1966 Chevrolet Chevelle Malibu �€" 383 Crate Engine, 4-Speed,
Custom Black Cherry Build Why This Car Is Special The 1966
Chevrolet Chevelle is widely regarded as the high point of the
model's first generation. That year, Chevrolet gave the Chevelle a
full restyle �€" longer, lower, and wider than the original 1964
design �€" and paired the new sheetmetal with an expanding engine
lineup that would define the muscle car era. The Malibu trim sat at
the top of the Chevelle hierarchy in 1966, offering buyers a step
up in interior finish and exterior detail without requiring them to
pay for the full SS package. It was a smart buy then, and it
remains one of the most sought-after body styles today because of
its clean lines and the way that fastback-style roofline sits over
the rear deck. The VIN on this car confirms it was assembled at the
Kansas City assembly plant in 1966, consistent with a
mid-production build. The body style decodes as a two-door hardtop
Sport Coupe �€" the most desirable body configuration of the
generation, with no B-pillar interrupting those long side windows.
What makes this particular 1966 Chevelle stand out from a typical
survivor or driver-quality car is the level of thought put into the
drivetrain and suspension upgrades. This is not a show car parked
on carpet and polished to the inch. It is a purpose-built street
machine that has been modified with quality components from names
that enthusiasts know and trust �€" Hooker, Holley, Borg-Warner,
Flowmaster, Gabriel, and Goodmark. The builder chose the right
parts, not the cheapest parts. Every major system has been
addressed, from the GM crate engine to the undercoated floor pans,
and the result is a 1966 Chevelle Malibu that drives and performs
the way these cars were always meant to. Features List - GM 383
crate engine rated at 383 horsepower - Holley carburetor - Polished
aluminum intake manifold - Chrome/polished valve covers -
Performance air cleaner - Hooker headers - 3-inch dual exhaust -
Dual Flowmaster mufflers - Borg-Warner Super T-10 4-speed manual
transmission - 4-speed manual shifter with center console - GM
12-bolt rear end - Aftermarket upper and lower rear control arms
with polyurethane bushings - Gabriel rear shocks - Power front disc
brakes - Power steering - Electric cooling fan - High-output
alternator - Goodmark steel cowl induction hood - Custom burgundy
(Black Cherry) exterior paint - Black vinyl top - 17 and 18-inch
custom Coys wheels - Undercoated floor pans - Original instrument
cluster - Chrome-trimmed door panels - Black vinyl bench seats,
front and rear - Chevelle floor mats - Aftermarket AM/FM radio -
Secondary aftermarket stereo/CD unit - Front and rear seat belts
Mechanical The engine in this 1966 Chevelle Malibu is a GM 383
crate unit rated at 383 horsepower. To put that in context, the
hottest engine Chevrolet offered in the 1966 Chevelle from the
factory was the L78 396, rated at 375 horsepower �€" and that
rating was almost certainly conservative, as GM was known to
understate power figures during the horsepower wars of the
mid-1960s. The 383 in this car gets you into that same power
neighborhood, but with the reliability and warranty backing of a
factory crate assembly. The short block is a 383 cubic inch
small-block built on GM's proven architecture, and the rotating
assembly is balanced from the factory. Feeding the engine is a
Holley carburetor, which is the correct choice for a build like
this. Holley supplied the carburetors for the original
high-performance Chevelles, and the modern Holley units are better
in virtually every measurable way �€" fuel metering, durability,
and tunability. Underneath, a polished aluminum intake manifold and
chrome valve covers give the engine bay a finished, deliberate
appearance that matches the care taken with the rest of the car.
Exhaust starts with Hooker headers, one of the most respected names
in performance exhaust manufacturing. The headers feed into a
3-inch dual e
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