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Old 10-25-2003, 02:46 AM
Lethal1973 Lethal1973 is offline
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Default Re: 1970-73 Yenko Camaro Advert

Here is some info on the green car. Original dealer was Jay Kline Chevrolet in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Car was originally ordered by Jay's son, Steve Kline. Steve used to do some road racing in the early 1970's - he raced a strange Chevy powered racer called an Enchida or Enchada(sp?). The Camaro is a 1973. It is a Z-28/Rally Sport/Type LT and was ordered with Automatic and Air. It is a late 1973 car built in July or August (I think). Yenko Conversion was an additional $2500 on top of the original price. That included the body modifications and the engine conversion to a 427. I don't know if Jay Kline or Yenko did the work. The 427 was a solid lifter version with aluminum heads. My understanding is that the aluminum heads were used to compensate for the difference in weight between the proposed fiberglass front and the actual modified steel front. The interior has the rear package shelf removed. The rear seat is shortened so that the interior extends all the way into the trunk. Battery was mounted in the trunk. Seats are the deluxe cloth/vinyl in green and driver seat is pretty hacked up (nobody seems to carry a green replacement seat cover set) Original hood was supposed to be fiberglass but is steel with a bonded on cowl induction hood scoop. The hood started losing paint around the scoop about 5 years ago, so after trying some repairs, it was replaced with a Goodmark steel unit (still in primer). The trash man wouldn't take the old hood, so it is still sitting in the garage. Car also had a ram-air set-up with a large assembly that sealed to the cowl hood and also hat two flex hoses that went to holes and fittings in the front core support area. Looked kind of home-made. I think I still have most of the pieces. Had to take the right core support air inlet fitting out when the battery went back to the front long ago. Washer bottle looks like it was on the right and moved to the left to make room for the hose to the air cleaner setup. Has a 150 mph speedo and a mechanical tach built into the stock instument cluster. Went to replace the cluster awhile back (broken plastic tabs) and found that the whole cluster was hardwired - no printed circuit board-so left it as is rattling in the dash.
Car was ordered with AC but it is gone. I remember taking out the inside ductwork but cannot remember taking out the engine bay stuff so I am thinking that it may have come with the AC removed (maybe the AC was used to get the HD Radiator and front springs??). Car has a turbo 400 automatic-shifts hard (shift kit?) Has a Plymouth torqueflite 727 (?)transmission filter. Rear end is a 12 bolt - not sure what ratio. The front is steel with trans-am air extractors and wheel flairs molded in. The seams are all filled in (except for the rubber nose) so that the front is all one piece. No small rally sport bumbers-that area was filled in. Front lower spoiler was modified also. Sold the car 10 or 12 years ago for $4500 and bought it back for $2500 less than a year later. The buyer bought the car for the big block-he took it out and replaced it with a small block (am not sure what kind). Drives ok-leaks oil in the driveway. Still have the original title with my notarized signature as selling the car but never put his name in the "sold to" spot and he never transferred the ownership so have no idea where that original engine is now. Still have the original rusty air cleaner. There used to be a 427 decal on it but that has worn off almost completely. There is a Don Yenko Sportscars decal across the chrome top that is still present. Small Yenko shield emblem on the glovebox that has faded from the sun and is almost unreadable. "Off Road Use Only" decal in the engine bay on the radiator top. Also a 427 emmissions tune-up decal on the radiator top cover-decal is pretty beat up. Still has original glass except for the windshield which was replaced in the mid 1970's. Original windshield had a Yenko decal in the lower left corner which I was able to remove and reapply on the new one but it only lasted a few years and then peeled off leaving a ghost impression. There are a couple of stickers on the drivers door above the regular GM stickers having to do with body modified by dealer but still conforming to federal safety standards. Unfortunatley, some of the info disappeared when I had the bright idea to clean the door jamb with lacquor thinner years ago. One sticker says something to the effect that car is for marketing and testing and may not be licensed for street use?? Had a red-gold-blue Yenko shield emblem on the back end but it was stolen years ago alond with the 427 emblem in the front grille. The 427 on the back was left alone. When I repurchsed the car I got tired of having people ask me to let them have a look at the 427 so I removed the back emblem and put a Z-28 emblem on the spolier (it was a 69 Z-28 fender emblem). Then I got tired of hearing about the wrong emblem so put back the 427 and a black/chrome Yenko emblem that I found at a swap meet. Put in a bolt in rollbar when I first got the car plus some extra gauges in the dash where the air conditioning vent was. Put a Corvette center brakelite on the roof in the mid-eighties. Replaced original wheels with centerlines early on. Those and the GF Goodrich tires were stolen (inside my garage-nice neighborhood) and then were replaced Enki wheels and Pirelli P7 tires. The tires rotted away over the years and were replaced a few years ago with some so-so tires from the local Goodyear dealer. Paint has gone to hell-lots of cracking and crazing all over. Car sits outside during the non-winter months so looks its age. Still fun to drive-has lots of character-kind of like Clint Eastwood-lots of wrinkles but still looking dangerous.
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