fbpx
Wikipedia

Chevrolet Chevy II / Nova

The Chevrolet Chevy II/Nova is a small automobile manufactured by Chevrolet, and produced in five generations for the 1962 through 1979, and 1985 through 1988 model years. Built on the X-body platform, the Nova was the top selling model in the Chevy II lineup through 1968. The Chevy II nameplate was dropped after 1968, with Nova becoming the nameplate for all of the 1969 through 1979 models. It was replaced by the 1980 Chevrolet Citation introduced in the spring of 1979. The Nova nameplate returned in 1985, produced through 1988 as a S-car based, NUMMI manufactured, subcompact based on the front wheel drive, Japan home-based Toyota Sprinter.

Chevrolet Chevy II / Nova
1963 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 4-door sedan
Overview
Manufacturer
Production
  • 1961–1979
  • 1985–1988
Model years
  • 1962–1979
  • 1985–1988
Body and chassis
Class
Chronology
Successor (subcompact model)

History edit

Origin edit

Chevrolet designer Clare MacKichan recalled about creating the Chevy II: "There was no time for experimentation or doodling around with new ideas from either the engineers or from us in design; And it had to be a basic-type car." The 1962 Chevy II rode a 110 in (2,794 mm) wheelbase, compared to 109.5 in (2,781 mm) for the Ford Falcon, at which Chevy's new compact was aimed. "I think that was the quickest program we ever did at any time," he continued. "We worked night and day on that car, and it didn't take very long to run it through our shop because we had a deadline." And that is what made the Chevy II one of the fastest new-car development programs in GM history – just 18 months after the designers got the green light, the first production Chevy II rolled off the Willow Run, Michigan, assembly line in August 1961, in time for its September 29 introduction. Unlike the Corvair, the 1962 Chevy II design team deliberately avoided any revolutionary features in concept or execution; their mission was to give Chevrolet buyers a simple, back-to-the-basics compact car. When he announced the Chevy II to the press, Chevrolet General Manager Ed Cole described the car as offering "maximum functionalism with thrift." When the Chevy II was introduced, it was the second post-WWII American made car from the "Big 3", after the Pontiac Tempest (and the first Chevrolet since the 1928 Chevrolet National), to use a four-cylinder engine.

There was a lot of debate within the Chevrolet organization over just what to call this new car, and the decision to go with "Chevy II" was a very late one. Among the finalists was Nova. It lost out because it didn't start with a "C," but was selected as the name for the top-of-the-line series. Ultimately the Nova badge would replace Chevy II, but that wouldn't happen until 1969. In almost every way, the creators of the Chevy II used Falcon as a benchmark. The 1962 model range included sedans and wagons, as well as a two-door hardtop and a convertible. The only body styles it didn't offer which the Falcon did were a 2-door wagon/sedan delivery and coupe utility (the Ford Falcon Ranchero).

First generation (1962–1965) edit

  • Chevrolet Chevy II
  • First generation
 
1964 Chevrolet Chevy II two door sedan
Overview
Production1961–1965
Model years1962–1965
Assembly
Body and chassis
ClassCompact
Body style
LayoutFR layout
PlatformX-body
RelatedAcadian
Powertrain
Engine
  • 153 cu in (2.5 L) Chevrolet 153 I4
  • 194 cu in (3.18 L) I6
  • 230 cu in (3.8 L) I6
  • 283 cu in (4.64 L) V8
  • 327 cu in (5.36 L) V8
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase110 in (2,794 mm)
Length
  • 183 in (4,648 mm) Sedan, Coupe[1]
  • 187.4 in (4,760 mm) Station Wagon
Width70.8 in (1,798 mm)
Height54–55 in (1,372–1,397 mm) depending on body style

After the rear-engine Chevrolet Corvair was outsold by the conventional Ford Falcon in 1960, Chevrolet completed work on a more conventional compact car that would eventually become the Chevy II. The car was of semi-unibody construction having a bolt on front section joined to its unitized cabin and trunk rear section, available in two- and four-door sedan configurations as well as convertible and 4-door station wagon versions. The 1962 Chevy II came in three series and five body styles—the 100 Series, 300 Series and Nova 400 Series. A 200 series was also introduced, but was discontinued almost immediately.[2] The sportiest-looking of the lot was the US$2,475 ($23,944 in 2022 dollars [3]) Nova 400 convertible—23,741 were produced that year.[4]

 
1960s Chevrolet Nova emblem
 
1962 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 400 convertible
 
1963 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 400 4-Door Station Wagon

Available engines for the Chevy II in 1962 and 1963 included Chevrolet's inline-four engine of 153 cu in (2.5 L) and a new 194 cu in (3.2 L) Hi-Thrift straight-six engine. All Chevy II engines featured overhead valves. A V8 engine was not available in 1962 and 1963. With no documentation proving it, the legend of a dealer installed V8 engine being in a 1962 or 1963 model year Chevy II is a myth. Refer to the GM Heritage Center 1963 Chevrolet Nova information available on the GM Heritage site.[5] In addition, that documentation does not list a V8 engine as a possible dealer installed option.

In 1962 and 1963 the Nova option for the Chevy II was available in a convertible body style, and a two-door hardtop was available from 1962 to 1965, although the hardtop was dropped when the 1964 models were first introduced, but subsequently brought back to the line later in the model year. Like all Chevy two-door hardtops, the body style was marketed as the Sport Coupe.

For 1963, the Chevy II Nova Super Sport was released, under RPO Z03.[6] It featured special emblems, instrument package, wheel covers, side moldings, bucket seats, and floor shifter, and was available only on the 400 series sport coupe and convertible.[6] Cost of the package was US$161.40, equal to $1,542.77 today.[7] As mentioned above, the Nova option could not officially have V8 engines at this time—the standard SS engine was the six-cylinder (this was also applicable to the Impala (and later the early Chevelle c. 1964–65) when the SS was a sport and appearance package)—but small-block V8 engine swaps were commonplace among enthusiasts.

For 1964, sales were hit hard by the introduction of the new Chevelle,[8] and the Chevy II received its first factory V8 option, a 195 hp (145 kW) 283 cu in (4.6 L), as well as a 230 cu in (3.8 L) straight six.[9] The six-cylinder was all-new, replacing the older Stovebolt engine. Rival manufacturer Chrysler had earlier developed the Slant Six in their Plymouth Valiant, a Chevy II competitor, when the cars were introduced to the public in late 1959 as 1960 models. At introduction in the fall, the hardtop coupe was missing in the lineup, contributing to a loss of sales (as well as showroom appeal). Chevrolet subsequently reintroduced the Sport Coupe in the lineup later in the model year, and it remained available through 1967.

 
1965 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 4-door sedan (with aftermarket wheels)

The 1965 Chevrolet Chevy II and Nova were updated with cleaner front-end styling courtesy of a fresh full-width grille with new integrated headlight bezels. Parking lights moved down to the deep-section bumper, and sedans gained a new roofline. Taillight and backup lights were restyled, as was the rear cove. The 1965 Chevy II came in entry-level 100 form or as the posher Nova 400, each in three body styles. The Nova Super Sport came as a Sport Coupe only, and its production dipped to just 9,100 cars. Super Sports had a new brushed-chrome console with floor-mounted four-speed manual transmission or Powerglide automatic, but a column-mounted three-speed manual remained standard. Bucket seats wore textured vinyl trim, and the dashboard held ammeter, oil pressure, and temperature gauges. An expanded engine lineup gave customers six power choices of the six-cylinder or V-8 engines; the four-cylinder was available only in the 100. But, for Chevy II enthusiasts, 1965 is best remembered as the year the Chevy II became a muscle car. A 327 cu in (5.4 L) V8 was available with up to 300 hp (220 kW), suddenly putting Nova SS performance practically on a par with the GTO, 4-4-2, and 271 bhp Mustang 289s-at least in straight-line acceleration. Midyear also brought a more potent 283 with dual exhausts and 220 horsepower.

The Chevelle Malibu SS continued to eat away at the Nova SS market: Out of 122,800 Chevy IIs built for 1965 (compared to 213,601 Falcons), only 9,100 were Super Sports. For 1965, Chevy II had the dubious distinction of being the only car in GM's lineup to suffer a sales decline. It is possible that some Chevy II sales were lost to the brand-new '65 Corvair, which addressed virtually all its 1960–64 problems, got rave reviews from automotive journals and featured sleek new (Z-body) styling along with a brand-new chassis.

Second generation (1966–1967) edit

  • Chevrolet Chevy II
  • Second generation
 
1967 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 4-Door Sedan
Overview
Production1965–1967
Model years1966–1967
Assembly
Body and chassis
ClassCompact
Body style
LayoutFR layout
PlatformX-body
RelatedAcadian
Powertrain
Engine
  • 153 cu in (2.51 L) I4
  • 194 cu in (3.18 L) I6
  • 230 cu in (3.8 L) I6
  • 250ci (4.1L) I6 (1967)
  • 283 cu in (4.64 L) V8
  • 327 cu in (5.36 L) V8
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase110 in (2,794 mm)
Length
  • 183 in (4,648 mm) Sedan, Coupe[10]
  • 187.4 in (4,760 mm) Station wagon
Width71.3 in (1,811 mm)
Height
  • 55.1 in (1,400 mm) Sedan
  • 52.8–53.8 in (1,341–1,367 mm) Coupe
  • 55.7 in (1,415 mm) Station Wagon

1966 Chevy IIs introduced an extensive sharp-edged restyle based in part on the Super Nova concept car. In general, proportions were squared up but dimensions and features changed little. Highlights included a bold grille and semi-fastback roofline. "Humped" fenders in an angular rear end were reminiscent of larger 1966 Chevrolets, though the 1966 Chevy II and Nova had vertical taillights and single headlights. The lineup again started with Chevy II 100 and Chevy II Nova 400 models.

 
1966 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Sport Coupe
 
1967 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Station Wagon

For just $159 (equal to $1,434.1 today) more than a Nova 400, buyers could choose a Nova Super Sport. Available only in a Sport Coupe, the Nova SS was top of the line. The 194 cu in (3.18 L) inline-six was standard on the Super Sport, but any Chevy II (excluding four-cylinder) engine could be coupled with the SS. The Nova SS was visually distinguished by wide rocker panels and a bright aluminum deck lid cove. It had bright SS emblems on the grille and in the ribbed rear panel, and Super Sport script on the quarter panels. Wheel covers were inherited from the 1965 Malibu SS. Strato-bucket front seats were included, but a tachometer cost extra.[11] The ’66 Chevy II sales brochure clearly promoted the Super Sport as the “Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Super Sport,” but the name "Nova" was not used anywhere on the body. Front and rear emblems displayed "Chevy II SS."[12] In 1967, Chevy II was still the name of the vehicle, but the Nova SS option package replaced all Chevy II badging with Nova SS badging.

The 90 hp (67 kW) 153 cu in (2.51 L) inline-four engine was only offered in the base Chevy II 100 series models. Buyers could also order a 194 cu in (3.18 L) inline-six engine (std. in the SS), a 230 cu in (3.8 L) inline-six, a 195 hp (145 kW) or 220 hp (160 kW) 283 cu in (4.64 L) V-8, a 275 hp (205 kW) 327 cu in (5.36 L) V-8 and the top engine, a new Turbo-Fire 327 cu in (5.36 L) V-8 delivering 350 hp (260 kW). This engine was first seen in the Chevelle. This engine with the close-ratio four-speed manual transmission turned the normally mild Nova into a proper muscle car; The Powerglide automatic was not available with the 350 hp engine.

The 1967 models received nothing more than a touch-up after a restyling for 1966. All Novas got a crosshatch pattern that filled the deck lid trim panel. The Nova officially was still called the Chevy II Nova and had overtaken the bottom-rung Chevy II 100 in sales. The Chevy II 100 lacked much in the way of trim or brightwork. 1967 models carried significant improvements in the area of safety equipment. A government-mandated energy-absorbing steering column and safety steering wheel, soft interior parts such as armrests and sun visors, recessed instrument panel knobs, front seat belt anchors and dual brake master cylinders, were included in all 1967 models.


The 1967 Chevy II and its deluxe Nova rendition continued to attract compact-car shoppers, but the Chevrolet Camaro, introduced for 1967, took away some Nova sales. Available only in hardtop coupe form, the 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS got a new black-accented anodized aluminum grille. SS wheel covers were again inherited, this time from the 1965–66 Impala SS. The 1966 "Chevy II SS" badges were replaced with "Nova SS" emblems for the '67s. Nova versions started with the 194 cu in (3.18 L)in-line six engine but new was an optional 250 cu in (4.1 L) inline-six. Further powertrain options included a 195 hp (145 kW) 283 cu in (4.64 L) V-8 and, for $93 more, a 275 hp (205 kW) 327 cu in (5.36 L) V-8. Nova SS coupes had a console-mounted shift lever with their Powerglide automatic transmission or a four-speed manual. Other models had a column-mounted gearshift. Compared to the 1966 model year output, sales of the 1967 models dropped by more than a third to 106,500 (including 12,900 station wagons). About 10,100 Nova SS Chevrolets went to customers this year, 8,200 of them with V-8 engines. In the Chevy II 100 and regular Nova series, six-cylinder engines sold far better than V-8s.

Third generation (1968–1974) edit

  • Chevrolet Chevy II Nova
  • Chevrolet Nova
  • Third generation
 
Chevrolet Nova SS 350 coupe
Overview
Production1967–1974
Model years1968–1974
Assembly
Body and chassis
ClassCompact
Body style
LayoutFR layout
PlatformX-body
Related
Powertrain
Engine
List
  • 153ci (2.5L) I4
  • 194ci (3.1L) I6
  • 230ci (3.8L) I6
  • 250ci (4.1L) I6
  • 307ci (5.0L) V8
  • 327ci (5.4L) V8
  • 350ci (5.7L) V8
  • 396ci (6.5L) V8
  • 402ci (6.6L) V8
Transmission
List
Dimensions
Wheelbase111.0 in (2,819 mm)
Length189.4 in (4,811 mm)[13]
Width72.4 in (1,839 mm)
Height
  • 53.9 in (1,369 mm) Sedan
  • 52.4 in (1,331 mm) Coupe
 
1968 was the last year of the Chevy II Nova nameplate

The 1968 models were fully-redesigned with an extensive restyle on a longer 111-inch wheelbase that gave Chevrolet's compacts a chassis that was just one inch shorter than that of the midsize Chevelle coupe. The station wagon and hardtop sport coupe were discontinued, the former in line with an industry trend which left AMC the only American maker of compact station wagons until Chrysler rejoined the market in 1976 (the 1966–70 Ford Falcon wagon was actually midsize, using a bodyshell identical to the Fairlane wagon's). One notable change was the front subframe assembly — as compared with Ford, Chrysler and AMC, in whose cars the entire front suspension was integrated with the bodyshell, a separate subframe housing the powertrain and front suspension (similar to the front part of the frame of GM's full-size, full-framed vehicles) replaced the earlier style. Although the front subframe design was unique for the Nova, the Camaro introduced a year earlier was the first to incorporate such a design; the redesigned Nova was pushed a year ahead to 1968 instead of 1969. The sales brochure claimed 15 powertrain choices for coupes and a dozen for sedans. Options included power brakes and steering, Four-Season or Comfort-Car air conditioning, rear shoulder belts, and head restraints. There were a few Chevrolet Novas built with the 194 ci (3.1 L), the same motor that had been used in the previous generations of the Chevy II. Sales of the 1968 Chevy II Nova fell by half.

