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need some info

 
76 zack 76 zack
New User | Posts: 1 | Joined: 01/05
Posted: 01/12/05
07:23 AM

I am doing a research paper over the history of Camaros. I was wondering if anybody could give me some info about their history. If you could i would really use it. thank you   

 
EthelkilledFred EthelkilledFred
User | Posts: 109 | Joined: 03/04
Posted: 01/12/05
08:53 AM

the history of Camaros



Sault man’s Black Panther only one of its
kind

Monday, November 11, 2002 - 09:00



Local News - Sault resident Bob Simonen has a car that’s making
headlines across North America
His 1967 Black Panther Camaro is the only one of its kind known to still
exist

Classic Car magazine found out Simonen had the car and since then it
has been a feature in the magazine and on the cover of numerous
wheels sections in newspapers across the country. "It’s been
mind-boggling," said Simonen, who has loved cars since he was old
enough to drive. "There’s such an interest in the car. I guess car
enthusiasts are looking for something new."

Since the car was found by the media, Simonen has been getting calls
from all over Canada and the United States. "The Americans are going
nuts for it," he said.

Simonen bought the car for $3,625 in 1967 at Gorrie's
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile in Toronto. "I just went down to look for a plain
car," he said.
He drove the car until the mid-1980s and then put it away. Between 2001
and 2002 Simonen did a full frame-off restoration of the automobile.

This year, Simonen entered the car in shows for the first time. The Black
Panther appeared in nine shows and won 11 trophies.

When Simonen bought the car he had no idea it would be such a
collector's item one day. "I just bought it because I liked the car," he
said.

It is estimated that fewer than 50 of these cars were produced. Gorrie's
modified the cars by incorporating different performance options. Each
was painted black with a gold band around the nose and a nameplate
was fixed to each fender and on the rear deck lid.

The interior of the car was also gold and it had 1967 Confederation
plates, which Simonen still has in his basement.

"There are very few cars with the gold interior and gold stripping," said
Simonen.

When the car was produced, it also had a 007 package because the
James Bond movie Goldfinger was so popular at the time. The 007
package had mock toggle switches that said things such as 'seat eject.'
Simonen had the 007 package removed when he bought the car and now
he is kicking himself.
He isn’t sure how much the car is worth today but he said he would
consider selling it.

For how much?

"The sky is the limit," he said.





 

 
EthelkilledFred EthelkilledFred
User | Posts: 109 | Joined: 03/04
Posted: 01/12/05
08:54 AM

the history of Camaros








CAMARO by Steve Statham,


With more than 80 colour and 40 black/white photographs, this book vividly displays the hottest Camaros of all time. This thorough history and stunning photos are complemented by performance figures, comparison charts plus option and engine data.
The story starts in the mid-1960's, with Chevrolet working on the Panther prototype, an answer to the faithful's call for performance cars. The Panther name was dropped in favour of Camaro, and GM debuted the new musclecar in 1967. The book goes on to chronicle the wild cars of the musclecar era, including some of the most powerful factory-built machines ever created - SS396s, Z28s, COPOs and more. From there it's into the 1970s, when the Camaro sold record numbers as one of the few performance cars in a fuel-economy-conscious world.
Through the ' 80s and into the 1990s when the new Z28 SS rekindled musclecar memories,
it's all here !

 

 
EthelkilledFred EthelkilledFred
User | Posts: 109 | Joined: 03/04
Posted: 01/12/05
09:04 AM













In Search of the Elusive Black Panther
Story Contributor: Bob & Lorraine Simonen
Edited by: ClassicCar.com
For more info>VISIT THE CAMARO PORTAL



While Ford was fighting off the early successes of the Chevrolet Corvair and Chevy II with their introduction of the Mustang in August of 1964, GM began work on a counter-punch experimental project named XP-836. The XP-836 project directly targeted the Ford Mustang mystique and the new youth market that emerged from almost nowhere in the eyes of GM marketers. The surprising popularly of Ford’s Mustang framed the XP-836 project from the very start and incorporated the “Mustang formula” in the early years of production.

In the winter of 1965, the XP-836 project turned out a proto type car based on some cobbled up Chevy IIs. While crude, the new Chevrolet was shaping up to run well along side Ford’s Pony car. Now named the “Panther”, the project and the proto-types were written about in great length by the automotive press with all the excitement of a pending rivalry with the Mustang. Given a name that the public could latch onto, the “Panther” was quickly being promoted as GM’s Mustang-fighter. Sometimes called “Chevy’s Mustang” the “Panther” evolved conceptually using much of the Mustang marketing formula.

 
Now branded with the “Panther” script and leaping-cat emblems similar to that used by Jaguar, the proto-types advanced with an outward confidence that Chevrolet’s sleek new cat would be chasing down the Mustang. By early 1966, Ralph Nader was doing a hatchet job on the Corvair, and GM management sought to tone-down the image of their new car in hopes of not drawing the attention of safety crusaders with the aggressive “Panther” name.

