Vehicle Description
This former SCCA racer had its birth as a 1964 tuxedo black coupe
with a silver interior. The original seats are still available. The
original engine was a 327. The car underwent at least one repaint
to a metalflake pattern before it was sold in 1971. The original
engine was replaced with the current 8-cylinder 5.7 liter small
block Chevy 350 (approx. 380 bhp on the Dyno, top speed 160 mph)
and a new Holley carburetor. It was rebuilt to SCCA race car
specifications, flairs were added, the headlights were removed and
it was painted hugger orange. It raced on the SCCA and Midwest
council in 1972 and 1973. Logbooks are available upon purchase.
Thereafter this Corvette was sold in 1974, then sold again and
raced on the Midwest Council as the Yellow #80 Corvette starting in
1975. Logbooks from this period are available with the car. Through
an estate the Corvette was sold to Jeff Dodge, although not a race
car driver himself, Jeff has a sterling reputation as a builder and
restorer of fine race cars. His resume includes the rebuild of
GT40p1046 (1966 Le Mans winner) several of the original Shelby AC
cobras and Shelby Daytona coupes, Mario Andretti's Yellow GT40 1967
Sebring winner that beat Steve McQueen and Wilson Fittipaldi's GT40
(p1083). Jeff also refinished the 1967 Ford GT40 Le Mans winner for
the Ford Motor Company that currently sits in their museum.
The car was purchased from Jeff Dodge by the current owner in 2014
and rebuilt from the ground up while trying to hew as close as
possible to the original period specific racing specs. The small
block Chevy was rebuilt with a new carburetor and broken in by Lon
McPherson a well-known race car engine builder in South Central
Wisconsin. The car was stripped down to its chassis and all
components were powder coated gray. A new fuel cell was fashioned
with a cage and fuel cap from a Jet airplane. The original clutch
was replaced with a new, NASCAR clutch and new magnesium alloy bell
housing. A new 4-speed, manual Rock Crusher gearbox was installed.
The front and back spring leaf suspensions were completely redone,
and the rear end was replaced. Le Mans style headlight cans were
inserted. The imprints of the twin gills on either side behind the
front wheels were cut out and utilized to vent the front brakes via
air ducts. It was painted period-specific, Ermine white with a blue
stripe and orange trim. The car is outfitted with bias-ply Good
Year Blue Streaks on dark bronze Torque II wheels with slotted
rotors with 4 piston Brakes.
The car is outfitted with a new full roll cage and a tube frame
making both very safe and light (approx. 2600 lbs.). A new 5-point
fire suppression system and a fuel shut-off switch was installed
ensuring the upmost safety in a crash.
The car was lightly raced and meticulously maintained during the
2019 season on the VSCDA (logbooks available with the car) by the
current owner and is currently in Concours d'Elegance
condition.
All extras and previous parts from the recent rebuild are available
and included in the purchase price.