In 1969 Chevrolet dropped the Chevy II portion of its compact car's name; it was now known simply as the Chevrolet Nova. The 153 cu in (2.51 L) four-cylinder engine was offered between 1968 and 1970, then was dropped due to lack of interest (besides its other usage in the Jeep DJ-5A a.k.a. the Postal Jeep or a marine/industrial engine) and to clear the field for the Vega. Far more popular were the 230 cu in (3.8 L) six-cylinder and the base 307 cu in (5.03 L) V8, which replaced the 283 cu in (4.64 L) V8 offered in previous years. Several units were produced with the 327 cu in (5.36 L), 275 hp (205 kW), engine, four-barrel quadrajet carb and four-speed Saginaw transmission with a heavy-duty 12-bolt positraction rear as a "towing option' package. At mid-year, a semi-automatic transmission based on the Powerglide called the Torque-Drive (RPO MB1) was introduced as a low-cost option (~$100 less than the Powerglide) for clutchless motoring. The Torque-Drive transmission was only offered with the four and six-cylinder engines. The two-speed Powerglide was still the only fully-automatic transmission available with most engines, as the more desirable three-speed Turbo-Hydramatic was only available with the largest V8 engines.

Nova SS edit

 
Chevrolet Nova SS Coupé

The Nova Super Sport was transformed from a trim option to a performance package for 1968. One of the smallest muscle cars ever fielded by Detroit, the Nova SS now included a 295 hp (220 kW) 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8 engine along with a heavy-duty suspension and other performance hardware, priced at US$312.[14] Optional V8 engines included two versions of the big-block 396 cu in (6.5 L) rated at 350 bhp (350 PS; 260 kW); and 375 bhp (380 PS; 280 kW) at 5600 rpm and 415 lb⋅ft (563 N⋅m) at 3600 rpm of torque,[15] which went for US$348.[16] Both engines were offered with a choice of transmissions including the M-21 close-ratio four-speed manual, the heavy-duty M-22 "Rock Crusher" four-speed manual, or the three-speed Turbo-Hydramatic 400 automatic transmission. A total of 5,571 SS coupés were produced for 1968. Novas sported the SS badge until 1976.[17] Front disc brakes were optional on the 1968 Nova SS.

1969–1972 edit

For 1969 the Chevy II nameplate was retired, leaving the Nova nameplate.[18] The "Chevy II by Chevrolet" trunklid badge was replaced with "Nova by Chevrolet" and the "Chevy II" badge above the grille was replaced with the bowtie emblem and the 1969 model was promoted under the Nova model name in Chevrolet sales literature.[19]

As with other 1969 GM vehicles, locking steering columns were incorporated into the Nova. Simulated air extractor/vents were added below the Nova script, which was relocated to the front fender behind the wheel-well instead of the rear quarter panel. The 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8 with four-barrel carburetor that came standard with the SS option was revised with a 5 hp (4 kW) increase to 300 hp (220 kW), while a two-barrel carbureted version of the 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8 rated at 255 hp (190 kW) was a new option on non-SS models. The SS option price remained US$312[20] A new Turbo-Hydramatic 350 three-speed automatic was made available for non-SS Novas with six-cylinder and V8 engines, although the older two-speed Powerglide continued to be available on the smaller-engined Novas. 1969 SS models were the first Nova SS models to have standard front disc brakes.

 
1970–1972 Chevrolet Nova four-door sedan

The 1970 Nova was basically a carryover from 1969. The side marker and taillight lenses for the 1970 Nova were wider and positioned slightly differently. This was the final year for the SS396 (actually, a 402 cubic in. engine now). All other engines were carried over including the seldom-ordered four-cylinder which was in its final year.[21] The car finally became simply the Chevrolet Nova this year after two years of transitional nameplates (Chevy II Nova in 1968 and Chevrolet Chevy Nova in 1969). Out of 254,242 Novas sold for 1970, 19,558 were the SS 350 or SS 396 version. Approximately 177 Central Office Production Order (COPO) Novas were ordered, with 175 converted by Yenko Chevrolet. The other two were sold in Canada. The Nova was used in Trans-Am racing this year.

Year 1971 Novas were similar to the previous year. The 396 cu in (6.49 L) engine was replaced with the 350 cu in (5.7 L) in the SS model. 1971 also saw the introduction of the Rally Nova, a trim level that only lasted two years (until it resurfaced as the Nova Rally in 1977). The Rally kit included black or white stripes that ran the length of the car and between the taillights in the back, a Rally Nova sticker on the driver's side of the hood, 6-slot 14X6" Rally wheels, heavy duty suspension with mono-leaf or multi-leaf in the rear depending on optional equipment ordered., and a "sport" body colored driver's side mirror that was adjustable from the interior. The well-hyped Vega stole sales from the Nova this year, but the compact soon would enjoy a resurgence of popularity that would last deep into the 1970s. A mid-year production change was the front door hinges spot welded to the A-pillar and the door shell, a design shared with the Vega and later implemented by GM's subsequent light-duty trucks and vans which later was used with the S10, Astro van, and full-size trucks commencing with the GMT400 a decade later.

The 250 cu in (4.1 L) six-cylinder engine was now the standard Nova engine with the demise of the 153 cu in (2.51 L) four-cylinder and 230 cu in (3.8 L) six-cylinder engines. The 307 cu in (5.03 L) and 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8s were carried over from 1970 and all engines featured lowered compression ratios to enable the use of unleaded gasoline as a result of a GM corporate mandate that took effect with the 1971 model year.

After 1971, other GM divisions began rebadging the Nova as their new entry-level vehicle, such as the Pontiac Ventura II (once a trim option for full-size Pontiacs to 1970), Oldsmobile Omega and the Buick Apollo. This was considered to build brand loyalty with respective GM divisions although the company later fused their badge engineering with platform sharing to cut expenditures. The initials of the four model names spelled out the acronym NOVA (Nova, Omega, Ventura, Apollo). The 1973 introduction of the Omega and Apollo coincided with the subsequent oil crisis where sales of the X and H platform increased.

The 1972 Nova received only minor trim changes. The Rally package option with heavy duty suspension returned and was a rather popular choice, with 33,319 sold. SuperSport equipment went on 12,309 coupes. Nova production moved to Norwood, Ohio, where it would be assembled alongside the Camaro. At mid-year, a sunroof option called the Sky Roof became available on two-door models. Also, the optional Strato bucket seats available on coupes switched from the previous low-back design with adjustable headrests to the high back units with built-in headrests introduced the previous year on Camaros and Vegas. Despite the lack of change, Nova had its best sales season in years, with the production of the 1972 models reaching 349,733. Of these, 139,769 had the six-cylinder engine.

Rally Nova 1971-1972 edit

 
Rally Nova

Mid 1971 saw the introduction of the Rally Nova[22](RPO-YF1) available with the Nova coupe (X27) model only. The Rally Nova option was basically an appearance option but did include heavy duty front and rear suspension (RPO-F40) which could be mono-leaf or multi-leaf in the rear depending on optional equipment ordered. The Rally Nova was a would-be Muscle Car. It had the look of a Muscle Car with stripes, black grill, left hand sport mirror and 14X6" 6-slot Rally wheels but it could not be ordered with the SS-only 200 hp (150 kW) Turbo-Fire 350 V8 4V (RPO-L48) engine. This was done for two reasons, people who wanted the Muscle Car look could have it without paying for the more expensive Super Sport option. The other reason was because of insurance surcharges that applied to owners of "real" Muscle Cars. The SS was more expensive to insure because of the 200 hp Turbo-Fire 350 V8 engine. [23][24][25]

The Rally Nova option included black or white tapered stripe decals that ran the length of the car with "Rally Nova" wording in the stripes toward the rear of both quarter panels. A stripe decal between the taillights on the back, a "Rally Nova" decal on the driver's side of the hood, 6-slot 14x6" Rally wheels with special center caps, driver's side body colored remote adjustable Sport mirror, black painted grill with bright upper and lower horizontal bars, black accent headlight bezels, bright roof drip moldings and color-keyed floor carpeting.[26]

Available engines for the Rally Nova were the 165 hp (125 kW) Turbo-Thrift 250 L6 1V (RPO-L22), 130 hp (95 kW) Turbo-Fire 307 V8 2V (RPO-L14) and 165 hp (125 kW) Turbo-Fire 350 V8 2V (RPO-L65). Available transmissions were 3-Speed manual (RPO-ZW4) (all engines), Powerglide automatic (RPO-M35) (standard engines only) and the Turbo-Hydra-matic automatic (RPO-M40) (V8 only). The Rally Nova only came with 2" single exhaust since the 2-1/4" dual exhaust was reserved for the SS-only 200 hp Turbo-Fire 350 V8 4V (RPO-L48).[25]

Optional interior trim levels Custom (RPO-ZJ1) and Special (RPO-ZJ3) could be ordered. Custom Exterior (RPO-ZJ2/YF8) and Exterior Decor Package (RPO-ZJ5) were not available when the Rally Nova was ordered. This means bright rear panel trim plate, bright side window moldings, sill moldings, fender moldings, side molding and accent striping would have never come on a Rally Nova. The only allowed exterior options were a vinyl roof (RPO-C08), engine badges for 307 or 350 engines and for mid 1972 the newly available Sky Roof.[25][27]

Other available optional accessories and equipment that could be had with the Rally Nova included - Sport steering wheel (RPO-NK4), vinyl rim steering wheel (RPO-NK2), color-keyed floor mats - front and rear (RPO-B37), color-keyed seat belts front, shoulder and rear (RPO-AK1), AM (RPO-U63) or AM/FM (RPO-U69) radios, windshield antenna (RPO-U76), rear speaker (RPO-U80), clock (RPO-U35), special instrumentation (RPO-U17)(Required V8 coupe with bucket seats and console), rear window defogger (RPO-C50), auxiliary lighting (RPO-ZJ9), A/C (RPO-C60)(with V8 engine only), bucket seats (RPO-A51), console (RPO-D55) (with bucket seats only), softray tinted glass (RPO-A01), trailering rear axel 3:42 ratio (RPO-YD1), positraction (RPO-G80), wheel trim rings (RPO-P06), power drum brakes (RPO-J50), power disk brakes (RPO-JL2), E78X14 bias ply belted single white stripe tires (RPO-PL3), power steering (RPO-N40), front and rear bumper guards (RPO-V30) , heavy duty radiator (RPO-V01) and heavy duty battery (RPO-T60).[25]

Production numbers for the Rally Nova were 7,700 built in 1971 and 33,319 in 1972 of 403,450 total Nova 2-door coupes produced from 1971-1972.[28]

Yenko Novas edit

 
1970 Yenko Nova coupe 350 SC

Retired race car driver and muscle car specialist Don Yenko of Yenko Chevrolet in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, refitted a series of third-generation Novas, as well as Chevelles and Camaros for optimum performance to compete with the frontrunning Ford Mustangs, Plymouth Barracudas and Dodge Challengers. The specially redesigned Nova (sometimes known as the "Yenko Supernova") had a stronger body frame and suspension system to house the powerful and heavy 427cid (7.0 L) V8 engine that powered the Yenko Super Cars. Only 37 were known to be produced with an original selling price of $4,000.00. Today, only seven units are registered and known to exist. In 1970, emissions standards and fuel economy were taking a toll on muscle cars. To counter this, Yenko requested a high-output Chevy 350cid V8 in his special line of Novas, the same engine that the new Z-28 Camaro and LT1 Corvette shared. Additionally, the new "Yenko Deuce", as it was known, had extensive suspension, transmission, and rear axle upgrades along with some very lively stripes, badges, and interior decals.

Facelift (1973–1974) edit

The 1973 model year introduced a hatchback body style based on the 2-door coupe. The front and rear of the Nova were restyled, following a government mandate for vehicles to be fitted with front bumpers capable of withstanding 5 mph (8 km/h) impacts and rear bumpers capable of absorbing 2.5 mph (4 km/h) impacts. To go along with the bigger bumpers, stylists gave the Nova a new grille with a loosely patterned crosshatch insert and parking lights located inboard of the headlights. In 1974, the rear bumper could absorb 5 mph impacts. Fuel tank capacity increased to 21 gallons, which required a redesigned trunk pan where a circular section was stamped to house the space-saver spare tire used on hatchback models.

 
1973 Chevrolet Nova SS

An SS option remained available, but it was merely a $123 dress-up package that included a blackout grille and Rally wheels. It could be ordered with any of the Nova engines. 35,542 SS packages were installed, making 1973 the best-selling year for the option. A modified rear side window shape was also introduced, eliminating the vent windows on both two- and four-door models. A revised rear suspension was adapted from the second generation Camaro with multi-leaf springs replacing the mono-leaf springs used on Novas since the original 1962 model. By this time, six-cylinder and V8 engines were de rigueur for American compact cars, with the 307 cu in (5.03 L) and 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8s becoming fairly common. The 1973 Nova with a six-cylinder engine or 307 cu. in. (5.0 L) V8 were among the last Chevrolets to be offered with the two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission, which was in its final year. A dressy Custom series (which became a mid-level trim package in 1975) joined the Nova line and a Custom hatchback listed for $2,701 with a six-cylinder engine. That was $173 more than the six-cylinder base-model two-door hatchback. Air conditioning added $381. Every 1973 Chevrolet Nova got side guard door beams and additional sound insulation, as well as flow-through ventilation systems. A sunroof could be installed, and fold-down rear seats were available.

For 1974, the Chevrolet Nova got a centered bow-tie grille emblem, as well as modified bumpers that added two inches to the length and helped cushion minor impacts. The Powerglide was replaced by a lightweight version of the three-speed Turbo-Hydramatic 350 ( THM 250 ) already offered with the 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8, which was the only V8 offered for 1974. Nova sales continued the surge they had enjoyed since 1972 and approached 400,000 cars for 1974. Six-cylinder Novas were the fastest gainers, as sales of V-8 Novas declined. These were the years of the first energy crisis as Middle Eastern countries cut back on oil exports. After waiting for hours in gas lines and fretting about the prospect of fuel rationing, thrifty compacts looked pretty good to plenty of Americans and it fit the bill.

