GM released several G-body muscle cars in its time, and some of them shot right to iconic fame. Here are some of the top ...
The Chevrolet Monte Carlo isn't usually part of the conversation about classic GM muscle cars, but it's an American-made, two ...
With fewer than 1,500 examples produced, this special 1980s Pontiac muscle car is seldom seen on the road today.
The Chevy Camaro is the only muscle car that never wimped out, and it dominated the 1970s the sales volume champ.
While the GTO was the first high-performance intermediate to sell in large numbers, it wasn't the first American model worthy ...
During a decade free of unnecessary restrictions, American manufacturers developed a series of wild drag strip-oriented ...
This combination of factors led to the rapid rise of the muscle car as the quintessential, all-American vehicle. Every automaker wanted a piece of the pie, and several brands began to launch models ...
Back in the 1960s and 1970s, working- and middle-class Americans could afford to buy, drive and even collect muscle cars.
Muscle cars represent the pinnacle of American automotive performance and style with their powerful engines, aggressive ...
Badged as the Chevrolet SS, it marked the first time the marque had offered a full rear-wheel-drive V8 muscle sedan since the Impala SS of the mid-1990s. The Muscle car class has shrunk ...
The concept of the COPO cars originated with Fred Gibb, a dealer and Chevy tuner who ordered fifty 1968 L78 V-8-equipped Novas fitted with three-speed automatic transmissions to homologate the cars ...
There was one car, however, that may have dropped a few ponies, but never lost its cool during the entire 1970s, and that of course is the Chevrolet ... possession of the muscle car segment.