, and the prices have moved accordingly over the past decade.
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1965 Chevrolet El Camino
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