The 'Spirit of America' Nova was introduced in 1974. In anticipation of the US bicentennial in 1976, the limited edition Nova Coupes were painted white and featured blue and red accent stripes as well as red and blue interior carpets and fabrics. Oldsmobile and Buick entered the compact car market; both the Apollo and Omega debuted, using the same body styles from the Nova lineup. Additional options were included on these Nova-like models, such as lighting under the dashboard and in the glove compartment. Pontiac's final GTO of this era was based on a facelifted 1974 Ventura coupe, itself based on the Nova, but fitted with a shaker hood scoop from the Trans Am.

Novas and all 1974 cars were fitted with a weight-sensitive relay within the front seat that prevented the vehicle from being started until the driver's seatbelt had been fastened, following a safety mandate from the NHTSA. Later, Congress repealed the mandate requiring this type of device, declaring that it infringed on a driver's freedom of choice, and allowed owners of 1974-model cars to have the seat belt interlock bypassed.[29] The devices were not included in future Nova models. Along with this controversial seat belt interlock, a new, more convenient "inertial reel" one-piece lap/shoulder safety belt assembly was standard for both front outboard passengers, along with a plastic clip attached to the headrest to guide the belt across the wearer's shoulder.

Prices edit

Original manufacturers sales prices for the third generation Nova were:[30]

Year Production Low Price High Price
1968 201,005 $2,200 $2,400
1969 251,900 $2,240 $2,435
1970 315,122 $2,175 $2,200
1971 194,878 $2,175 $2,285
1972 349,733 $2,375 $2,400
1973 369,511 $2,375 $2,700
1974 390,537 $2,810 $3,105

Fourth generation (1975–1979) edit

  • Chevrolet Nova
  • Fourth generation
 
1976 Chevrolet Nova sedan
Overview
Also called
  • Chevrolet Concours (1976–1977)
  • Chevrolet Iran
Production1974–1979
Model years1975–1979
Assembly
Body and chassis
ClassCompact
Body style
LayoutFR layout
PlatformX-body
Related
Powertrain
Engine
  • 151 cu in (2.5 L) Iron Duke I4
  • 230 cu in (3.8 L) I6
  • 250 cu in (4.1 L) I6
  • 262 cu in (4.3 L) V8 (1975 only)
  • 305 cu in (5.0 L) V8
  • 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase111.0 in (2,820 mm)
Length196.7 in (4,996 mm)[31]
Width72.2 in (1,834 mm)
Height
  • 53.6 in (1,361 mm) Sedan
  • 52.7 in (1,339 mm) Coupe
Chronology
SuccessorChevrolet Citation/Citation II

The 1975 Chevrolet Nova was the most-changed Chevy car for that model year. "Now it's beautiful," said the brochure of Nova's all-new sheet metal, "refined along the lines of elegant European sedans." Chevrolet wisely maintained a visual kinship with the 1968–1974 design, and also retained Nova's efficiently sized 111-inch wheelbase. Front tread grew by an inch and a half, and the front stabilizer bar had a larger diameter. Novas now had standard front disc brakes and steel-belted radial tires. The front suspension and subframe assembly was similar to the one used in the second generation GM F-body cars (the Camaro and Pontiac Firebird), whereas the rear axle and suspension were carried over from the previous generation. Coupes, including the hatchback, had fixed side windows (or optional flip-out windows) - the first for a GM vehicle later optioned throughout the 1980s with its light duty trucks (S10, Astro/Safari, and GMT400 trucks to the K2XX series) and vertical vents on the B-pillar. All Novas now had cut-pile carpeting, formerly installed only in the Custom series. Speedometers had larger, easier-to-read graphics. Windshields offered greater glass area. Front-door armrests were redesigned with integral pull bars. The base model carried the inline six-cylinder 250 cu in (4.1 L), 105 hp (78 kW), three V8 engines (262 cu in (4.29 L), a 1975-only option, a 305 cu in (5.00 L) and a 350 cu in (5.7 L)) for 1976 only, were offered. Mated to a three-speed automatic, 3-speed manual or 4-speed – V8s only – Which remained the norm through the end of the decade (and the end of the rear-wheel drive X platform). By then, Cadillac had developed its own version of the X-body, called the K-body which was named the Seville, whose styling was distinct from those of its corporate cousins, and Buick replaced the Apollo with the Skylark name that had been inactive since the previous incarnation ended production at the end of the 1972 model year.

 
1975 Chevrolet Nova LN

The LN (Luxury Nova) package (which was the top luxury trim similar to the Caprice and Malibu Classic) sent Nova into the luxury portion of the compact market; some actually thought of it as competing against a few high-end European imports. The Nova LN was called "the most luxurious compact in Chevrolet's history," with wide-back reclining front seats that "look and feel like big, soft lounge chairs." LN equipment included ad­ditional sound insulation, map pockets, an electric clock, a smoked instrument lens, floor shifter and center console, and a day/night mirror. Taillight lenses have additional white accents unavailable with the base model and a chrome plated grille. Above the front marker lenses, the LN had 4.3 LITER (or 5.7 LITER) decals - making it the first Chevrolet product with metric displacement badges sold in the Americas. Swing-out quarter windows could be ordered for the coupe. "Thanks to LN," the sales brochure announced, "Nova's image will never be the same again." The LN was more Eurocentric as opposed to the Custom which became the mid-level trim option.

For 1976 the Nova LN was rebranded Concours to rival the Ford Granada and the Mercury Monarch, as well as upscale versions of the Dodge Dart and Plymouth Valiant. Like regular versions of the 1976 Nova, the Concours came in three body styles: coupe, hatchback coupe, and four-door sedan. Concours was the most luxurious Chevrolet compact to date. Rosewood vinyl decorated the upper door panels, instrument panel, and steering wheel. Concours models had an upright hood ornament, bumper guards, bright trim moldings, black bumper impact strips, and full wheel covers; more-basic Novas came with hubcaps. The Concours coupe also was the first Chevrolet coupe with a fold-down front center armrest. A V8 Concours coupe sold for $547 more than the comparable base Nova. Engines for the 1976 Chevrolet Nova were a 105-horsepower inline-six, a 165-horsepower 350-cubic-inch V-8, or a 140-horse 305-cubic-inch V-8. 1976 GM vehicles first saw use of the THM200 — from the GM T platform to GM X-Bodies (Chevrolet Nova et al.). A lighter duty, 10-bolt rear differential with a 7.5" ring gear (also used with the Vega/Monza and produced until 2005) was phased into production - being standard equipment with the base inline-six. A "Cabriolet" padded vinyl top was available for Nova coupes. Modest revisions were made to the brakes, and also to fuel and exhaust system mountings. Dashboards contained new knobs. After testing the 1976 Chevrolet Nova, the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department placed the largest order for compact police cars ever seen in the U.S.

The $187 Nova SS option group included a black grille with unique diamond-mesh pattern, Rally wheels, four-spoke steering wheel, and heavy-duty suspension.

Minor changes for the 1977 model year included a more modern round gauge cluster to replace the long sweeping speedometer, and a revised dash panel which changed to a flatter design. Some new colors were offered (as with the rest of the divisions) and some small trim added. A separate brochure was printed for the Concours while the "1977 Nova" brochure detailed only base and Custom versions. The Nova SS previously offered for 1975 and 1976 was discontinued, the option code for the SS — RPO Z26 — continued as the Nova Rally from 1977 through 1979. A badged-engineered Nova Malibu Rallye (1977 and 1978 model years – not related to the USA market Chevelle-based model and based on the Nova hatchback coupe) was sold in Mexico using the RPO Z26 package but fitted with 'Malibu Rallye' graphics and a front grille emblem.

Three engines and four transmissions were available for every 1977 Chevrolet Nova, including Concours. Buyers could choose from a 110-horsepower 250-cubic-inch inline six, a 145-horsepower 305 cubic-inch two-barrel V-8, or 170-horsepower 350 cubic-inch four-barrel V-8. Shifting was accomplished by three-speed (column or floor shift) and four-speed manuals or Turbo Hydra-Matic. Novas might also be equipped with a heavy-duty suspension or the F41 sport suspension. A surprising number of police departments ordered Novas with either a 305- or 350-cubic-inch V-8 engine, following the lead of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department, which had given the compacts an exhaustive evaluation.

 
1976 Chevrolet Nova 2-door coupe
 
Rear view of a 1976 Nova sedan

Promoted as "Concours by Chevrolet", the 1977 Concours featured a new vertical bar grille and a revised stand-up hood ornament. The rear of the Concours also got new triple unit taillamps reminiscent of the Caprice. It also boasted newly designed wheel covers and wider bright wheel-opening moldings. "International in style, it is American in function," the sales brochure insisted of the Concours. The brochure went on to note that Concours offered a "very special blending of classic style and good sense." That last comment referenced Nova's sensible size. Novas themselves, the marketing materials said, were "not too small, not too big, not too expensive."

For 1978 the Concours was discontinued to clear the way for the newly downsized Malibu, and the Nova Custom inherited much of the Concours' exterior finery but lacked the stand-up hood ornament displayed by the Concours. Upholstery choices included all-vinyl or Edinburgh woven sport cloth/vinyl. More basic versions of the 1978 Chevrolet Nova had the same grille as used in 1976-1977 and added a gold-tinted Chevy bowtie emblem at the leading edge of the hood. For '78 Nova was also available with Rally equipment, which included yet another front-end layout: a diamond-pattern grille with horizontal parking lights and black headlight bezels (basically the 1976-1977 SS grille), plus triple band striping and color-keyed Rally wheels. All Nova drivers faced a new dual-spoke, soft vinyl-covered steering wheel; the same one found in the Caprice and Malibu.

Any 1978 Chevrolet Nova could be ordered with a 250-cubic-inch six-cylinder engine, a 145-horsepower 305-cubic-inch V-8, or a 170-horsepower 350-cubic-inch V-8. Law enforcement agencies in 48 states were driving Novas by now, as the sales brochure boasted. Production dropped almost 100,000 for the model, to 288,000, making Nova the only Chevrolet series to show a sales decline for 1978. Sales of the Nova hatchback body style lagged well behind regular coupes and sedans, and base models handily outsold Customs.

Upon introduction of the downsized GM A-body (later G-body) mid-size cars in 1978, the X-body and downsized A-platform had similar exterior dimensions. The roomier and more modern downsized A-bodies outsold their X-body counterparts.

The 1979 Chevrolet Nova marked the end of the line for the rear-wheel-drive Nova. The front end was revised with rectangular headlights and a new grille for the short run (matching that of its Pontiac Phoenix cousin, which replaced the Ventura for 1977); a modified horizontal-bar grille contained vertical parking lights. New chromed hood and fender moldings were installed, and new front-bumper filler panels gave the front end a more finished look. The Custom went back to the base dual section taillights since the triple section taillights were discontinued. The lineup was the same as in 1978; the base-level hatchback, coupe, and sedan, plus the Custom coupe and sedan. As usual, base coupe and sedan proved to be the best sellers. Nova Customs had a special acoustical package including improved headlining and full hood insulation, along with other luxury extras, while the Rally Package returned, this time using the same grille as other 1979 Novas. These final Novas were promoted for their "solid value" and "reputation for dependability," capitalizing upon a 17-year heritage that had begun with the Chevy II. Fewer than 98,000 examples were produced. Regular production ended on December 22, 1978, but some cars badged "Nova Custom" were built on special order with luxury amenities in early 1979. The final Chevrolet Nova (Custom) built on special order would roll off the line on March 15, 1979, and this would be the end of the rear-drive Nova for good. Chevrolet's compact models were headed into the front-wheel-drive age and for 1980, Nova's place in the lineup would be taken over by the new and very different Chevrolet Citation (the Phoenix, Omega and Skylark carried over to this platform as well, and the Seville was reassigned to another front-drive platform).

Fifth generation (1985–1988) edit

  • Chevrolet Nova
  • Fifth generation
 
1988 Chevrolet Nova 5-Door Hatchback
Overview
Production1984–1988
Model years1985–1988
AssemblyUnited States: Fremont, California (NUMMI)
Body and chassis
ClassSubcompact
Body style
LayoutTransverse front-engine, front-wheel drive
PlatformToyota AE82 Platform (GM S platform as known within GM)
Related
Powertrain
Engine
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase95.7 in (2,430 mm)
Length166.3 in (4,220 mm)
Width64.4 in (1,640 mm)
Height52.8 in (1,340 mm)
Chronology
SuccessorGeo Prizm

The Chevrolet Nova nameplate returned in spring 1984 as a front-wheel drive subcompact vehicle for the 1985 to 1988 model years. It was assembled in Fremont, California, by NUMMI, a joint venture between General Motors and Toyota of Japan, resulting in various Corolla-based cars sold under General Motors brands, also referred to as the S-car within GM. It resurrected a name last used on the compact-sized rear-wheel drive 1979 Chevrolet Nova. The new Nova was a rebadged and mildly restyled Japanese market Toyota Sprinter, a model sold in Japan as a badge engineered version of the Toyota Corolla. Nova shared the Corolla's AE82 platform, 1.6 L (98 cu in) 4-cylinder engines and was available with 5-speed manual, 3-speed or 4-speed automatic transmissions. For the first time ever, quad headlights were used on the Nova (mimicking most other models at the time, such as the slightly-larger Chevrolet Cavalier). It was designed for manufacturability and reached an unusually high level of quality and production speed at NUMMI, compared to other US factories.[32]

1985 model The 1985 Chevrolet Nova was initially offered only in a four-door three-box, notchback sedan body style and in the Midwestern states. A five-door hatchback was added shortly after its introduction, and the line was distributed throughout the US and Canada beginning around traditional new-model introduction time in the fall (as were the other Chevy imports, the Suzuki-based Sprint which had been first launched on the West Coast and the Isuzu-based Spectrum which had initially been available on the Eastern Seaboard and throughout New England and New York State). The only engine was a carbureted 1.6-liter four-cylinder with 74 horsepower (55 kW). It teamed with either a five-speed manual or three-speed automatic transmission. This was the same powertrain as offered in the Corolla. The four-door sedan listed for $7,435, a rather stiff tariff by Chevrolet standards. The five-door, which added a split-folding rear seat, started at $7,669. All Nova options were grouped into seven packages, which did away with the long list of optional equipment that accompanied such cars as the Chevrolet Chevette. (Simple though it was, the subcompact Chevette offered nearly 30 options). However, adding one of the costlier packages could easily push the Nova's sticker to over $10,000.

