If you live in the Minneapolis area, you better not blink, or you may miss summer. And if you're a car (especially anything performance-oriented), that means you may not get the chance to get driven ...
Half the crowd cheers, half winces — and both sides have a point.
Today, when you flip through the pages ofSuper Chevymagazine, the chances are pretty high that you will find at least one older car with an LS conversion. Let’s face it; we’ve become a spoiled lot ...
Introduced in 1961, the Chevrolet Nova didn't develop into a full-fledged muscle car until 1968. That's when Chevy began offering the big-block 396-cubic-inch (6.5-liter) V8 with up to 375 horsepower.
Like it or not, the newest rage in developing project cars seems to be the phenomenon of putting fuel-injected, computer-controlled Bow Tie muscle into vintage Chevys-from Tri-Fives to Camaros, and ...
With the arrival of the LS engine in January 1995, Chevrolet revolutionized its long-standing Small-Block V8 workhorse. The LS was a clean sheet design, with little held over from the venerable “mouse ...
The “LS-swap all the things” meme is particularly relevant in drifting, where the V8’s meaty torque curve and bulletproof reliability have proven invaluable to countless teams and competitors. Now, we ...