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"Kip Addotta Encyclopedia of People, Products, Services, Health & Entertainment"
Kip Addotta Encyclopedia of People, Products, Services, Health & Entertainment!

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My 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtop!

If you're looking for a stock 55 Hard Top for your collection, The 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtop! It doesn't get any better than this! This stock, numbers-matching Hard Top has acquired only 100+ miles since having a body off, nut and bolt professional restoration. It still sports its original 265 power pack engine, power glide transmission, and power brakes. It was repainted its original, correct two-tone paint of Indian Ivory and Harvest Gold and re-upholstered in its correct, original Beige pattern cloth with Light Green imitation leather. It's now restored to its original factory condition and original color scheme. This car, originally assembled at the Los Angeles, California GM plant, has been in the West its entire life. This is as good as it gets!

The 1955 Chevy once upon a time

Once upon a time (Don't you love stories that start this way?), among the several holidays a year that a young man looked forward to was Christmas, his birthday, and the day the new cars were unveiled at the local dealer's showroom. Actually, since all the cars came out on different days, usually in September, it dulled the pain of going back to school. For those of you, who remember, return with me now to those days of yesteryear. For those who weren't there, imagine being excited to see the new SUV or compact car (which generally looks identical to last year's) being unveiled to crowds of people at a car dealership. Hard to imagine, right? So listen while I try to tell how cool it was.

The 1955 Chevy and kids

For the average kid of 10 to about 13 years of age, paying attention to the new cars of the late '40s and '50s was as natural as a budding interest in girls. Sports played a big part of life even before then, but suddenly, horsepower, glittering chrome, and looking cool were important. For me, I fed the fuel by avidly reading Hot Rod, Motor Trend, and all the "small" car books that were great for hiding inside a schoolbook. For years before the '55 came out, I had been reading the rumors about Chevy bringing out a V-8 engine that was going to set the car guys on edge. When the Corvette came out in 1953, I spent so much time in the showroom ogling those white fiberglass sports cars that I can still smell them. They were different from the other new cars. Maybe it was the plastic and vinyl, but I loved it! Since I rode to the showroom on a bicycle, the fact that the first Corvette had a six-cylinder motor wasn't all that important. What was great was how the salesmen treated me. Obviously I wasn't a buyer, but I knew how to act so they didn't chase me away unless there was a real buyer looking at the car. The coolest part of those early Corvettes, for me anyway, was the mesh screen over the headlights. I didn't know why they were there, but I loved the look.

The 1955 Chevy, finally

Other than the Corvettes, though, there wasn't much to look at in a Chevy dealership. The passenger cars were nice, and I appreciate them much more now than I did then, but after spending some quality time in a new Corvette, I jumped on my bike and headed to the hot rod lot. In my hometown, there was a small car lot that had what I thought was a great selection of '32-40 Fords with flathead motors and bumpy cams. The sales guys on that lot weren't as friendly as the Chevy guys, so I just had to hang around and listen to the flat motors idle.

The 1955 Chevy came with a V8

In 1954, things started getting serious. The "inside information," available only to the few million of us that read Motor Trend and Hot Rod, was fueling the fire of the new Chevy V-8 and the car that went with it. By late summer, the showrooms were emptied and later the windows were covered with white paper; we knew the time was drawing near for the new cars! Kids my age could wander innocently through the dealership and then make a mad dash inside the showroom to catch a sneak peek, but the sales force was way ahead of us. Usually there wasn't even a car there, and for the few days just before the big day, the new model was concealed with a car cover! Can you believe it?

The 1955 Chevy in LA

We had an alternative plan, but it didn't cover Chevys. In the Los Angeles area, where I spent my youth, there was a giant GM assembly plant in a suburb named South Gate. They tried to keep the new models away from the fence and concealed, but as the inventory built up, we got our looks at the new models. This plant was known as the B-O-P plant, which stood for Buick, Olds, and Pontiac. I was definitely interested in those cars, but I wanted to see the Chevys! To do that, though, would have meant about a 50-mile trip to the other side of L.A., and that wasn't going to happen.

The 1955 Chevy we are waiting

So now it was wait, and wait, and wait. Finally the appointed time arrives. Of course it would be a school day, but at 3:00 p.m., I ran with my brother and pals to the local Chevy dealer. All the showroom windows were clean and a turquoise and white two-door Bel Air hardtop reigned supreme inside. Even at that time of day, there was a crowd. The hood was up, the trunk was up, the doors were open, and I was in love! The wraparound windshield meant that Chevys had finally caught up with big brothers Buick, Olds, and Cadillac for styling. The interior was unlike any other Chevy so far. The inside and the outside matched in color and design. The dash reminded me of the Corvette, but the steering wheel was much more custom. The engine was trademark Chevy orange, a color I grew to know quite well over years of leaning over Chevy engines. I doubt if any of us on that day in 1954 suspected the impact that little V-8 would eventually have.