 
1986 Chevrolet Nova CL sedan

1987 model The 1987 Chevrolet Nova saw only minor changes after its introduction two years earlier as a near-twin to the front-wheel-drive Toyota Corolla. A rear-window defogger was added to the list of standard equipment, while visual changes were limited to lighter silver highlights on the vertical grille bars and a change of turn signal lens colors from amber to clear/white front and red rear. CL models also got red reflective panels carrying the taillights onto the trunk/hatch, body-colored bumpers, and new aluminum wheels. The 1987 Chevrolet Nova continued in two body styles, a four-door sedan and five-door hatchback. The four-door proved by far the more popular – by about three to one. Nova's only engine was again a 74-horsepower 1.6-liter four designed by Toyota, mated to either a five-speed manual transmission or four-speed automatic. Though Corollas were priced slightly below competing Novas, Chevy's version of the car could often be bought for less because slow sales encouraged dealers to discount prices. "Slow sales," however, meant slow by Chevy standards, for the Nova sold about as well as the Corolla, and buyers would find that their discounted Nova in turn had a lower resale value than the equivalent Toyota, a pattern that would persist for GM-branded NUMMI cars. Aside from some minor interior and exterior trim differences, the cars were much the same, though Novas had a slightly softer suspension that favored ride over handling.

 
1988 Chevrolet Nova Hatchback

1988 model The 1988 Chevrolet Nova added a sporty model to its lineup of subcompact front-wheel-drive cars. This new 1988 Chevrolet Nova Twin-Cam got its name from a double-overhead-cam version of the Toyota-built 1.6-liter four-cylinder. Novas continued to share their basic design with the Corolla, and this engine had previously been used in the Toyota FX-16, a performance version of the Corolla. The twin-cam produced 110 hp (82 kW), 36 more than its single-cam sibling. A five-speed manual transmission was standard, as in the regular Novas, but the Twin-Cam offered a four-speed automatic as an option versus the three-speed offered on other models. The more potent engine elevated the 1988 Chevrolet Nova Twin-Cam into junior sport-sedan terri­tory, but the advancement didn't come cheaply. The base Nova listed at about $8,800, the Twin-Cam went for $11,395. That price included fuel injection, sport suspension, power steering, leather-covered steering wheel, tachometer, four-wheel disc brakes, and wider tires on aluminum wheels, but it was a stiff tariff, and few were ordered (approximately 3,300 Twin-Cam models were built). There were no color choices; all 1988 Chevrolet Nova Twin-Cams wore black metallic paint with a grey interior; and there was no hatchback version offered. Every 1988 Chevrolet Nova got rear shoulder belts, rear window defogger, and AM/FM stereo radio as standard equipment. This was the last model year for the Nova name at Chevrolet. Starting with 1989, Chevrolet pushed this car into its new Geo division and renamed it the Prizm. Geo was Chevy's effort to come up with an import-sounding label to attract buyers who were not inclined to shop American.

Production Figures:

Chevrolet Nova Production Figures[33]
Sedan Hatchback Yearly Total
1985 N/A N/A
1986 124,961 42,788 167,749
1987 123,782 26,224 150,006
1988 90,563 18,570 109,133
Total 339,306 87,582 426,888

Reviews edit

 
Chevrolet Nova advertisement (1962)

The reaction to the 1962 Chevrolet Chevy II was mainly positive. Veteran Mechanics Illustrated tester Tom McCahill was favorably impressed with a Chevy II 400 Series Nova convertible he drove at a press preview for Chevy's 1962 models, held at GM's Milford, Michigan, test track. "Flat out, which with Powerglide was 91 mph, this little car never wavered and even over some rough strips it was one of the safest feeling 91's I have ever driven." The styling reminded "Uncle" Tom of a "small Mercedes-Benz", and he concluded that "with a little hopping up, a stick shift and its low price, it should sell like cold beer on a hot Fourth of July."

Car Life was even more enthusiastic, honoring the Chevy II with its "Award for Engineering Excellence". "We think the Chevy II, in either 4- or 6-cylinder form, represents an important development in the American automotive field," reported the magazine. "We think it represents a return to sensibility in terms of basic transportation; it is a car of reasonable size, adequate performance and simple elegance." The award was mentioned in a 1962 Chevrolet Nova advertisement. (see right)

Consumer Reports described the six-cylinder Chevy II as an "ultra-sensible, conventional car with outstanding interior space," but also reported "higher than average" interior noise levels. There were also complaints about the four-cylinder version's lack of refinement. "CR hesitates to recommend the Four for normal use. The Four is an excellent hackabout for specialized local use – if you can stand the vibration." McCahill put it this w­ay: "The four wasn't the smoothest four I have ever driven, but it had nice response and will probably still be running long after Castro shaves his beard off." Consumer Reports in 1963: "New last year, the Chevy II has not yet developed into a smooth-riding, quiet, or in any sense luxurious car. It is an easy driving, agile one. By far its most important asset is a body with substantially the room of intermediate cars, but with a very compact silhouette and especially good entrance height."

Motor Trend called the new Chevy II "a most straightforward car – simple, honest and conventional." Editor Jerry Titus was fascinated with the new rear single-leaf suspension: "How it actually works seems almost contradictory. There is a great deal of body roll, but the car does not feel unstable. The ride is soft and pleasing, but not seasick-soft with the constant pitching and rolling that some cars have." Interior room, steering, and brakes were commended. Performance was rated as "moderate" for a six-cylinder Nova convertible with Powerglide: 0-60 came up "a shade under 16 seconds," and the top speed was reported to be 98 mph, but Titus felt that "the car seems at its best below 75, where it did not feel as though it was working hard." The four, meanwhile, took 20 seconds to make it from 0 to 60 mph. In comparison, a 1960 90 bhp Falcon with stick shift took 21 seconds 0 to 60, also according to Motor Trend, while the 101 bhp six introduced for 1961 required 14.3 seconds with stick and 15.2 with the two-speed Fordomatic.[34]

Motor Trend tested a 1964 195-bhp, two-barrel SS with Powerglide, recording 0 to 60 in 11.3 seconds, 18.0 seconds and 75 mph in the quarter-mile, and 100 mph all out. Fuel economy ranged from 12.3 mpg in heavy traffic to 19.6 on the highway. Motor Trend concluded that "By adding a V-8 and bigger brakes, plus detail changes, Chevrolet has made a nice compact even more desirable and a much better performer."

The mid-1980s Nova made no attempt to recapture the former "Muscle" glory that it once had, with the Twin Cam performance variant appearing only in the final year of the nameplate after Toyota had already moved on to the next generation of the platform.

International Novas edit

Canada edit

 
1963 Acadian Convertible
 
1966 Acadian Coupe

While the Chevy II and Nova were also sold in Canada, from the beginning a mildly re-trimmed version was also sold by Pontiac-Buick dealers as the Acadian.

The Acadian was produced between the years 1962 and 1971. It was a stand-alone make based upon the Chevy II, which was produced in both the U.S. and Canada[35] and sold exclusively through Canadian PontiacBuickGMC dealerships. Due to the Canadian tariffs on imports put into place many years before, there was no compact car available to the Canadian Pontiac dealer. The U.S. built Pontiac Tempest, which started production in 1961 was not available initially to the Canadian buyer – import duties would have made it too expensive to compete in the thrifty Canadian compact market. The Acadian was introduced to give the unhappy Canadian Pontiac – Buick dealer a car he could sell in the growing compact market. During its entire run, the Acadian offered the same body styles as were offered in the Chevy II/Nova, and the cars were virtually the same, save minor trim and badging details.

Originally offered in top-line Beaumont and base Invader trim, the top trim line was renamed Canso in anticipation of the Chevelle-based Acadian Beaumont which would arrive for 1964. A sporty model, the Sport Deluxe (or "SD"), was equivalent to the U.S.-market Nova SS, and it also featured bucket seats, deluxe exterior trim, and special badging.

Base price for the 1966 Acadian was $2,507. The 327-350 hp (L79) was available; 85 were produced. The Acadian line was now down to six models; 7,366 Acadians were sold in 1966.[36] It survived until mid-1971, after which it was replaced by the Pontiac Ventura II.

Argentina edit

 
Argentinian Chevrolet Malibu

In 1962 Argentina offered the 1962-64-style Chevy II as the Chevrolet 400 through 1974, and the 1968–72 Nova as the Chevrolet Chevy from late 1969 through 1978, both models overlapping for several years. An upscale model (Chevy Super) was produced from about 1973 with different trim, front turn indicators and taillights, a much better appointed interior with plastic "wood" trim, named Malibu with no relation to the American Chevelle. All engines were inline-sixes. The first and second generations were available, depending on year and model, with the 194 cu in (3.18 L), 230 cu in (3.8 L) and 250 cu in (4.1 L) engines.

The third generation ("Chevys") were produced with the 230 cu in (3.8 L) and 250 cu in (4.1 L) engines with specially tuned carburetors for sporting models. The "Chevy" metal emblem for the third generation had the same font as the "Nova" emblem of 1968–1974 American Novas, and was, for the first few years, in the rearmost section of both rear fenders. Later, it was moved to the rearmost section of both front fenders, as it was in the American cars from 1969. Sidemarker lights were not mandatory and changed much during the production run, from being deleted, to leaving a small chrome plate, to the same light as in the American cars. Rear deck emblems just said "CHEVROLET" in chrome letters, obviating the typical "Model by Chevrolet" used in the American cars at the time. The hood emblem was similar to the 1969 American Novas: the bow tie, either in blue or just chrome.

Initially, the Argentinian Chevy used very similar trim to the American counterpart, while more luxurious – a "big" car by local standards. They there standard models without accessories and were often used for taxi service. The interior layout remained the American 1968 version for the entire run. The ignition switch remained dash mounted as the U.S.-mandated steering lock was not required in Argentina. Power steering became available at the end of the production run. V8s versions weren't produced: Power windows were not available, tinted windows were darker than American versions, and the darker band on the upper edge of the windshield was not present.

Very popular accessories were vinyl roofs, rally wheels, sport steering wheels, bucket seats with high backs, and tufted leatherette upholstery (many sedans were produced this way). Interiors were usually black. Steering wheels and instrument panels were only black for many years, as were seatbelts. American style interior color coordination was absent. The last year of the Nova in Argentina is called locally "Opus 78" (because the slogan of the publicity) and it was the most equipped, adding simil-leather bucket seats, air-conditioning, power steering, electric antenna, and a new dashboard with integrated central console. During its run on certain models, the "Chevy" was also available with the 3-speed Turbo Hydra-Matic automatic transmission as an option. It was marketed with the name "Chevromatic."

Their Super Sports, "SS" counterparts were both coupés and 4-door sedans, the latter of which was unheard of in the US prior to the introduction of the 1994 Impala SS. In fact, a majority were fitted with inline-sixes coupled to a ZF manual transmission with floor lever 4 speeds, a single two-barrel Holey 2300 RX 7214-A carburetor giving out 168 hp (125 kW) and a sporting exhaust note. Corsa, a local auto publication magazine tested a Chevy Coupé SS Serie 2 and obtained a 0–100 km/h (0–62 mph) time of 11.1 seconds.

Urban legend edit

A popular but false urban legend claims that the vehicle sold poorly in Spanish-speaking countries because no va translates to "doesn't go". However, in Spanish 'nova' is a distinct word primarily used to refer to the astronomical event, and doesn't have the same meaning as 'no va'. In fact, the car actually sold quite well in Mexico, as well as many Central and South American countries. Nova was also the name of a successful brand of gasoline sold in Mexico at the time, further proving that the name confusion was not a problem.[37]

A similar story has been told of the British Vauxhall Nova (a small car that was completely unrelated to the Chevrolet Nova aside from both being built by GM). According to the story, it had to be sold as an Opel Corsa in Spain due to the same alleged language confusion. This version of the story is also a myth, as the Spanish-market version of the car was known as a Corsa from the outset. In fact, the car was called the Corsa in all markets except the United Kingdom.

There was also a Nova kit car designed and built by A.D.D. from 1971. It lost a court case with GM Vauxhall over the use of the name, after it was shown that GM's Chevrolet had a prior claim.

References edit

  1. ^ GM Heritage Center. Official GM MY1963 Specsheet. Retrieved January 1, 2013.
  2. ^ Mays, James. "1963 Chevrolet Chevy II". www.OldCarsCanada.Com. Retrieved April 15, 2013.
  3. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved May 28, 2023.
  4. ^ Gunnell, John (2002-04-01), Standard Catalogue of American Cars 1946–1975, Revised 4th edition, Iola, WI: Krause Publications Inc., p. 174, ISBN 978-0873494618
  5. ^ "GM Vehicle Information Kits". GM Heritage Center. GM. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  6. ^ a b Super Chevy, 5/94, p. 14.
  7. ^ Super Chevy, 5/94, p.14.
  8. ^ Flory, J. "Kelly", Jr. American Cars 1960–1972 (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Coy, 2004), p.281.
  9. ^ Chevrolet Nova History February 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, (Muscle Car Club). Retrieved 2010-03-06.
  10. ^ GM Heritage Center. Official GM MY1966 Specsheet. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  11. ^ The Editors of Consumer Guide
  12. ^ 1966 Chevrolet Chevy II brochure December 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from www.oldcarbrochures.com on November 20, 2008
  13. ^ GM Heritage Center. Official GM MY1969 Specsheet. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  14. ^ Flory, J. "Kelly", Jr. American Cars 1960–1972 (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Coy, 2004), p.579.
  15. ^ "1969 Chevrolet Nova SS 396 375 HP 4-speed". automobile-catalog. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
  16. ^ Flory, p.579.
  17. ^ Quentin Willson's Great Cars, p.148 ISBN 0-7566-1730-8
  18. ^ Gunnell (2002), p. 196
  19. ^ 1970 Chevrolet range brochure Retrieved from www.oldcarmanualproject.com on November 26, 2008
  20. ^ Flory, p.653.
  21. ^ Flory, J. "Kelly", Jr. American Cars 1960–1972 (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Coy, 2004), p.726.
  22. ^ Clarke, R.M. (1975). Chevy II. Nova & SS Muscle Portfolio. Brooklands Books LTD. ISBN 1855202581.
  23. ^ "Downloadable Vehicle Information Kits". GM Heritage Archive. General Motors.
  24. ^ "1971 Chevy Nova" (PDF). GM Heritage Archive. General Motors. September 1970.
  25. ^ a b c d "1972 Nova" (PDF). GM Heritage Archive. General Motors. September 1971.
  26. ^ "1972 Nova". The Old Car Manual Project. The Old Car Manual Project. September 1971.
  27. ^ "1972 Nova Sky Roof". Mark Lundquist. Motortrend. February 2009.
  28. ^ "Production Numbers". Nova Recource. Nova Recource.
  29. ^ "The Seat-Belt Story". Biotech.law.lsu.edu. Retrieved December 27, 2010.
  30. ^ "Chevrolet Nova Third generation Model Information".
  31. ^ GM Heritage Center. Official GM MY1976 Specsheet. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
  32. ^ Adler 1992, page 23-24
  33. ^ Flammang, James M. (1999). Standard catalog of American cars, 1976-1999. Ron Kowalke (3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. ISBN 0-87341-755-0. OCLC 43301709.
  34. ^ The Editors of Consumer Reports
  35. ^ "Canadian Acadians". Retrieved September 12, 2010.
  36. ^ Statham, Steve (1997). Nova SS: Nova and Chevy II 1962-1979. Muscle Car Color History Series. MBI Publishing Company. ISBN 9781610591218.
  37. ^ "Nova Don't Go". snopes.com. Retrieved December 27, 2010.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

