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1964 Chevrolet Corvair

$18,997used

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Basics

Condition

used

Interior Color

blue

Exterior Color

white

Drivetrain

Rear-wheel Drive

Transmission

Unknown

Fuel

Gas

Engine

164ci Turbo-Air flat-6 engine

VIN

40967W236837

Stock Number

SN3184

Mileage

51,283

Features

Seating

Leather Seats

View Full List of Features

Seller's Comments

1964 Chevrolet Corvair Monza Convertible White over Blue with Powerglide


Why This Car Is Special

The 1964 Chevrolet Corvair Monza Convertible represents the high point of the first-generation Corvair's development and, in many ways, the most complete version of what Ed Cole and his team at Chevrolet originally set out to build. By 1964, Chevrolet engineers had addressed the handling characteristics that would later make headlines in Ralph Nader's 1965 book. That year's most significant mechanical update was a redesigned rear suspension featuring a transverse leaf spring that replaced the earlier swing-axle setup, giving the 1964 Corvair Monza a more neutral and predictable handling balance before the fully independent rear suspension arrived on the second-generation car in 1965. In other words, if you wanted the cleanest version of the first-generation body with genuinely improved chassis dynamics, 1964 is the year to buy.

The Corvair was unlike anything else Detroit produced. It used a rear-mounted, air-cooled flat-six engine, a rear transaxle, and full four-wheel independent suspension at a time when most American compacts still relied on solid rear axles and conventional front-engine layouts. Chevrolet drew more inspiration from European engineering philosophy than from the rest of its own lineup, and the result was a car that handled, felt, and drove differently from any other American vehicle of the era. The Monza trim package, introduced in 1960, transformed the Corvair from an economy car into something more desirable bucket seats, console, upgraded interior, and chrome detailing that set it apart from the base 500 series.

The VIN on this car decodes to confirm it was built at the Willow Run, Michigan assembly plant, which was one of the primary Corvair production facilities during this era. The body style code confirms the open convertible body. This is a genuine Monza Convertible, not an upgraded base car.


Features List

164 cubic inch Turbo-Air air-cooled flat-six engine
Dual carburetors
Forced-air cooling with centrifugal blower
2-speed Powerglide automatic transaxle
Dash-mounted transmission shift lever
Rear-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout
Quadri-Flex four-wheel independent suspension
Transverse rear leaf spring (1964 handling update)
Power-operated white vinyl soft top
Blue leather interior
Brushed aluminum dash inserts
Center console (standard on Monza)
AM push-button radio
Heater and defroster
Chrome rocker panel moldings
Quad headlights with aluminum bezels
13-inch wheels with Monza-specific wheel covers
Chrome front and rear bumpers
Self-adjusting Safety Master brakes
White exterior


Mechanical

Power comes from the 164 cubic inch Turbo-Air horizontally opposed six-cylinder engine, fed by dual carburetors. This is the base Monza state of tune for 1964, rated at 95 horsepower. The engine is air-cooled, which means there is no radiator, no coolant, and no water pump. Instead, a belt-driven centrifugal blower forces air through the finned cylinders and heads, a system borrowed conceptually from aircraft and Volkswagen practice but executed on a larger scale. The flat-six sits entirely behind the rear axle centerline, a configuration that gives the 1964 Corvair Monza Convertible its distinctive weight distribution and the open front trunk that Corvair owners used for luggage storage.

The 2-speed Powerglide automatic transaxle is integrated with the engine at the rear of the car, and the shift lever mounts in the dash rather than on the floor a layout that was standard practice on early Corvairs. It is an unusual arrangement by today's standards and one of the details that makes this car genuinely interesting to drive and explain. The transverse rear leaf spring introduced for 1964 replaced the earlier three-piece swing axle setup and substantially improved rear camber control under

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