A long-lost 1957 show car Chevy Nomad sports original Rochester Ramjet and column-shifted three-speed manual for an OG street-sleeper vibe. The annual SEMA trade show in Las Vegas is massive, and to ...
Unbeknownst to the great unwashed, this car’s sale will be a rare referendum, and watching it play out in real time in a public setting will be informative—but only for those who know the backstory, ...
This Chevy Bel Air Nomad was assembled in Oakland, California, in early 1957, and my dad, S.J. Salzman, bought it for $3200 ...
The Chevy Nomad debuted at the 1954 GM Motorama as a two-door sport wagon with front-end styling taken from the 1954 Chevy Corvette. The grille was the Corvette’s oval with thirteen chrome-heavy ...
The Chevy Nomad was a standout vehicle that defied the conventional expectations of a station wagon. With its unique blend of style, engineering, and performance, it became an icon in automotive ...
“Nomad” — what a great name for an unusual car that suggests what many of us wish we could do: Be a rover, just wander arounding, moving from place to place. Related Articles Me & My Car: ’56 Ford ...
With over a hundred years of history, Chevrolet remains a force to reckoned with in the global automotive industry. A bastion of American ingenuity, Chevy has been known to manufacture reliable ...
It is so shiny that you can hardly look at it without putting your sunglasses on. The gloss black paint, the chrome, the wheels, everything shines on this car from bumper to bumper. It is a 1955 Chevy ...
The 1956 Chevy Nomad is undoubtedly an icon of ‘50s-era automotive styling, showing off an eye-catching two-door station wagon body style and two large rear tail fins. Now, one talented woodworker is ...
Most Chevrolet Caprices from the 1990s blend into the background of automotive history like a beige sofa in a thrift store. But this one? It’s far from ordinary. A custom-built, one-off creation by ...