chevrolet, chevy, nova, model, sold, latin, america, based, opel, vauxhall, corsa, chevrolet, chevy, chevrolet, chevy, nova, small, automobile, manufactured, chevrolet, produced, five, generations, 1962, through, 1979, 1985, through, 1988, model, years, built,. For the model sold in Latin America and based on Opel Vauxhall Corsa see Chevrolet Chevy The Chevrolet Chevy II Nova is a small automobile manufactured by Chevrolet and produced in five generations for the 1962 through 1979 and 1985 through 1988 model years Built on the X body platform the Nova was the top selling model in the Chevy II lineup through 1968 The Chevy II nameplate was dropped after 1968 with Nova becoming the nameplate for all of the 1969 through 1979 models It was replaced by the 1980 Chevrolet Citation introduced in the spring of 1979 The Nova nameplate returned in 1985 produced through 1988 as a S car based NUMMI manufactured subcompact based on the front wheel drive Japan home based Toyota Sprinter Chevrolet Chevy II Nova1963 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 4 door sedanOverviewManufacturerChevrolet General Motors NUMMI 1985 88 Production1961 19791985 1988Model years1962 19791985 1988Body and chassisClassCompact 1962 1979 Subcompact 1985 88 ChronologySuccessorChevrolet Citation compact model Geo Prizm subcompact model Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin 2 First generation 1962 1965 3 Second generation 1966 1967 4 Third generation 1968 1974 4 1 Nova SS 4 2 1969 1972 4 3 Rally Nova 1971 1972 4 4 Yenko Novas 4 5 Facelift 1973 1974 4 6 Prices 5 Fourth generation 1975 1979 6 Fifth generation 1985 1988 7 Reviews 8 International Novas 8 1 Canada 8 2 Argentina 9 Urban legend 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksHistory editOrigin edit Chevrolet designer Clare MacKichan recalled about creating the Chevy II There was no time for experimentation or doodling around with new ideas from either the engineers or from us in design And it had to be a basic type car The 1962 Chevy II rode a 110 in 2 794 mm wheelbase compared to 109 5 in 2 781 mm for the Ford Falcon at which Chevy s new compact was aimed I think that was the quickest program we ever did at any time he continued We worked night and day on that car and it didn t take very long to run it through our shop because we had a deadline And that is what made the Chevy II one of the fastest new car development programs in GM history just 18 months after the designers got the green light the first production Chevy II rolled off the Willow Run Michigan assembly line in August 1961 in time for its September 29 introduction Unlike the Corvair the 1962 Chevy II design team deliberately avoided any revolutionary features in concept or execution their mission was to give Chevrolet buyers a simple back to the basics compact car When he announced the Chevy II to the press Chevrolet General Manager Ed Cole described the car as offering maximum functionalism with thrift When the Chevy II was introduced it was the second post WWII American made car from the Big 3 after the Pontiac Tempest and the first Chevrolet since the 1928 Chevrolet National to use a four cylinder engine There was a lot of debate within the Chevrolet organization over just what to call this new car and the decision to go with Chevy II was a very late one Among the finalists was Nova It lost out because it didn t start with a C but was selected as the name for the top of the line series Ultimately the Nova badge would replace Chevy II but that wouldn t happen until 1969 In almost every way the creators of the Chevy II used Falcon as a benchmark The 1962 model range included sedans and wagons as well as a two door hardtop and a convertible The only body styles it didn t offer which the Falcon did were a 2 door wagon sedan delivery and coupe utility the Ford Falcon Ranchero First generation 1962 1965 editChevrolet Chevy IIFirst generation nbsp 1964 Chevrolet Chevy II two door sedanOverviewProduction1961 1965Model years1962 1965AssemblyUnited States Framingham Massachusetts Framingham Assembly 1962 1963 Kansas City Missouri Leeds Assembly 1962 1963 Norwood Ohio Norwood Assembly Oakland California Oakland Assembly 1962 1963 Ypsilanti Michigan Willow Run Assembly Argentina Buenos AiresBelgium AntwerpCanada Oshawa Ontario Oshawa Assembly Switzerland BienneBody and chassisClassCompactBody style2 door sedan2 door hardtop2 door convertible 1962 63 4 door sedan4 door station wagonLayoutFR layoutPlatformX bodyRelatedAcadianPowertrainEngine153 cu in 2 5 L Chevrolet 153 I4194 cu in 3 18 L I6230 cu in 3 8 L I6283 cu in 4 64 L V8327 cu in 5 36 L V8Transmission3 4 speed manual2 speed Powerglide automaticDimensionsWheelbase110 in 2 794 mm Length183 in 4 648 mm Sedan Coupe 1 187 4 in 4 760 mm Station WagonWidth70 8 in 1 798 mm Height54 55 in 1 372 1 397 mm depending on body styleAfter the rear engine Chevrolet Corvair was outsold by the conventional Ford Falcon in 1960 Chevrolet completed work on a more conventional compact car that would eventually become the Chevy II The car was of semi unibody construction having a bolt on front section joined to its unitized cabin and trunk rear section available in two and four door sedan configurations as well as convertible and 4 door station wagon versions The 1962 Chevy II came in three series and five body styles the 100 Series 300 Series and Nova 400 Series A 200 series was also introduced but was discontinued almost immediately 2 The sportiest looking of the lot was the US 2 475 23 944 in 2022 dollars 3 Nova 400 convertible 23 741 were produced that year 4 nbsp 1960s Chevrolet Nova emblem nbsp 1962 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 400 convertible nbsp 1963 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 400 4 Door Station WagonAvailable engines for the Chevy II in 1962 and 1963 included Chevrolet s inline four engine of 153 cu in 2 5 L and a new 194 cu in 3 2 L Hi Thrift straight six engine All Chevy II engines featured overhead valves A V8 engine was not available in 1962 and 1963 With no documentation proving it the legend of a dealer installed V8 engine being in a 1962 or 1963 model year Chevy II is a myth Refer to the GM Heritage Center 1963 Chevrolet Nova information available on the GM Heritage site 5 In addition that documentation does not list a V8 engine as a possible dealer installed option In 1962 and 1963 the Nova option for the Chevy II was available in a convertible body style and a two door hardtop was available from 1962 to 1965 although the hardtop was dropped when the 1964 models were first introduced but subsequently brought back to the line later in the model year Like all Chevy two door hardtops the body style was marketed as the Sport Coupe For 1963 the Chevy II Nova Super Sport was released under RPO Z03 6 It featured special emblems instrument package wheel covers side moldings bucket seats and floor shifter and was available only on the 400 series sport coupe and convertible 6 Cost of the package was US 161 40 equal to 1 542 77 today 7 As mentioned above the Nova option could not officially have V8 engines at this time the standard SS engine was the six cylinder this was also applicable to the Impala and later the early Chevelle c 1964 65 when the SS was a sport and appearance package but small block V8 engine swaps were commonplace among enthusiasts For 1964 sales were hit hard by the introduction of the new Chevelle 8 and the Chevy II received its first factory V8 option a 195 hp 145 kW 283 cu in 4 6 L as well as a 230 cu in 3 8 L straight six 9 The six cylinder was all new replacing the older Stovebolt engine Rival manufacturer Chrysler had earlier developed the Slant Six in their Plymouth Valiant a Chevy II competitor when the cars were introduced to the public in late 1959 as 1960 models At introduction in the fall the hardtop coupe was missing in the lineup contributing to a loss of sales as well as showroom appeal Chevrolet subsequently reintroduced the Sport Coupe in the lineup later in the model year and it remained available through 1967 nbsp 1965 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 4 door sedan with aftermarket wheels The 1965 Chevrolet Chevy II and Nova were updated with cleaner front end styling courtesy of a fresh full width grille with new integrated headlight bezels Parking lights moved down to the deep section bumper and sedans gained a new roofline Taillight and backup lights were restyled as was the rear cove The 1965 Chevy II came in entry level 100 form or as the posher Nova 400 each in three body styles The Nova Super Sport came as a Sport Coupe only and its production dipped to just 9 100 cars Super Sports had a new brushed chrome console with floor mounted four speed manual transmission or Powerglide automatic but a column mounted three speed manual remained standard Bucket seats wore textured vinyl trim and the dashboard held ammeter oil pressure and temperature gauges An expanded engine lineup gave customers six power choices of the six cylinder or V 8 engines the four cylinder was available only in the 100 But for Chevy II enthusiasts 1965 is best remembered as the year the Chevy II became a muscle car A 327 cu in 5 4 L V8 was available with up to 300 hp 220 kW suddenly putting Nova SS performance practically on a par with the GTO 4 4 2 and 271 bhp Mustang 289s at least in straight line acceleration Midyear also brought a more potent 283 with dual exhausts and 220 horsepower The Chevelle Malibu SS continued to eat away at the Nova SS market Out of 122 800 Chevy IIs built for 1965 compared to 213 601 Falcons only 9 100 were Super Sports For 1965 Chevy II had the dubious distinction of being the only car in GM s lineup to suffer a sales decline It is possible that some Chevy II sales were lost to the brand new 65 Corvair which addressed virtually all its 1960 64 problems got rave reviews from automotive journals and featured sleek new Z body styling along with a brand new chassis Second generation 1966 1967 editChevrolet Chevy IISecond generation nbsp 1967 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova 4 Door SedanOverviewProduction1965 1967Model years1966 1967AssemblyNorwood Ohio U S Norwood Assembly Ypsilanti Michigan U S Willow Run Assembly Oshawa Ontario Canada Oshawa Assembly Body and chassisClassCompactBody style2 door sedan2 door hardtop4 door sedan4 door station wagonLayoutFR layoutPlatformX bodyRelatedAcadianPowertrainEngine153 cu in 2 51 L I4194 cu in 3 18 L I6230 cu in 3 8 L I6250ci 4 1L I6 1967 283 cu in 4 64 L V8327 cu in 5 36 L V8Transmission3 4 speed manual2 speed PowerglideDimensionsWheelbase110 in 2 794 mm Length183 in 4 648 mm Sedan Coupe 10 187 4 in 4 760 mm Station wagonWidth71 3 in 1 811 mm Height55 1 in 1 400 mm Sedan52 8 53 8 in 1 341 1 367 mm Coupe55 7 in 1 415 mm Station Wagon1966 Chevy IIs introduced an extensive sharp edged restyle based in part on the Super Nova concept car In general proportions were squared up but dimensions and features changed little Highlights included a bold grille and semi fastback roofline Humped fenders in an angular rear end were reminiscent of larger 1966 Chevrolets though the 1966 Chevy II and Nova had vertical taillights and single headlights The lineup again started with Chevy II 100 and Chevy II Nova 400 models nbsp 1966 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Sport Coupe nbsp 1967 Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Station WagonFor just 159 equal to 1 434 1 today more than a Nova 400 buyers could choose a Nova Super Sport Available only in a Sport Coupe the Nova SS was top of the line The 194 cu in 3 18 L inline six was standard on the Super Sport but any Chevy II excluding four cylinder engine could be coupled with the SS The Nova SS was visually distinguished by wide rocker panels and a bright aluminum deck lid cove It had bright SS emblems on the grille and in the ribbed rear panel and Super Sport script on the quarter panels Wheel covers were inherited from the 1965 Malibu SS Strato bucket front seats were included but a tachometer cost extra 11 The 66 Chevy II sales brochure clearly promoted the Super Sport as the Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Super Sport but the name Nova was not used anywhere on the body Front and rear emblems displayed Chevy II SS 12 In 1967 Chevy II was still the name of the vehicle but the Nova SS option package replaced all Chevy II badging with Nova SS badging The 90 hp 67 kW 153 cu in 2 51 L inline four engine was only offered in the base Chevy II 100 series models Buyers could also order a 194 cu in 3 18 L inline six engine std in the SS a 230 cu in 3 8 L inline six a 195 hp 145 kW or 220 hp 160 kW 283 cu in 4 64 L V 8 a 275 hp 205 kW 327 cu in 5 36 L V 8 and the top engine a new Turbo Fire 327 cu in 5 36 L V 8 delivering 350 hp 260 kW This engine was first seen in the Chevelle This engine with the close ratio four speed manual transmission turned the normally mild Nova into a proper muscle car The Powerglide automatic was not available with the 350 hp engine The 1967 models received nothing more than a touch up after a restyling for 1966 All Novas got a crosshatch pattern that filled the deck lid trim panel The Nova officially was still called the Chevy II Nova and had overtaken the bottom rung Chevy II 100 in sales The Chevy II 100 lacked much in the way of trim or brightwork 1967 models carried significant improvements in the area of safety equipment A government mandated energy absorbing steering column and safety steering wheel soft interior parts such as armrests and sun visors recessed instrument panel knobs front seat belt anchors and dual brake master cylinders were included in all 1967 models The 1967 Chevy II and its deluxe Nova rendition continued to attract compact car shoppers but the Chevrolet Camaro introduced for 1967 took away some Nova sales Available only in hardtop coupe form the 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS got a new black accented anodized aluminum grille SS wheel covers were again inherited this time from the 1965 66 Impala SS The 1966 Chevy II SS badges were replaced with Nova SS emblems for the 67s Nova versions started with the 194 cu in 3 18 L in line six engine but new was an optional 250 cu in 4 1 L inline six Further powertrain options included a 195 hp 145 kW 283 cu in 4 64 L V 8 and for 93 more a 275 hp 205 kW 327 cu in 5 36 L V 8 Nova SS coupes had a console mounted shift lever with their Powerglide automatic transmission or a four speed manual Other models had a column mounted gearshift Compared to the 1966 model year output sales of the 1967 models dropped by more than a third to 106 500 including 12 900 station wagons About 10 100 Nova SS Chevrolets went to customers this year 8 200 of them with V 8 engines In the Chevy II 100 and regular Nova series six cylinder engines sold far better than V 8s Third generation 1968 1974 editChevrolet Chevy II NovaChevrolet NovaThird generation nbsp Chevrolet Nova SS 350 coupeOverviewProduction1967 1974Model years1968 1974AssemblyLeeds Kansas City Missouri U S Leeds Assembly Van Nuys California U S Van Nuys Assembly Norwood Ohio U S Norwood Assembly 1972 only Ypsilanti Michigan U S Willow Run Assembly San Martin Argentina GM Argentina Mexico City Mexico 1973 1974 Arica ChileBody and chassisClassCompactBody style2 door coupe3 door hatchback4 door sedanLayoutFR layoutPlatformX bodyRelatedBuick ApolloOldsmobile OmegaPontiac VenturaPowertrainEngineList 153ci 2 5L I4194ci 3 1L I6230ci 3 8L I6250ci 4 1L I6307ci 5 0L V8327ci 5 4L V8350ci 5 7L V8396ci 6 5L V8402ci 6 6L V8TransmissionList 4 speed M 20 manual4 speed M 21 manual4 speed M 22 manual4 speed Borg Warner T 10 manual3 speed manual Saginaw 3 speed THM350 automatic3 speed THM400 automatic2 speed Powerglide automatic2 speed Torque Drive semi automaticDimensionsWheelbase111 0 in 2 819 mm Length189 4 in 4 811 mm 13 Width72 4 in 1 839 mm Height53 9 in 1 369 mm Sedan52 4 in 1 331 mm Coupe nbsp 1968 was the last year of the Chevy II Nova nameplateThe 1968 models were fully redesigned with an extensive restyle