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Forgot to include a few pics of the green 69 Camaro after I got it all done. Last two was its first time out at Byron IL Dragway, and the others were after I had paint & bodywork done,
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Here you go... Attachment 248687 Attachment 248688 Attachment 248689 |
Berger COPO pictures
Thanks Bruce, almost called you to post them initially. This looks lots better.....
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You can always call me :) :biggthumpup: |
Bruce has this picture posting stuff down to a science :BruceRocks:
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In a previous post here I made mention of a friend's 68 Camaro SS396 L89, one of 272 produced that year. Here are some pictures of it when I bought it in early 1980, from another friend. Back story.....I've known this car since 1972, when my friend Bruce bought it from a salvage yard as a running, driving car. He went thru the motor and added headers, a Hurst Super Shifter, and probably a few other goodies that I've forgotten. Factory 4.10 gear, and I think it's an M21, not M22. This thing ran really strong. I had planned to do a total resto on it, but a couple months after I bought it, I had the opportunity to buy a 70 Dodge Hemi Challenger from the original owner, a guy that I worked with. So, I jumped on that opportunity and sold the Camaro to my friend Brian, who still owns the car.
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After 27 years of doing absolutely nothing with this Camaro, another friend and I shamed Brian into getting the thing off to the body shop for body work, and paint. We hauled it down to a shop near Springfield MO, where the work was done, and they did a really nice job. That's the good news.....the bad news is, once back home, it got pushed into Brian's shop and buried with absolutely nothing else done to it in the 15 years since :(
Not long after Brian bought it from me, he was able to do a title search with the State of Illinois (back in the good old days when you could do things like that without people getting their panties in a bunch) and he got in touch with the original owner. He confirmed that it was indeed an original L89 car and that he blew the engine under warrranty, which explained the "CE" block in the car. In late 71 or early 72, his lower level garage flooded in a heavy storm and the Camaro was inundated. His insurance company would go either way, fixing the car or totalling it. He said the car needed brakes and tires and had some rust showing, so he decided to let them total it. That's how it ended up at the salvage yard where my friend Bruce bought it. |
WOW! I could listen to these stories all day! Keep ‘em coming.
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My '68 L72/M22/4.10 Biscayne when Larry Myers brought it home to his mother's driveway from Polar Chevrolet in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. And some photos from his days racing it.
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