Seeking a “clammier” image for the new car, the marketing department looked to their current line of Chevrolet monikers, the Corvair, Corvette, Chevelle, and Chevy II for inspiration. Desiring another “C” name brand, merchandising manager Bob Lund and GM Car & Truck Group vice-president Ed Rollert poured through French and Spanish dictionaries and came up with “Camaro”. Meaning, “warm friend”, the new name offered GM an excellent label to compliment the current Chevrolet line and introduce their new car with a much tamer image. 








Though the “Camaro” name was replacing the various project names the car had been developed under, outside the company some controversy over the meaning of the new name was causing a potential image problem for the new car. In an unprecedented national conference call with some 200 journalists, GM released the “ warm & friendly” Camaro name to the public ahead of the cars introduction to dealer showrooms. The effort was successful in quashing any “image killing” interpretations of the new Camaro moniker.

In 1967, amidst the phenomenal success of the Ford Mustang, General Motors pulled off a sensational introduction of the Chevrolet Camaro by delivering over 212,000 units to dealer showrooms that year. Keeping in fashion with the Mustang formula, the Camaro was offered with a laundry list of options at both the factory and dealer level. Camaro customers could custom build their own car with a host of options previously only available on Chevrolet’s higher-line models.

Desiring the same custom performance treatments being offered by Shelby America for the Mustang, Camaro enthusiasts looked to the dealerships in hopes of finding these performance options. Happily, the folks at Toronto-based Gorries Chevrolet/Oldsmobile dealership answered the call to incorporate their race knowledge into the new Camaro. The result was the “Black Panther” Camaro.

 












A
lready known in racing and rally circles with their work on the Corvette, Gorries’s geared up to modify a limited number of Camaros into Black Panthers, giving the Camaro some real street muscle. Modifications such as heavy-duty front coils, rear leaf stiffeners, tubular shocks, 10” front disc brakes, power assist brakes and steering, 500 magnum wheels and low profile Uniroyal 8.55 X 14 tubeless tires were added to the dealer-modified cars. Brake balancing valves and other small tuning points remarkably improved the handling and the drivability of the standard production car.

All Gorries Black Panther Camaros were of course painted black, with a painted gold band around the nose. The Black Panther nameplate was fixed to the forefront of each fender and on the rear deck lid. A gold stripe was added along the bodyline above the rocker panel area and a Gold pin stripe was added just below the upper side bodyline.

The Panther’s came with a deluxe Gold interior and any of the regular factory options a customer might desire. This first Panther out of the Gorries shop was equipped with the “007” James Bond panel as a bit of a joke. Simply enough, a console was added in place of the glove box lid between the seats. The console featured a row of six or eight toggle switches labeled, Seat Ejector, Machine Guns, Smoke Ejectors, etc. What began as a joke later turned out later to be a customer demanded option that even the most reserved customers opted for.

Gorries offered both the 327 and 427 V-8 engine options for their Panthers. The 327 offering was the 275HP L30 engine, at 10:1 compression and made 355FT pounds of torque at 3,200 RPM. The optional blueprinted 427 - 435HP, ZL1 engine with its neck snapping 460FT pounds of torque at 4,000 RPM put some real teeth in the Panthers. At 12:1 compression, the ZL1 engine with its large 925 CFM 4-barrel carburetor proved to be a formal opponent for the Shelby GT-500 Mustangs, which carried the 428 big-block Ford engine, but only developed 355HP in 1967.






Gorries franchised the sale of the Black Panther to Chevrolet dealerships as far way as New Orleans. It’s estimated that less than 50 Black Panthers where produced. Only two cars are known to exist today, with the remainder unaccounted for. The Black Panther Camaro may be the rarest of the dealer inspired street racers and no doubt the best looking. While not as well know as the Yenko Camaros’, the Gorries “Black Panther” stands out as great example of dealer derived street muscle at a time when “Race on Sunday and Sell on Monday” was the performance enthusiast creed.

Its unknown how many of the Black Panthers still exist, but the example shown here is owned by Bob & Lorraine Simonen of Sault Ste. Marie of Ontario, Canada. Bob bought the car in April of 1967 from Gorries Downtown Chevrolet in Toronto. Bob drove the car daily until the mid 1980’s when he decided to garage his black beauty with thoughts of restoring it one day.

In October of 2001, everything fell together for Bob when he dusted of his project and began a full frame-off restoration of the Panther. Restoration work was completed in May of 2002. Shown here, the black and gold treatment really shows off the beauty of the Camaro’s lines and styling. Under the skin breaths the original heart of the 1960’s Chevrolet design team with some rather bold accents added by Gorries Chevrolet. Through Bob’s research, he has learn that his car is truly “the rarest and most
elusive Camaros’ on the street today.  Bob says his car is the only one known to exist to-day with the remainder unaccounted for….are there any more out there?  
 

 
EthelkilledFred EthelkilledFred
User | Posts: 109 | Joined: 03/04
Posted: 01/12/05
09:06 AM

I am doing a research paper over the history of Camaros


Hey, when your done with your paper, post here.

 

 

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