1971 Chevrolet Camaro SS 396 �€" Big Block, Muncie 4-Speed, Factory
Air Why This Car Is Special The 1971 Chevrolet Camaro SS 396 sits
at an interesting crossroads in muscle car history. It was the
first year of the redesigned second-generation body �€" a longer,
lower, wider platform that many enthusiasts consider the
best-looking Camaro ever produced. Chevrolet stretched the
wheelbase to 108 inches and gave the car a more sculpted,
European-influenced roofline that set it apart from the boxier
first-generation cars. At the same time, 1971 was one of the last
years you could order a Camaro with a genuine big block engine
before tightening emissions regulations and insurance pressures
pushed the industry toward smaller displacement motors. That
combination of the new body style and the outgoing big block
powertrain makes the 1971 Camaro SS 396 a particularly desirable
intersection of form and function. The VIN on this car decodes to
confirm it was built at the Lordstown, Ohio assembly plant. The
engine code confirms the 396 cubic inch big block at 300
horsepower, and the body style code identifies it as the Sport
Coupe. The SS package in 1971 was a separate option that added
specific badging, a blacked-out grille, and sport suspension tuning
over a standard Camaro �€" it was not simply a sticker package.
Pairing that with the Muncie 4-speed manual and factory air
conditioning on a big block car was an uncommon and expensive
combination at the time, and it makes this particular car a
well-optioned example of the model. It is also worth noting what
happened to the Camaro line just one year later. In 1972, a lengthy
strike at the Norwood, Ohio plant essentially wiped out most of
that year's production. The combination of the 1971 model being the
first year of the new design and having genuine high-output big
block availability makes surviving, well-equipped examples like
this one increasingly difficult to find in presentable condition.
Features - 396 cubic inch big block V8, 300 horsepower - Muncie
4-speed manual transmission - True factory air conditioning - Dual
exhaust - Power brakes - Power steering - Rear sway bar - White
racing stripes - Black vinyl top - SS badges front and rear - SS
steering wheel - Center console - Black sport wheels - BFGoodrich
Radial T/A tires - Chrome bumpers - Black vinyl bucket seats -
Clean undercarriage Mechanical Under the hood is the 396 cubic inch
Turbo-Jet V8 rated at 300 horsepower, backed by a Muncie
close-ratio 4-speed manual gearbox �€" one of the most respected
manual transmissions of the era. Muncie 4-speeds were built in
Muncie, Indiana and were known for their durability and precise
shift feel. Chevrolet offered them in two gear ratios depending on
the intended use, and they were a preferred choice for buyers who
wanted to actually drive their car rather than simply own it. The
combination of a 396 big block and a Muncie 4-speed is exactly the
drivetrain configuration that buyers specified when they were
serious about performance. Factory air conditioning on a big block
Camaro required additional engineering at the factory level �€" the
system had to be designed around the larger engine bay demands of
the 396 �€" which is why it was a less common option than on small
block cars. Having true factory air means the firewall, brackets,
and wiring are correct and original to the car, not a retrofit.
Power brakes and power steering round out the driving experience,
making this a car that can be driven regularly without the heavy
steering and firm pedal effort of a base-spec muscle car. The rear
sway bar improves handling balance under cornering, a detail that
matters on a car this size carrying a big block up front. The
undercarriage photos show a clean, solid structure �€" no
significant rust, no patched floor pans, no evidence of previous
accident damage to the frame rails. For a car based in Florida for
any portion of its life, that condition is worth examining
carefully, and
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