on a longer 111 inch wheelbase that gave Chevrolet s compacts a chassis that was just one inch shorter than that of the midsize Chevelle coupe The station wagon and hardtop sport coupe were discontinued the former in line with an industry trend which left AMC the only American maker of compact station wagons until Chrysler rejoined the market in 1976 the 1966 70 Ford Falcon wagon was actually midsize using a bodyshell identical to the Fairlane wagon s One notable change was the front subframe assembly as compared with Ford Chrysler and AMC in whose cars the entire front suspension was integrated with the bodyshell a separate subframe housing the powertrain and front suspension similar to the front part of the frame of GM s full size full framed vehicles replaced the earlier style Although the front subframe design was unique for the Nova the Camaro introduced a year earlier was the first to incorporate such a design the redesigned Nova was pushed a year ahead to 1968 instead of 1969 The sales brochure claimed 15 powertrain choices for coupes and a dozen for sedans Options included power brakes and steering Four Season or Comfort Car air conditioning rear shoulder belts and head restraints There were a few Chevrolet Novas built with the 194 ci 3 1 L the same motor that had been used in the previous generations of the Chevy II Sales of the 1968 Chevy II Nova fell by half In 1969 Chevrolet dropped the Chevy II portion of its compact car s name it was now known simply as the Chevrolet Nova The 153 cu in 2 51 L four cylinder engine was offered between 1968 and 1970 then was dropped due to lack of interest besides its other usage in the Jeep DJ 5A a k a the Postal Jeep or a marine industrial engine and to clear the field for the Vega Far more popular were the 230 cu in 3 8 L six cylinder and the base 307 cu in 5 03 L V8 which replaced the 283 cu in 4 64 L V8 offered in previous years Several units were produced with the 327 cu in 5 36 L 275 hp 205 kW engine four barrel quadrajet carb and four speed Saginaw transmission with a heavy duty 12 bolt positraction rear as a towing option package At mid year a semi automatic transmission based on the Powerglide called the Torque Drive RPO MB1 was introduced as a low cost option 100 less than the Powerglide for clutchless motoring The Torque Drive transmission was only offered with the four and six cylinder engines The two speed Powerglide was still the only fully automatic transmission available with most engines as the more desirable three speed Turbo Hydramatic was only available with the largest V8 engines Nova SS edit nbsp Chevrolet Nova SS CoupeThe Nova Super Sport was transformed from a trim option to a performance package for 1968 One of the smallest muscle cars ever fielded by Detroit the Nova SS now included a 295 hp 220 kW 350 cu in 5 7 L V8 engine along with a heavy duty suspension and other performance hardware priced at US 312 14 Optional V8 engines included two versions of the big block 396 cu in 6 5 L rated at 350 bhp 350 PS 260 kW and 375 bhp 380 PS 280 kW at 5600 rpm and 415 lb ft 563 N m at 3600 rpm of torque 15 which went for US 348 16 Both engines were offered with a choice of transmissions including the M 21 close ratio four speed manual the heavy duty M 22 Rock Crusher four speed manual or the three speed Turbo Hydramatic 400 automatic transmission A total of 5 571 SS coupes were produced for 1968 Novas sported the SS badge until 1976 17 Front disc brakes were optional on the 1968 Nova SS 1969 1972 edit For 1969 the Chevy II nameplate was retired leaving the Nova nameplate 18 The Chevy II by Chevrolet trunklid badge was replaced with Nova by Chevrolet and the Chevy II badge above the grille was replaced with the bowtie emblem and the 1969 model was promoted under the Nova model name in Chevrolet sales literature 19 As with other 1969 GM vehicles locking steering columns were incorporated into the Nova Simulated air extractor vents were added below the Nova script which was relocated to the front fender behind the wheel well instead of the rear quarter panel The 350 cu in 5 7 L V8 with four barrel carburetor that came standard with the SS option was revised with a 5 hp 4 kW increase to 300 hp 220 kW while a two barrel carbureted version of the 350 cu in 5 7 L V8 rated at 255 hp 190 kW was a new option on non SS models The SS option price remained US 312 20 A new Turbo Hydramatic 350 three speed automatic was made available for non SS Novas with six cylinder and V8 engines although the older two speed Powerglide continued to be available on the smaller engined Novas 1969 SS models were the first Nova SS models to have standard front disc brakes nbsp 1970 1972 Chevrolet Nova four door sedanThe 1970 Nova was basically a carryover from 1969 The side marker and taillight lenses for the 1970 Nova were wider and positioned slightly differently This was the final year for the SS396 actually a 402 cubic in engine now All other engines were carried over including the seldom ordered four cylinder which was in its final year 21 The car finally became simply the Chevrolet Nova this year after two years of transitional nameplates Chevy II Nova in 1968 and Chevrolet Chevy Nova in 1969 Out of 254 242 Novas sold for 1970 19 558 were the SS 350 or SS 396 version Approximately 177 Central Office Production Order COPO Novas were ordered with 175 converted by Yenko Chevrolet The other two were sold in Canada The Nova was used in Trans Am racing this year Year 1971 Novas were similar to the previous year The 396 cu in 6 49 L engine was replaced with the 350 cu in 5 7 L in the SS model 1971 also saw the introduction of the Rally Nova a trim level that only lasted two years until it resurfaced as the Nova Rally in 1977 The Rally kit included black or white stripes that ran the length of the car and between the taillights in the back a Rally Nova sticker on the driver s side of the hood 6 slot 14X6 Rally wheels heavy duty suspension with mono leaf or multi leaf in the rear depending on optional equipment ordered and a sport body colored driver s side mirror that was adjustable from the interior The well hyped Vega stole sales from the Nova this year but the compact soon would enjoy a resurgence of popularity that would last deep into the 1970s A mid year production change was the front door hinges spot welded to the A pillar and the door shell a design shared with the Vega and later implemented by GM s subsequent light duty trucks and vans which later was used with the S10 Astro van and full size trucks commencing with the GMT400 a decade later The 250 cu in 4 1 L six cylinder engine was now the standard Nova engine with the demise of the 153 cu in 2 51 L four cylinder and 230 cu in 3 8 L six cylinder engines The 307 cu in 5 03 L and 350 cu in 5 7 L V8s were carried over from 1970 and all engines featured lowered compression ratios to enable the use of unleaded gasoline as a result of a GM corporate mandate that took effect with the 1971 model year After 1971 other GM divisions began rebadging the Nova as their new entry level vehicle such as the Pontiac Ventura II once a trim option for full size Pontiacs to 1970 Oldsmobile Omega and the Buick Apollo This was considered to build brand loyalty with respective GM divisions although the company later fused their badge engineering with platform sharing to cut expenditures The initials of the four model names spelled out the acronym NOVA Nova Omega Ventura Apollo The 1973 introduction of the Omega and Apollo coincided with the subsequent oil crisis where sales of the X and H platform increased The 1972 Nova received only minor trim changes The Rally package option with heavy duty suspension returned and was a rather popular choice with 33 319 sold SuperSport equipment went on 12 309 coupes Nova production moved to Norwood Ohio where it would be assembled alongside the Camaro At mid year a sunroof option called the Sky Roof became available on two door models Also the optional Strato bucket seats available on coupes switched from the previous low back design with adjustable headrests to the high back units with built in headrests introduced the previous year on Camaros and Vegas Despite the lack of change Nova had its best sales season in years with the production of the 1972 models reaching 349 733 Of these 139 769 had the six cylinder engine Rally Nova 1971 1972 edit nbsp Rally NovaMid 1971 saw the introduction of the Rally Nova 22 RPO YF1 available with the Nova coupe X27 model only The Rally Nova option was basically an appearance option but did include heavy duty front and rear suspension RPO F40 which could be mono leaf or multi leaf in the rear depending on optional equipment ordered The Rally Nova was a would be Muscle Car It had the look of a Muscle Car with stripes black grill left hand sport mirror and 14X6 6 slot Rally wheels but it could not be ordered with the SS only 200 hp 150 kW Turbo Fire 350 V8 4V RPO L48 engine This was done for two reasons people who wanted the Muscle Car look could have it without paying for the more expensive Super Sport option The other reason was because of insurance surcharges that applied to owners of real Muscle Cars The SS was more expensive to insure because of the 200 hp Turbo Fire 350 V8 engine 23 24 25 The Rally Nova option included black or white tapered stripe decals that ran the length of the car with Rally Nova wording in the stripes toward the rear of both quarter panels A stripe decal between the taillights on the back a Rally Nova decal on the driver s side of the hood 6 slot 14x6 Rally wheels with special center caps driver s side body colored remote adjustable Sport mirror black painted grill with bright upper and lower horizontal bars black accent headlight bezels bright roof drip moldings and color keyed floor carpeting 26 Available engines for the Rally Nova were the 165 hp 125 kW Turbo Thrift 250 L6 1V RPO L22 130 hp 95 kW Turbo Fire 307 V8 2V RPO L14 and 165 hp 125 kW Turbo Fire 350 V8 2V RPO L65 Available transmissions were 3 Speed manual RPO ZW4 all engines Powerglide automatic RPO M35 standard engines only and the Turbo Hydra matic automatic RPO M40 V8 only The Rally Nova only came with 2 single exhaust since the 2 1 4 dual exhaust was reserved for the SS only 200 hp Turbo Fire 350 V8 4V RPO L48 25 Optional interior trim levels Custom RPO ZJ1 and Special RPO ZJ3 could be ordered Custom Exterior RPO ZJ2 YF8 and Exterior Decor Package RPO ZJ5 were not available when the Rally Nova was ordered This means bright rear panel trim plate bright side window moldings sill moldings fender moldings side molding and accent striping would have never come on a Rally Nova The only allowed exterior options were a vinyl roof RPO C08 engine badges for 307 or 350 engines and for mid 1972 the newly available Sky Roof 25 27 Other available optional accessories and equipment that could be had with the Rally Nova included Sport steering wheel RPO NK4 vinyl rim steering wheel RPO NK2 color keyed floor mats front and rear RPO B37 color keyed seat belts front shoulder and rear RPO AK1 AM RPO U63 or AM FM RPO U69 radios windshield antenna RPO U76 rear speaker RPO U80 clock RPO U35 special instrumentation RPO U17 Required V8 coupe with bucket seats and console rear window defogger RPO C50 auxiliary lighting RPO ZJ9 A C RPO C60 with V8 engine only bucket seats RPO A51 console RPO D55 with bucket seats only softray tinted glass RPO A01 trailering rear axel 3 42 ratio RPO YD1 positraction RPO G80 wheel trim rings RPO P06 power drum brakes RPO J50 power disk brakes RPO JL2 E78X14 bias ply belted single white stripe tires RPO PL3 power steering RPO N40 front and rear bumper guards RPO V30 heavy duty radiator RPO V01 and heavy duty battery RPO T60 25 Production numbers for the Rally Nova were 7 700 built in 1971 and 33 319 in 1972 of 403 450 total Nova 2 door coupes produced from 1971 1972 28 Yenko Novas edit nbsp 1970 Yenko Nova coupe 350 SCRetired race car driver and muscle car specialist Don Yenko of Yenko Chevrolet in Canonsburg Pennsylvania refitted a series of third generation Novas as well as Chevelles and Camaros for optimum performance to compete with the frontrunning Ford Mustangs Plymouth Barracudas and Dodge Challengers The specially redesigned Nova sometimes known as the Yenko Supernova had a stronger body frame and suspension system to house the powerful and heavy 427cid 7 0 L V8 engine that powered the Yenko Super Cars Only 37 were known to be produced with an original selling price of 4 000 00 Today only seven units are registered and known to exist In 1970 emissions standards and fuel economy were taking a toll on muscle cars To counter this Yenko requested a high output Chevy 350cid V8 in his special line of Novas the same engine that the new Z 28 Camaro and LT1 Corvette shared Additionally the new Yenko Deuce as it was known had extensive suspension transmission and rear axle upgrades along with some very lively stripes badges and interior decals Facelift 1973 1974 edit The 1973 model year introduced a hatchback body style based on the 2 door coupe The front and rear of the Nova were restyled following a government mandate for vehicles to be fitted with front bumpers capable of withstanding 5 mph 8 km h impacts and rear bumpers capable of absorbing 2 5 mph 4 km h impacts To go along with the bigger bumpers stylists gave the Nova a new grille with a loosely patterned crosshatch insert and parking lights located inboard of the headlights In 1974 the rear bumper could absorb 5 mph impacts Fuel tank capacity increased to 21 gallons which required a redesigned trunk pan where a circular section was stamped to house the space saver spare tire used on hatchback models nbsp 1973 Chevrolet Nova SSAn SS option remained available but it was merely a 123 dress up package that included a blackout grille and Rally wheels It could be ordered with any of the Nova engines 35 542 SS packages were installed making 1973 the best selling year for the option A modified rear side window shape was also introduced eliminating the vent windows on both two and four door models A revised rear suspension was adapted from the second generation Camaro with multi leaf springs replacing the mono leaf springs used on Novas since the original 1962 model By this time six cylinder and V8 engines were de rigueur for American compact cars with the 307 cu in 5 03 L and 350 cu in 5 7 L V8s becoming fairly common The 1973 Nova with a six cylinder engine or 307 cu in 5 0 L V8 were among the last Chevrolets to be offered with the two speed Powerglide automatic transmission which was in its final year A dressy Custom series which became a mid level trim package in 1975 joined the Nova line and a Custom hatchback listed for 2 701 with a six cylinder engine That was 173 more than the six cylinder base model two door hatchback Air conditioning added 381 Every 1973 Chevrolet Nova got side guard door beams and additional sound insulation as well as flow through ventilation systems A sunroof could be installed and fold down rear seats were available For 1974 the Chevrolet Nova got a centered bow tie grille emblem as well as modified bumpers that added two inches to the length and helped cushion minor impacts The Powerglide was replaced by a lightweight version of the three speed Turbo Hydramatic 350 THM 250 already offered with the 350 cu in 5 7 L V8 which was the only V8 offered for 1974 Nova sales continued the surge they had enjoyed since 1972 and approached 400 000 cars for 1974 Six cylinder Novas were the fastest gainers as sales of V 8 Novas declined These were the years of the first energy crisis as Middle Eastern countries cut back on oil exports After waiting for hours in gas lines and fretting about the prospect of fuel rationing thrifty compacts looked pretty good to plenty of Americans and it fit the bill The Spirit of America Nova was introduced in 1974 In anticipation of the US bicentennial in 1976 the limited edition Nova Coupes were painted white and featured blue and red accent stripes as well as red and blue interior carpets and fabrics Oldsmobile and