1968 Chevrolet Camaro SS Convertible �€" 350 V8, Power Top, Ivory
Interior Why This Car Is Special The 1968 Chevrolet Camaro SS
Convertible sits at an interesting crossroads in first-generation
Camaro history. Chevrolet had launched the Camaro in September 1966
as a direct answer to the Ford Mustang, and by 1968 the car had hit
its stride. The '68 model year brought refinements over the debut
cars, including side marker lights added to meet new federal safety
standards, and a revised hidden wiper setup that cleaned up the
cowl area significantly. The result was a cleaner, more cohesive
design that many collectors consider the sweet spot of the first
generation. Decoding this car's VIN tells us something right away.
The second and third characters �€" '24' �€" confirm this is a
Camaro convertible, body style 67/68 style Sport Convertible. The
'7' in the model year position confirms 1968, and the '8' in the
engine position confirms a V8 application from the factory. That
matters because it means this car was engineered from the start to
carry V8 torque loads, with the corresponding heavier-duty subframe
and body reinforcement that came with factory V8 convertible
production. The SS package in 1968 was not just a badge. It
included a blacked-out grille with SS badging, specific hood
ornamentation, rocker panel striping, and the suspension tuning
that separated these cars from a standard Sport Coupe or base
convertible. Chevrolet produced just over 27,000 Camaro SS
convertibles across the 1968 model year �€" a relatively small
number compared to total Camaro production of roughly 235,000 units
that year, which makes the SS ragtop a genuinely desirable
configuration rather than just a popular one. This particular
example presents as a driver-quality restomod. It has been upgraded
with modern convenience and reliability in mind while retaining the
visual character that makes a 1968 Camaro SS Convertible worth
owning in the first place. Features List - 350 cubic inch V8 engine
- 700R4 four-speed automatic overdrive transmission - Front disc
brakes - Power-operated white convertible top - Ivory vinyl
interior - Correct 1968 SS hood ornamentation - 18-inch wheels with
mag-style covers - 10-bolt rear axle - X-frame underbody brace -
Red exterior Mechanical Under the hood is a 350 cubic inch small
block Chevrolet V8 dressed with chrome Chevrolet valve covers, a
chrome open-element air cleaner, and red-painted accessories. The
presentation is clean and purposeful �€" this is an engine bay
built to be seen. The 350 is backed by a 700R4 four-speed automatic
overdrive transmission, which is one of the most practical upgrades
you can make to a car like this. The original Turbo-Hydramatic 350
or 396 four-speed that may have come in a factory SS had no
overdrive gear, which means highway driving at 60 to 70 miles per
hour was a noisy, fuel-burning exercise. The 700R4 drops engine RPM
considerably at cruise speed, making this 1968 Camaro SS
Convertible a genuinely comfortable car for longer drives, not just
a weekend show piece. Front disc brakes are fitted, replacing the
factory front drums that came standard on most 1968 Camaros unless
the optional front disc package was ordered. The improvement in
stopping distance and fade resistance is substantial, and for a car
that sees real road use, this is a sensible upgrade. The rear uses
a 10-bolt axle, which is the correct unit for this application and
more than adequate for the power level this 350 produces. The
addition of an X-frame underbody brace addresses a known
characteristic of first-generation Camaro convertibles. Without a
fixed roof structure, the unibody shell on any open-top car is
inherently less rigid than its coupe counterpart. GM engineers knew
this and added some reinforcement from the factory, but aftermarket
X-braces are a common and well-regarded addition that reduces cowl
shake and tightens up the overall feel of the chassis. It is a
detail that reflects thoughtfu
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