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1970 Chevrolet Nova

$99,997

1970 Chevrolet Nova

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Nova

Year

1970

Mileage

56,979 miles

VIN

114270W383456

Body Type

Coupe

Transmission

Manual

Engine

396ci Turbo-Jet 375hp Big Block V8

Description

1970 Chevrolet Nova SS 396 — Big Block 4-Speed with Cowl Induction Why This Car Is Special The 1970 Chevrolet Nova SS 396 occupies a specific and well-earned place in the muscle car era. While the Chevelle and Camaro got most of the press, Chevrolet engineers understood that dropping a big block into a lighter, smaller body produced a very different kind of performance car — one that was harder to dismiss at the strip and easier to park anywhere else. The Nova's X-body platform weighed significantly less than the Chevelle's A-body, which meant the 396 cubic inch Turbo-Jet V8 had considerably less mass to motivate.

The result was a car that ran quicker than its sticker price suggested and competed directly with machinery costing far more. The VIN on this car decodes to confirm it was built at the Willow Run, Michigan assembly plant in 1970, with the SS package and the 396 engine as factory-installed equipment. The engine code points to the L78 specification — the 375 horsepower version of the 396 — which was the most powerful naturally aspirated big block offered in the Nova SS that year.

Chevrolet offered the 396 in the Nova SS in three states of tune for 1970: 350 hp, 375 hp, and a solid-lifter 375 hp version. The 375 hp hydraulic-lifter L78 that lives in this car is the high-output variant most buyers were after, rated at 415 lb-ft of torque. It is paired with the close-ratio 4-speed manual transmission, which was the correct combination for buyers who wanted maximum performance rather than convenience.

The 1970 model year was the final year Chevrolet marketed the engine displacement as '396.' The actual displacement had been quietly bored to 402 cubic inches starting in 1970, but Chevrolet continued to badge these cars as 396s for that model year because the 396 name carried weight with buyers. The badging on this car accurately reflects how it left the factory. Features List 396ci Turbo-Jet L78 375hp Big Block V8 Close-Ratio 4-Speed Manual Transmission Factory SS Package Cowl Induction Hood Black Vinyl Top Center Console Dashboard Tachometer SS Steering Wheel Dual Exhaust Chrome Front and Rear Bumpers Woodgrain Door Panels Magnum 500-Style Wheels Goodyear Polyglas Tires Clean Undercarriage Mechanical The 396 Turbo-Jet under the cowl induction hood is the L78 variant, rated at 375 horsepower and 415 lb-ft of torque from the factory.

This engine used solid valve springs, an aggressive hydraulic camshaft, an 800 cfm Holley four-barrel carburetor, and 11.0:1 compression. It was not a subtle engine. Chevrolet built it for buyers who wanted to use it.

The cowl induction hood feeds cooler, denser outside air directly into the carburetor from the high-pressure area at the base of the windshield, a system that provided a measurable intake charge advantage over a standard hood setup. The 4-speed manual transmission is the correct companion to the L78. When this combination was new, Car and Driver and other publications consistently tested similarly equipped Novas in the high 13-second range in the quarter mile, with 60 mph arriving in under six seconds — numbers that placed the Nova SS 396 ahead of many better-known competitors.

The undercarriage photographs show a solid, clean structure with no visible rust or patch repair, which matters considerably when evaluating a car of this age from any part of the country, but especially so for cars with an unknown history. Interior The black vinyl interior is correct and well-suited to a car spec'd at this level. The center console runs between the bucket seats and houses the shifter for the 4-speed, keeping the mechanical relationship between driver and drivetrain as direct as it should be.

The dashboard tachometer is mounted in the instrument cluster, giving the driver accurate engine speed information without requiring an aftermarket pod on the column or dash. The SS steering wheel — a specific option for the Super Sport package — provides a smaller diameter

Classic Chevrolet Nova Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1962–1979
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Expert buyer's guide to the classic Chevrolet Nova 1962–1979. SS396 verification, COPO documentation, cowl tag decoding, floor pan inspection, and current market pricing tiers.
This guide covers
10-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
6 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Chevrolet Nova Market Overview

Based on 97 Chevrolet Nova listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

97
Listed Now
$45,476
Avg. Asking Price
1962–1978
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Above Average
This car: $99,997
Low: $7,500 High: $174,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 68%
Manual 27% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 10%
Good 6%
Fair 1%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 97 listings →
💰

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Classic Chevrolet Nova Buyer's Guide

The Chevrolet Nova ran from 1962 through 1979 and spent most of that run being underestimated. General Motors built it on a compact platform originally designed for the economy-minded Chevy II, then spent the late 1960s cramming engines as big as the 396 cubic-inch big-block into every corner they could find. The result is one of the most rewarding sleepers in the classic car market — if you know how to verify what you're actually buying. A documented SS396 is worth real money. A car wearing repro SS badges without a cowl tag to back them up is worth considerably less.