Buick entered the compact car market both the Apollo and Omega debuted using the same body styles from the Nova lineup Additional options were included on these Nova like models such as lighting under the dashboard and in the glove compartment Pontiac s final GTO of this era was based on a facelifted 1974 Ventura coupe itself based on the Nova but fitted with a shaker hood scoop from the Trans Am Novas and all 1974 cars were fitted with a weight sensitive relay within the front seat that prevented the vehicle from being started until the driver s seatbelt had been fastened following a safety mandate from the NHTSA Later Congress repealed the mandate requiring this type of device declaring that it infringed on a driver s freedom of choice and allowed owners of 1974 model cars to have the seat belt interlock bypassed 29 The devices were not included in future Nova models Along with this controversial seat belt interlock a new more convenient inertial reel one piece lap shoulder safety belt assembly was standard for both front outboard passengers along with a plastic clip attached to the headrest to guide the belt across the wearer s shoulder Prices edit Original manufacturers sales prices for the third generation Nova were 30 Year Production Low Price High Price1968 201 005 2 200 2 4001969 251 900 2 240 2 4351970 315 122 2 175 2 2001971 194 878 2 175 2 2851972 349 733 2 375 2 4001973 369 511 2 375 2 7001974 390 537 2 810 3 105Fourth generation 1975 1979 editChevrolet NovaFourth generation nbsp 1976 Chevrolet Nova sedanOverviewAlso calledChevrolet Concours 1976 1977 Chevrolet IranProduction1974 1979Model years1975 1979AssemblyLeeds Kansas City Missouri U S Leeds Assembly North Tarrytown New York U S North Tarrytown Assembly Van Nuys California U S Van Nuys Assembly Ypsilanti Michigan U S Willow Run Assembly Mexico City Mexico 1975 1978 Tehran Iran Pars Khodro Body and chassisClassCompactBody style2 door coupe3 door hatchback4 door sedanLayoutFR layoutPlatformX bodyRelatedBuick ApolloBuick SkylarkOldsmobile OmegaPontiac PhoenixPontiac VenturaCadillac Seville K platform PowertrainEngine151 cu in 2 5 L Iron Duke I4230 cu in 3 8 L I6250 cu in 4 1 L I6262 cu in 4 3 L V8 1975 only 305 cu in 5 0 L V8350 cu in 5 7 L V8Transmission3 speed manual4 speed M 21 manual4 speed M 22 manual5 speed Borg Warner T 50 manual3 speed THM350 automatic3 speed THM400 automaticDimensionsWheelbase111 0 in 2 820 mm Length196 7 in 4 996 mm 31 Width72 2 in 1 834 mm Height53 6 in 1 361 mm Sedan52 7 in 1 339 mm CoupeChronologySuccessorChevrolet Citation Citation IIThe 1975 Chevrolet Nova was the most changed Chevy car for that model year Now it s beautiful said the brochure of Nova s all new sheet metal refined along the lines of elegant European sedans Chevrolet wisely maintained a visual kinship with the 1968 1974 design and also retained Nova s efficiently sized 111 inch wheelbase Front tread grew by an inch and a half and the front stabilizer bar had a larger diameter Novas now had standard front disc brakes and steel belted radial tires The front suspension and subframe assembly was similar to the one used in the second generation GM F body cars the Camaro and Pontiac Firebird whereas the rear axle and suspension were carried over from the previous generation Coupes including the hatchback had fixed side windows or optional flip out windows the first for a GM vehicle later optioned throughout the 1980s with its light duty trucks S10 Astro Safari and GMT400 trucks to the K2XX series and vertical vents on the B pillar All Novas now had cut pile carpeting formerly installed only in the Custom series Speedometers had larger easier to read graphics Windshields offered greater glass area Front door armrests were redesigned with integral pull bars The base model carried the inline six cylinder 250 cu in 4 1 L 105 hp 78 kW three V8 engines 262 cu in 4 29 L a 1975 only option a 305 cu in 5 00 L and a 350 cu in 5 7 L for 1976 only were offered Mated to a three speed automatic 3 speed manual or 4 speed V8s only Which remained the norm through the end of the decade and the end of the rear wheel drive X platform By then Cadillac had developed its own version of the X body called the K body which was named the Seville whose styling was distinct from those of its corporate cousins and Buick replaced the Apollo with the Skylark name that had been inactive since the previous incarnation ended production at the end of the 1972 model year nbsp 1975 Chevrolet Nova LNThe LN Luxury Nova package which was the top luxury trim similar to the Caprice and Malibu Classic sent Nova into the luxury portion of the compact market some actually thought of it as competing against a few high end European imports The Nova LN was called the most luxurious compact in Chevrolet s history with wide back reclining front seats that look and feel like big soft lounge chairs LN equipment included ad ditional sound insulation map pockets an electric clock a smoked instrument lens floor shifter and center console and a day night mirror Taillight lenses have additional white accents unavailable with the base model and a chrome plated grille Above the front marker lenses the LN had 4 3 LITER or 5 7 LITER decals making it the first Chevrolet product with metric displacement badges sold in the Americas Swing out quarter windows could be ordered for the coupe Thanks to LN the sales brochure announced Nova s image will never be the same again The LN was more Eurocentric as opposed to the Custom which became the mid level trim option For 1976 the Nova LN was rebranded Concours to rival the Ford Granada and the Mercury Monarch as well as upscale versions of the Dodge Dart and Plymouth Valiant Like regular versions of the 1976 Nova the Concours came in three body styles coupe hatchback coupe and four door sedan Concours was the most luxurious Chevrolet compact to date Rosewood vinyl decorated the upper door panels instrument panel and steering wheel Concours models had an upright hood ornament bumper guards bright trim moldings black bumper impact strips and full wheel covers more basic Novas came with hubcaps The Concours coupe also was the first Chevrolet coupe with a fold down front center armrest A V8 Concours coupe sold for 547 more than the comparable base Nova Engines for the 1976 Chevrolet Nova were a 105 horsepower inline six a 165 horsepower 350 cubic inch V 8 or a 140 horse 305 cubic inch V 8 1976 GM vehicles first saw use of the THM200 from the GM T platform to GM X Bodies Chevrolet Nova et al A lighter duty 10 bolt rear differential with a 7 5 ring gear also used with the Vega Monza and produced until 2005 was phased into production being standard equipment with the base inline six A Cabriolet padded vinyl top was available for Nova coupes Modest revisions were made to the brakes and also to fuel and exhaust system mountings Dashboards contained new knobs After testing the 1976 Chevrolet Nova the Los Angeles Sheriff s Department placed the largest order for compact police cars ever seen in the U S The 187 Nova SS option group included a black grille with unique diamond mesh pattern Rally wheels four spoke steering wheel and heavy duty suspension Minor changes for the 1977 model year included a more modern round gauge cluster to replace the long sweeping speedometer and a revised dash panel which changed to a flatter design Some new colors were offered as with the rest of the divisions and some small trim added A separate brochure was printed for the Concours while the 1977 Nova brochure detailed only base and Custom versions The Nova SS previously offered for 1975 and 1976 was discontinued the option code for the SS RPO Z26 continued as the Nova Rally from 1977 through 1979 A badged engineered Nova Malibu Rallye 1977 and 1978 model years not related to the USA market Chevelle based model and based on the Nova hatchback coupe was sold in Mexico using the RPO Z26 package but fitted with Malibu Rallye graphics and a front grille emblem Three engines and four transmissions were available for every 1977 Chevrolet Nova including Concours Buyers could choose from a 110 horsepower 250 cubic inch inline six a 145 horsepower 305 cubic inch two barrel V 8 or 170 horsepower 350 cubic inch four barrel V 8 Shifting was accomplished by three speed column or floor shift and four speed manuals or Turbo Hydra Matic Novas might also be equipped with a heavy duty suspension or the F41 sport suspension A surprising number of police departments ordered Novas with either a 305 or 350 cubic inch V 8 engine following the lead of the Los Angeles Sheriff s Department which had given the compacts an exhaustive evaluation nbsp 1976 Chevrolet Nova 2 door coupe nbsp Rear view of a 1976 Nova sedanPromoted as Concours by Chevrolet the 1977 Concours featured a new vertical bar grille and a revised stand up hood ornament The rear of the Concours also got new triple unit taillamps reminiscent of the Caprice It also boasted newly designed wheel covers and wider bright wheel opening moldings International in style it is American in function the sales brochure insisted of the Concours The brochure went on to note that Concours offered a very special blending of classic style and good sense That last comment referenced Nova s sensible size Novas themselves the marketing materials said were not too small not too big not too expensive For 1978 the Concours was discontinued to clear the way for the newly downsized Malibu and the Nova Custom inherited much of the Concours exterior finery but lacked the stand up hood ornament displayed by the Concours Upholstery choices included all vinyl or Edinburgh woven sport cloth vinyl More basic versions of the 1978 Chevrolet Nova had the same grille as used in 1976 1977 and added a gold tinted Chevy bowtie emblem at the leading edge of the hood For 78 Nova was also available with Rally equipment which included yet another front end layout a diamond pattern grille with horizontal parking lights and black headlight bezels basically the 1976 1977 SS grille plus triple band striping and color keyed Rally wheels All Nova drivers faced a new dual spoke soft vinyl covered steering wheel the same one found in the Caprice and Malibu Any 1978 Chevrolet Nova could be ordered with a 250 cubic inch six cylinder engine a 145 horsepower 305 cubic inch V 8 or a 170 horsepower 350 cubic inch V 8 Law enforcement agencies in 48 states were driving Novas by now as the sales brochure boasted Production dropped almost 100 000 for the model to 288 000 making Nova the only Chevrolet series to show a sales decline for 1978 Sales of the Nova hatchback body style lagged well behind regular coupes and sedans and base models handily outsold Customs Upon introduction of the downsized GM A body later G body mid size cars in 1978 the X body and downsized A platform had similar exterior dimensions The roomier and more modern downsized A bodies outsold their X body counterparts The 1979 Chevrolet Nova marked the end of the line for the rear wheel drive Nova The front end was revised with rectangular headlights and a new grille for the short run matching that of its Pontiac Phoenix cousin which replaced the Ventura for 1977 a modified horizontal bar grille contained vertical parking lights New chromed hood and fender moldings were installed and new front bumper filler panels gave the front end a more finished look The Custom went back to the base dual section taillights since the triple section taillights were discontinued The lineup was the same as in 1978 the base level hatchback coupe and sedan plus the Custom coupe and sedan As usual base coupe and sedan proved to be the best sellers Nova Customs had a special acoustical package including improved headlining and full hood insulation along with other luxury extras while the Rally Package returned this time using the same grille as other 1979 Novas These final Novas were promoted for their solid value and reputation for dependability capitalizing upon a 17 year heritage that had begun with the Chevy II Fewer than 98 000 examples were produced Regular production ended on December 22 1978 but some cars badged Nova Custom were built on special order with luxury amenities in early 1979 The final Chevrolet Nova Custom built on special order would roll off the line on March 15 1979 and this would be the end of the rear drive Nova for good Chevrolet s compact models were headed into the front wheel drive age and for 1980 Nova s place in the lineup would be taken over by the new and very different Chevrolet Citation the Phoenix Omega and Skylark carried over to this platform as well and the Seville was reassigned to another front drive platform Fifth generation 1985 1988 editChevrolet NovaFifth generation nbsp 1988 Chevrolet Nova 5 Door HatchbackOverviewProduction1984 1988Model years1985 1988AssemblyUnited States Fremont California NUMMI Body and chassisClassSubcompactBody style4 door notchback sedan5 door hatchbackLayoutTransverse front engine front wheel drivePlatformToyota AE82 Platform GM S platform as known within GM RelatedToyota SprinterToyota CorollaHolden NovaPowertrainEngine1 6 L 4A C LC9 I4 gasoline 1 6 L 4A GE LW0 I4 gasoline Transmission5 speed manual3 speed automatic4 speed automaticDimensionsWheelbase95 7 in 2 430 mm Length166 3 in 4 220 mm Width64 4 in 1 640 mm Height52 8 in 1 340 mm ChronologySuccessorGeo PrizmThe Chevrolet Nova nameplate returned in spring 1984 as a front wheel drive subcompact vehicle for the 1985 to 1988 model years It was assembled in Fremont California by NUMMI a joint venture between General Motors and Toyota of Japan resulting in various Corolla based cars sold under General Motors brands also referred to as the S car within GM It resurrected a name last used on the compact sized rear wheel drive 1979 Chevrolet Nova The new Nova was a rebadged and mildly restyled Japanese market Toyota Sprinter a model sold in Japan as a badge engineered version of the Toyota Corolla Nova shared the Corolla s AE82 platform 1 6 L 98 cu in 4 cylinder engines and was available with 5 speed manual 3 speed or 4 speed automatic transmissions For the first time ever quad headlights were used on the Nova mimicking most other models at the time such as the slightly larger Chevrolet Cavalier It was designed for manufacturability and reached an unusually high level of quality and production speed at NUMMI compared to other US factories 32 1985 model The 1985 Chevrolet Nova was initially offered only in a four door three box notchback sedan body style and in the Midwestern states A five door hatchback was added shortly after its introduction and the line was distributed throughout the US and Canada beginning around traditional new model introduction time in the fall as were the other Chevy imports the Suzuki based Sprint which had been first launched on the West Coast and the Isuzu based Spectrum which had initially been available on the Eastern Seaboard and throughout New England and New York State The only engine was a carbureted 1 6 liter four cylinder with 74 horsepower 55 kW It teamed with either a five speed manual or three speed automatic transmission This was the same powertrain as offered in the Corolla The four door sedan listed for 7 435 a rather stiff tariff by Chevrolet standards The five door which added a split folding rear seat started at 7 669 All Nova options were grouped into seven packages which did away with the long list of optional equipment that accompanied such cars as the Chevrolet Chevette Simple though it was the subcompact Chevette offered nearly 30 options However adding one of the costlier packages could easily push the Nova s sticker to over 10 000 nbsp 1986 Chevrolet Nova CL sedan1987 model The 1987 Chevrolet Nova saw only minor changes after its introduction two years earlier as a near twin to the front wheel drive Toyota Corolla A rear window defogger was added to the list of standard equipment while visual changes were limited to lighter silver highlights on the vertical grille bars and a change of turn signal lens colors from amber to clear white front and red