1964 Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray Coupe Resto-Mod �€" 327/300 L75,
Muncie 4-Speed, Modern Chassis Upgrades Throughout Why This Car Is
Special The 1964 Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray coupe occupies a
specific and well-earned place in American automotive history. It
was the second year of the C2 generation, the first Corvette body
style to include a coupe, and the year Chevrolet refined the Sting
Ray's rough edges from its 1963 debut. The controversial split rear
window that defined the '63 coupe was gone, replaced by a
single-pane rear glass that improved rearward visibility. The
result was a cleaner, more purposeful look that most Corvette
historians consider the better-resolved design of the two.
Chevrolet built 8,304 coupes for 1964, compared to 13,925
convertibles, making the coupe the less common body style in that
production year. This particular 1964 Corvette Sting Ray has been
built as a serious, driver-focused resto-mod. The factory 327 cubic
inch small block is still under the hood in its L75 300-horsepower
configuration, backed by the correct Muncie close-ratio 4-speed
manual transmission. But the chassis, steering, brakes, and
suspension have all been upgraded with modern components that
dramatically change how the car drives without altering how it
looks. The undercarriage has been painted, the interior retains its
correct period appearance, and the exhaust uses a correct chambered
configuration that exits through the rear bumper valance tips
exactly as a factory car would. This is not a show car built for a
trailer. It is a 1964 Corvette Sting Ray that was built to be
driven. The VIN on this car decodes as a 1964 Corvette coupe built
at the St. Louis assembly plant, which was the only facility that
produced Corvettes during this era. The sequential production
number places this car well into the model year run, consistent
with a regular production coupe built with the L75 engine option.
Features List - 327 cubic inch L75 V8, factory rated at 300
horsepower - Muncie 4-speed close-ratio manual transmission - Power
rack-and-pinion steering (aftermarket upgrade) - Power disc brakes
(four-wheel) - Aftermarket Shark Bite rear suspension with
adjustable coilover shocks - Front adjustable coilover shocks -
Correct chambered dual exhaust, exiting through factory-style rear
bumper tips - Vintage-style air conditioning - American Racing mag
wheels - Bluetooth stereo (hidden installation) - Rockford Fosgate
subwoofers (mounted in cargo area) - Teakwood steering wheel -
Factory-style tachometer - Dashboard clock - Center console with
factory-correct shift pattern plate - Black vinyl bucket seats -
Corvette logo floor mats - Painted undercarriage Mechanical The
heart of this 1964 Corvette Sting Ray is its original-configuration
327 cubic inch small block in L75 trim. The L75 was the
middle-of-the-road 327 option for 1964, factory rated at 300
horsepower. It used a single four-barrel carburetor, hydraulic
lifters, and a 10.5:1 compression ratio. It was a strong,
streetable engine that did not require the constant attention of
the solid-lifter L76 or L84 variants, but still produced enough
torque to make the Muncie 4-speed feel connected and responsive.
The Muncie transmission is paired here with a correct chrome ball
shifter and the factory-style shift pattern plate on the console.
The combination of the 327 and the Muncie remains one of the most
satisfying manual drivetrain pairings in American performance car
history. Where this car separates itself from a stock restoration
is in the chassis and suspension work. The front suspension has
been updated with adjustable coilover shocks, which allow the ride
height and damping to be dialed in for the road conditions or
driving style of the owner. The rear end has been fitted with a
Shark Bite aftermarket independent rear suspension setup, also
using adjustable coilover shocks. The 1964 Corvette Sting Ray was
already ahead of its time in 1964 by offering independent rear su
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.