What to Check Before Buying

VIN Engine Decode — On 1968 to 1971 cars the VIN does not encode the engine; decode the block casting number and stamped suffix code. Any mismatch means the SS package is not factory.
Cowl Tag Check — Locate and photograph the firewall cowl tag. Verify body code, trim code, and option codes match the advertised configuration.
Block Casting Number — Read the engine block casting number on the rear driver's side. Cross-reference against published casting number guides for the claimed engine.
Floor Pan Probe — From underneath, probe floor pans with a screwdriver at seat mount areas and around the transmission tunnel. Soft metal means rot.
Rocker Panel Magnet Test — Run a magnet along the full length of each rocker. Filler is non-magnetic. Check for rippling or waviness indicating patch panels.
Cowl Seam Inspection — With the hood open, inspect the cowl seam at the windshield base. Bubbling paint or soft metal indicates serious rust.
Rear Quarter Rust — Check lower rear quarters and the area behind the rear wheel opening. These rust from the inside out — look for bubbling paint.
Trunk Floor Check — Pull up the trunk mat and inspect the floor and spare tire well for rust-through. Check seams where the floor meets the quarters.
Subframe Mount Condition — Inspect front subframe mounting points on the unibody for corrosion. Cracked or rotted mounts require serious structural repair.
Cooling System Check — On 396 cars, check for overheating history: rusty coolant, white residue on valve covers, or milky oil on the dipstick.

Common Issues

Floor pan rust is the Nova's most universal problem — water trapped under carpet rots the pans from above while road spray attacks from below. Budget $1,500–$4,000 for full floor replacement on a rough car. Cowl rust at the windshield base is serious structural rot affecting the firewall — repair costs run $2,500–$5,000. Rocker panel rust is cosmetic on the surface but structural underneath; full rocker replacement runs $800–$2,000 per side. Lower rear quarter rust is common and repairable but can extend into the trunk floor. On 396 cars, check for overheating damage — cracked heads and warped intake manifolds result from cooling system neglect. SS badge fraud is widespread: verify every claim with cowl tag data.

What to Look For

Start with the cowl tag — riveted to the firewall, lists original body, trim, and option codes. On 1968 to 1971 Novas the engine is not encoded in the VIN; verify the engine by its block casting number and stamped suffix code. On 396/SS cars, confirm block casting numbers and casting dates. Inspect floor pans from underneath with a screwdriver — they rot from trapped moisture under carpeting. Check rocker panels and lower rear quarters for filler with a magnet. Inspect the cowl seam at the base of the windshield for rust perforation. Look at the rear frame rails where they meet the floor. On manual transmission cars, check the bellhousing area for cracked metal. Verify front subframe mounting points for corrosion. Check trunk floor and spare tire well.

Price Guide

Third-gen 1975–1979 drivers: $8,000–$18,000. Chevy II 1962–1967 with V8: $18,000–$32,000. Second-gen 1968–1974 non-SS 350: $22,000–$38,000. SS350 driver: $28,000–$42,000. Documented SS396 L34: $55,000–$75,000. Numbers-matching SS396 L78: $70,000–$90,000. COPO 9562 documented: $90,000–$130,000+. Deduct 30–40% for a non-original engine. Regional premiums apply in the Southwest where rust-free originals surface more frequently.

Did You Know?

The Nova nameplate generated an urban legend in Spanish-speaking markets — "no va" loosely means "it doesn't go" — though GM sold Novas successfully throughout Latin America. The 1975 Nova hatchback shared its platform with the Pontiac Ventura and Oldsmobile Omega. Yenko Chevrolet of Canonsburg, Pennsylvania was responsible for most documented COPO Nova orders — Don Yenko personally lobbied GM engineers to enable the 427 installation in the compact platform.

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