1966 Chevrolet Corvette Convertible �€" 327/300, 4-Speed, Nassau
Blue, 25,744 Actual Miles Why This Car Is Special The 1966
Chevrolet Corvette Convertible occupies a specific and well-earned
place in the C2 generation's short four-year run. By 1966,
Chevrolet had refined the Sting Ray body �€" introduced in 1963 �€"
to a point where the engineering and the styling worked together
about as well as they ever would. The egg-crate grille was new for
1966, the fender louvers were cleaned up, and the overall package
represented the most polished version of Bill Mitchell's original
design. Chevrolet built 17,762 Corvette convertibles for the 1966
model year, and while the big-block cars tend to dominate the
headlines, the small-block cars have always attracted a different
kind of buyer �€" one who understands that a 327 cubic inch V8 in a
3,000-pound fiberglass roadster is an entirely satisfying
arrangement. This particular 1966 Chevrolet Corvette Convertible is
finished in Nassau Blue with a matching bright blue leather
interior and a white soft top. The color combination is one of the
more distinctive pairings from that model year, and the car carries
25,744 actual miles. The VIN decodes to a 1966 Corvette convertible
built at the St. Louis assembly plant, with the 327 cubic inch 300
horsepower engine and a 4-speed manual transmission. That is a
straightforward, honest specification �€" no inflated horsepower
claims, no questionable options added after the fact. What you see
is what Chevrolet built. Features - 327 cubic inch V8, 300
horsepower - 4-speed manual transmission - 4-wheel disc brakes -
Knock-off style wheels with white letter tires - Dual exhaust -
Wood-rimmed steering wheel - Dashboard tachometer - Full gauge
cluster - Bright blue leather bucket seats - Center console -
Nassau Blue exterior - White convertible soft top - Chrome bumpers
- 25,744 actual miles Mechanical The L75 327/300 was Chevrolet's
mid-range small-block offering for the 1966 Corvette. It used a
single four-barrel carburetor and hydraulic lifters, which made it
more streetable than the higher-output 327/350 or 327/365 versions.
For context, 1966 was actually the final year for the 327 as the
Corvette's small-block option �€" the 350 would replace it starting
in 1969. That makes 1966 a historically significant year for anyone
who follows the small-block's development arc. The 4-speed manual
transmission was the right gearbox for this engine in this chassis.
Rowing through the gears in a mid-1960s Corvette is a tactile
experience that later cars with their tighter, more modern
transmissions don't quite replicate. The throws are deliberate, the
engagement is mechanical and direct, and it rewards a driver who
pays attention. One of the most significant mechanical upgrades
Chevrolet made to the C2 Corvette was the introduction of
four-wheel disc brakes in 1965, and this 1966 Corvette Convertible
carries that system. Before 1965, Corvette buyers had to make do
with four-wheel drums, which were adequate at best for a car with
this kind of power-to-weight ratio. The transition to four-wheel
discs was a genuine improvement in stopping performance, and it is
a feature that separates the 1965 and later cars from the earlier
C2s in practical terms. The dual exhaust exits cleanly through the
rear valance, as confirmed in the underside photos, and the exhaust
routing appears correct and tidy. The knock-off style wheels
deserve a note here. The 1966 Corvette offered genuine knock-off
aluminum wheels as an option �€" a design derived directly from
racing practice, where a single large spinner could be removed
quickly for a wheel change. The spinners thread onto a hub adapter
and are tightened with a lead hammer. They are period-correct and
they are one of the more mechanically interesting wheel options
that was ever available on an American production car. Interior The
interior of this 1966 Chevrolet Corvette Convertible is trimmed in
bright blue leathe
ClassicCars.com has been recognized as one of the fastest-growing private companies in the United States, successfully making the Inc. 5000 list in both 2015,
2016, 2017 and 2018. This prestigious accolade represents the continued growth of the company, and ClassicCars.com's dominance as the world's largest online marketplace for
buying and selling classic and collector vehicles.
The Stevie Awards, the world's premier business awards recognized
ClassicCars.com's first-class Customer Support team with a Stevie Bronze Award in 2019, celebrating the team's skills as exemplary customer support specialists.
In 2016 The Journal, brought to you by ClassicCars.com, was celebrated as the SECOND MOST INFLUENTIAL automotive blog in the world by NFC Performance.