rear CL models also got red reflective panels carrying the taillights onto the trunk hatch body colored bumpers and new aluminum wheels The 1987 Chevrolet Nova continued in two body styles a four door sedan and five door hatchback The four door proved by far the more popular by about three to one Nova s only engine was again a 74 horsepower 1 6 liter four designed by Toyota mated to either a five speed manual transmission or four speed automatic Though Corollas were priced slightly below competing Novas Chevy s version of the car could often be bought for less because slow sales encouraged dealers to discount prices Slow sales however meant slow by Chevy standards for the Nova sold about as well as the Corolla and buyers would find that their discounted Nova in turn had a lower resale value than the equivalent Toyota a pattern that would persist for GM branded NUMMI cars Aside from some minor interior and exterior trim differences the cars were much the same though Novas had a slightly softer suspension that favored ride over handling nbsp 1988 Chevrolet Nova Hatchback1988 model The 1988 Chevrolet Nova added a sporty model to its lineup of subcompact front wheel drive cars This new 1988 Chevrolet Nova Twin Cam got its name from a double overhead cam version of the Toyota built 1 6 liter four cylinder Novas continued to share their basic design with the Corolla and this engine had previously been used in the Toyota FX 16 a performance version of the Corolla The twin cam produced 110 hp 82 kW 36 more than its single cam sibling A five speed manual transmission was standard as in the regular Novas but the Twin Cam offered a four speed automatic as an option versus the three speed offered on other models The more potent engine elevated the 1988 Chevrolet Nova Twin Cam into junior sport sedan terri tory but the advancement didn t come cheaply The base Nova listed at about 8 800 the Twin Cam went for 11 395 That price included fuel injection sport suspension power steering leather covered steering wheel tachometer four wheel disc brakes and wider tires on aluminum wheels but it was a stiff tariff and few were ordered approximately 3 300 Twin Cam models were built There were no color choices all 1988 Chevrolet Nova Twin Cams wore black metallic paint with a grey interior and there was no hatchback version offered Every 1988 Chevrolet Nova got rear shoulder belts rear window defogger and AM FM stereo radio as standard equipment This was the last model year for the Nova name at Chevrolet Starting with 1989 Chevrolet pushed this car into its new Geo division and renamed it the Prizm Geo was Chevy s effort to come up with an import sounding label to attract buyers who were not inclined to shop American Production Figures Chevrolet Nova Production Figures 33 Sedan Hatchback Yearly Total1985 N A N A1986 124 961 42 788 167 7491987 123 782 26 224 150 0061988 90 563 18 570 109 133Total 339 306 87 582 426 888Reviews edit nbsp Chevrolet Nova advertisement 1962 The reaction to the 1962 Chevrolet Chevy II was mainly positive Veteran Mechanics Illustrated tester Tom McCahill was favorably impressed with a Chevy II 400 Series Nova convertible he drove at a press preview for Chevy s 1962 models held at GM s Milford Michigan test track Flat out which with Powerglide was 91 mph this little car never wavered and even over some rough strips it was one of the safest feeling 91 s I have ever driven The styling reminded Uncle Tom of a small Mercedes Benz and he concluded that with a little hopping up a stick shift and its low price it should sell like cold beer on a hot Fourth of July Car Life was even more enthusiastic honoring the Chevy II with its Award for Engineering Excellence We think the Chevy II in either 4 or 6 cylinder form represents an important development in the American automotive field reported the magazine We think it represents a return to sensibility in terms of basic transportation it is a car of reasonable size adequate performance and simple elegance The award was mentioned in a 1962 Chevrolet Nova advertisement see right Consumer Reports described the six cylinder Chevy II as an ultra sensible conventional car with outstanding interior space but also reported higher than average interior noise levels There were also complaints about the four cylinder version s lack of refinement CR hesitates to recommend the Four for normal use The Four is an excellent hackabout for specialized local use if you can stand the vibration McCahill put it this w ay The four wasn t the smoothest four I have ever driven but it had nice response and will probably still be running long after Castro shaves his beard off Consumer Reports in 1963 New last year the Chevy II has not yet developed into a smooth riding quiet or in any sense luxurious car It is an easy driving agile one By far its most important asset is a body with substantially the room of intermediate cars but with a very compact silhouette and especially good entrance height Motor Trend called the new Chevy II a most straightforward car simple honest and conventional Editor Jerry Titus was fascinated with the new rear single leaf suspension How it actually works seems almost contradictory There is a great deal of body roll but the car does not feel unstable The ride is soft and pleasing but not seasick soft with the constant pitching and rolling that some cars have Interior room steering and brakes were commended Performance was rated as moderate for a six cylinder Nova convertible with Powerglide 0 60 came up a shade under 16 seconds and the top speed was reported to be 98 mph but Titus felt that the car seems at its best below 75 where it did not feel as though it was working hard The four meanwhile took 20 seconds to make it from 0 to 60 mph In comparison a 1960 90 bhp Falcon with stick shift took 21 seconds 0 to 60 also according to Motor Trend while the 101 bhp six introduced for 1961 required 14 3 seconds with stick and 15 2 with the two speed Fordomatic 34 Motor Trend tested a 1964 195 bhp two barrel SS with Powerglide recording 0 to 60 in 11 3 seconds 18 0 seconds and 75 mph in the quarter mile and 100 mph all out Fuel economy ranged from 12 3 mpg in heavy traffic to 19 6 on the highway Motor Trend concluded that By adding a V 8 and bigger brakes plus detail changes Chevrolet has made a nice compact even more desirable and a much better performer The mid 1980s Nova made no attempt to recapture the former Muscle glory that it once had with the Twin Cam performance variant appearing only in the final year of the nameplate after Toyota had already moved on to the next generation of the platform International Novas editCanada edit nbsp 1963 Acadian Convertible nbsp 1966 Acadian CoupeWhile the Chevy II and Nova were also sold in Canada from the beginning a mildly re trimmed version was also sold by Pontiac Buick dealers as the Acadian The Acadian was produced between the years 1962 and 1971 It was a stand alone make based upon the Chevy II which was produced in both the U S and Canada 35 and sold exclusively through Canadian Pontiac Buick GMC dealerships Due to the Canadian tariffs on imports put into place many years before there was no compact car available to the Canadian Pontiac dealer The U S built Pontiac Tempest which started production in 1961 was not available initially to the Canadian buyer import duties would have made it too expensive to compete in the thrifty Canadian compact market The Acadian was introduced to give the unhappy Canadian Pontiac Buick dealer a car he could sell in the growing compact market During its entire run the Acadian offered the same body styles as were offered in the Chevy II Nova and the cars were virtually the same save minor trim and badging details Originally offered in top line Beaumont and base Invader trim the top trim line was renamed Canso in anticipation of the Chevelle based Acadian Beaumont which would arrive for 1964 A sporty model the Sport Deluxe or SD was equivalent to the U S market Nova SS and it also featured bucket seats deluxe exterior trim and special badging Base price for the 1966 Acadian was 2 507 The 327 350 hp L79 was available 85 were produced The Acadian line was now down to six models 7 366 Acadians were sold in 1966 36 It survived until mid 1971 after which it was replaced by the Pontiac Ventura II Argentina edit nbsp Argentinian Chevrolet MalibuIn 1962 Argentina offered the 1962 64 style Chevy II as the Chevrolet 400 through 1974 and the 1968 72 Nova as the Chevrolet Chevy from late 1969 through 1978 both models overlapping for several years An upscale model Chevy Super was produced from about 1973 with different trim front turn indicators and taillights a much better appointed interior with plastic wood trim named Malibu with no relation to the American Chevelle All engines were inline sixes The first and second generations were available depending on year and model with the 194 cu in 3 18 L 230 cu in 3 8 L and 250 cu in 4 1 L engines The third generation Chevys were produced with the 230 cu in 3 8 L and 250 cu in 4 1 L engines with specially tuned carburetors for sporting models The Chevy metal emblem for the third generation had the same font as the Nova emblem of 1968 1974 American Novas and was for the first few years in the rearmost section of both rear fenders Later it was moved to the rearmost section of both front fenders as it was in the American cars from 1969 Sidemarker lights were not mandatory and changed much during the production run from being deleted to leaving a small chrome plate to the same light as in the American cars Rear deck emblems just said CHEVROLET in chrome letters obviating the typical Model by Chevrolet used in the American cars at the time The hood emblem was similar to the 1969 American Novas the bow tie either in blue or just chrome Initially the Argentinian Chevy used very similar trim to the American counterpart while more luxurious a big car by local standards They there standard models without accessories and were often used for taxi service The interior layout remained the American 1968 version for the entire run The ignition switch remained dash mounted as the U S mandated steering lock was not required in Argentina Power steering became available at the end of the production run V8s versions weren t produced Power windows were not available tinted windows were darker than American versions and the darker band on the upper edge of the windshield was not present Very popular accessories were vinyl roofs rally wheels sport steering wheels bucket seats with high backs and tufted leatherette upholstery many sedans were produced this way Interiors were usually black Steering wheels and instrument panels were only black for many years as were seatbelts American style interior color coordination was absent The last year of the Nova in Argentina is called locally Opus 78 because the slogan of the publicity and it was the most equipped adding simil leather bucket seats air conditioning power steering electric antenna and a new dashboard with integrated central console During its run on certain models the Chevy was also available with the 3 speed Turbo Hydra Matic automatic transmission as an option It was marketed with the name Chevromatic Their Super Sports SS counterparts were both coupes and 4 door sedans the latter of which was unheard of in the US prior to the introduction of the 1994 Impala SS In fact a majority were fitted with inline sixes coupled to a ZF manual transmission with floor lever 4 speeds a single two barrel Holey 2300 RX 7214 A carburetor giving out 168 hp 125 kW and a sporting exhaust note Corsa a local auto publication magazine tested a Chevy Coupe SS Serie 2 and obtained a 0 100 km h 0 62 mph time of 11 1 seconds Urban legend editA popular but false urban legend claims that the vehicle sold poorly in Spanish speaking countries because no va translates to doesn t go However in Spanish nova is a distinct word primarily used to refer to the astronomical event and doesn t have the same meaning as no va In fact the car actually sold quite well in Mexico as well as many Central and South American countries Nova was also the name of a successful brand of gasoline sold in Mexico at the time further proving that the name confusion was not a problem 37 A similar story has been told of the British Vauxhall Nova a small car that was completely unrelated to the Chevrolet Nova aside from both being built by GM According to the story it had to be sold as an Opel Corsa in Spain due to the same alleged language confusion This version of the story is also a myth as the Spanish market version of the car was known as a Corsa from the outset In fact the car was called the Corsa in all markets except the United Kingdom There was also a Nova kit car designed and built by A D D from 1971 It lost a court case with GM Vauxhall over the use of the name after it was shown that GM s Chevrolet had a prior claim References edit GM Heritage Center Official GM MY1963 Specsheet Retrieved January 1 2013 Mays James 1963 Chevrolet Chevy II www OldCarsCanada Com Retrieved April 15 2013 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 Gunnell John 2002 04 01 Standard Catalogue of American Cars 1946 1975 Revised 4th edition Iola WI Krause Publications Inc p 174 ISBN 978 0873494618 GM Vehicle Information Kits GM Heritage Center GM Retrieved February 5 2017 a b Super Chevy 5 94 p 14 Super Chevy 5 94 p 14 Flory J Kelly Jr American Cars 1960 1972 Jefferson NC McFarland amp Coy 2004 p 281 Chevrolet Nova History Archived February 22 2010 at the Wayback Machine Muscle Car Club Retrieved 2010 03 06 GM Heritage Center Official GM MY1966 Specsheet Retrieved January 24 2013 The Editors of Consumer Guide 1966 Chevrolet Chevy II brochure Archived December 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from www oldcarbrochures com on November 20 2008 GM Heritage Center Official GM MY1969 Specsheet Retrieved January 24 2013 Flory J Kelly Jr American Cars 1960 1972 Jefferson NC McFarland amp Coy 2004 p 579 1969 Chevrolet Nova SS 396 375 HP 4 speed automobile catalog Retrieved July 4 2018 Flory p 579 Quentin Willson s Great Cars p 148 ISBN 0 7566 1730 8 Gunnell 2002 p 196 1970 Chevrolet range brochure Retrieved from www oldcarmanualproject com on November 26 2008 Flory p 653 Flory J Kelly Jr American Cars 1960 1972 Jefferson NC McFarland amp Coy 2004 p 726 Clarke R M 1975 Chevy II Nova amp SS Muscle Portfolio Brooklands Books LTD ISBN 1855202581 Downloadable Vehicle Information Kits GM Heritage Archive General Motors 1971 Chevy Nova PDF GM Heritage Archive General Motors September 1970 a b c d 1972 Nova PDF GM Heritage Archive General Motors September 1971 1972 Nova The Old Car Manual Project The Old Car Manual Project September 1971 1972 Nova Sky Roof Mark Lundquist Motortrend February 2009 Production Numbers Nova Recource Nova Recource The Seat Belt Story Biotech law lsu edu Retrieved December 27 2010 Chevrolet Nova Third generation Model Information GM Heritage Center Official GM MY1976 Specsheet Retrieved January 26 2013 Adler 1992 page 23 24 Flammang James M 1999 Standard catalog of American cars 1976 1999 Ron Kowalke 3rd ed Iola WI Krause Publications ISBN 0 87341 755 0 OCLC 43301709 The Editors of Consumer Reports Canadian Acadians Retrieved September 12 2010 Statham Steve 1997 Nova SS Nova and Chevy II 1962 1979 Muscle Car Color History Series MBI Publishing Company ISBN 9781610591218 Nova Don t Go snopes com Retrieved December 27 2010 Bibliography editAdler Paul S 1992 The Learning Bureaucracy New United Motor Manufacturing Inc School of Business Administration University of Southern California Archive External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chevrolet Nova GM Heritage Center Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Chevrolet Nova at Curlie Chevrolet Nova at the Internet Movie Cars Database Chevy Nova archived articles about the Nova on GM Classics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chevrolet Chevy II Nova amp oldid 1208722240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.