The 1955 Chevy gets a first look

Then the crowd parted and I got my first unobstructed view of the grille, oh that '55 Chevy grille! I had no idea that The 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtop was inspired by Harley Earl's seeing Ferraris on a trip to Italy, and frankly, it didn't matter at the moment. If I could have, I would have bought one and hung The 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtops on my bedroom wall--that's how cool I thought The 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtops was. It was so different and so beautiful that I couldn't believe how much The 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtop was changed in 1956. Not that the '56 wasn't beautiful, I just wasn't over the '55 after only a year.

The 1955 Chevy made me happy

I was late getting home from school that day, but I didn't care. For many nights after that, I dreamed of owning that Bel Air with the V-8, the wide whitewall tires, and big hubcaps, maybe even with some mellow dual exhausts. Extravagant dreams for a kid my age, but simple in their own way; give me a '55 Chevy and I'm a happy guy. It would be some years later before I actually owned a '55, but the 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtop made me happy then, and The 1955 Chevrolet Belair two door hardtops makes me happy now. I'm sure that the '55 Chevy has done that for many others, and will continue to do that for years to come. What a car!

The power plant of the 1955 Chevy two door hardtop is a 265 cubic inch V8. That, along with a four barrel carburetor and dual exhausts makes this car go like hell! On mine the side rear windows were stenciled with the words, "Only the Lonely"

1955 chevrolet convertible

For whatever reasons: scientific, personal, or traumatic, certain things just stick out like a sore thumb in our minds. Almost to the point that it seems the images have been burned on the inside of our eyelids and every time we close our eyes there they are front and center. There's no escaping it. Or is there?

When Tom Nicholson closed his eyes, he repeatedly saw his neighbor pulling up in the driveway with their '55 drop top Bel Air. For years Tom saw those images time and time again. Finally he figured the only way to win is to fight fire with fire.

Tom contacted Mark Moses at Moses Automotive to concoct a plan and build a '55 drop top. Between Mark, Tom, and Greg Melms (also of Moses Automotive) they decided to build a '55 that would cover several areas: dependability, comfort, looks, and of course, speed. Moses Automotive designed the entire car in and out and then located a rust-free shell in South Dakota (talk about a kick-ass name). From there they based the car around a set of Colorado Customs 18- and 20-inch rims. A set of Art Morrison framerails were ordered, along with an assortment of other goodies from AM. The power that drives the '55 is from a late-model Corvette, a good ol' LT1. The boys at Moses Automotive stepped things up though with a set of LT4 heads, LT4 intake manifold, TRW pistons, and a Powerdyne supercharger tops it all off.

The body was meticulously fitted, sanded, rubbed, and painted by Classic Autoworks. There the hood was nosed, decked, and filled. The door handles and trunk have also been shaved. The finished result is a smooth shiny PPG Viper red surface. Lee's Trim Shop covered the group of one off interior pieces in tan leather.

Well did it work? Was Tom finally able to remove those images from the back of his eyelids? Maybe. But I got a feeling the only thing he sees now when he closes his eyes is HIS drop top '55 sittin' in the driveway!

1955 chevrolet pickup

Such was the case with Alex Bugarin of Fowler, California, and his entry into the world of customized vehicles. Alex told us he caught the customizing bug back in 1997 from his two brothers-in-law. The pair owned an assortment of super-clean '55-57 passenger cars that really caught Alex's eye. For Alex, a landscaper by trade, the attraction translated into a truck, something he could relate to a little better. Alex combed the local classified ads and located a '55 Chevy big-window in Madera, California, for $2,500. The '55 was in real nice shape with a few upgrades already in place, plus it had a sweet color change with a lot of life still left in the paint.

1955 chevrolet parts

There are two basic identification needs that this book serves. This first is that of the typical collector who is trying to identify a Chevrolet V-8 engine component which may be in a salvage yard, at a swap meet, a friend's cache of parts, etc. He wants to know what kind of vehicle the component was originally installed on. And second, he wants to know which part is "correct" for his car, so a proper replacement can be found.

This is a common need experienced by the restorer who has a Chevy engine project missing original engine components, i.e., the intake, carburetor, exhaust manifolds. To identify a component, simply find the cast or stamped-in identification number, turn to the appropriate section of this book, and look it up.

1955-1993 Chevy V8 engine casting numbers explained...

Block, heads, crankshaft, intake and exhaust manifolds, carburetor, fuel pump, water pump, generator/alternator and EGR valve.



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