When the Chevy El Camino was released in the late '50s, its primary use was for work. It was also Chevrolet's response to the Ford Ranchero. When 28-year-old Larry Zamora of La Junta, Colorado, first ...
Chevrolet wanted to shoot two birds with one stone in 1971, so it made it clearer that the El Camino was both a "tough car and a luxurious pickup." The company's advertising materials praised the ...
When Chevrolet loanedHot Rodmagazine Publisher Ray Brock a 1964 El Camino for a road test, it wasn't just any Camino. It happened to be the first one outfitted with a 327-inch V-8. "Chevelle series ...
Developed in response to the Ford Ranchero, the Chevrolet El Camino arrived in 1959 as a two-door pickup based on a full-size car. GM discontinued the nameplate after only two years but chose to bring ...
Bowing for the 1959 model year, the Chevy El Camino was the Bowtie brand’s response to the Ford Ranchero. The El Camino shared General Motors’ B-Body Safety Girder X-frame platform with the full-size ...
The last El Camino rolled off the line in 1987. Ever since, concept vehicles have attempted to recreate the El Camino on a production platform, but they have remained just concepts. Bernt Karlsson of ...
A 24,000-mile 1984 Chevrolet El Camino Choo Choo SS highlights Raleigh Classic’s October lineup of low-mileage collector cars.
Explore every season of El camino interior with full episode guides, ratings, and streaming info.
Let’s say your weekend car is a seven-second 1966 Nova, but you also want something classic, understated, and ludicrously quick as a daily. What’s the answer? Well, according to Richy from Fast ...
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