1981 Chevrolet Corvette �€" Dark Bronze Metallic, 4-Speed Manual,
Glass T-Tops, Tan Leather Interior Why This Car Is Special The 1981
Chevrolet Corvette occupies an interesting place in C3 history. It
was the final model year the Corvette was assembled in St. Louis,
Missouri, where the car had been built since 1954. Beginning with
the 1981 model year, Chevrolet transitioned production to Bowling
Green, Kentucky �€" a facility that still builds Corvettes today.
Cars built during that transition year were actually assembled at
both plants, with some 1981 Corvettes carrying St. Louis stampings
and others built in Bowling Green. That detail alone makes the 1981
a historically significant model for collectors who track the
nameplate's manufacturing lineage. The 1981 model year also
introduced several technical updates that are easy to overlook but
mattered to engineers and enthusiasts. Chevrolet fitted the 1981
Corvette with a new Computer Command Control system, an early
engine management setup that monitored and adjusted the air-fuel
mixture to improve emissions compliance and driveability. The
fiberglass-reinforced monoleaf rear spring, which replaced the
multi-leaf steel unit, also arrived during this generation and
reduced unsprung weight �€" a genuine engineering improvement on a
car that had always prioritized handling. What makes this specific
1981 Chevrolet Corvette stand out is the combination of options it
carries. The 4-speed manual transmission was a delete-cost option
in 1981, meaning buyers who wanted it had to specifically request
it. By this point in the C3's run, the automatic had become far
more common, and the percentage of manual-transmission Corvettes
was declining year over year. A 4-speed car in this condition,
wearing a rare exterior color and a fully intact tan leather
interior, is a different proposition than the vast majority of 1981
Corvettes you'll encounter on the market. The Dark Bronze Metallic
exterior is a color that photographs warmer than it reads in
person. In natural light it shows a deep reddish-brown tone with
clear metallic flake, and it pairs naturally with the tan leather
interior. This is not a color combination that was ordered in large
numbers, and it gives the car a distinctly period-correct character
without looking out of place at a show or on the road. Features
List - 350ci 5.7L V8 - 4-Speed Manual Transmission - Dark Bronze
Metallic Exterior - Tan Leather Bucket Seats - Leather-Wrapped
Corvette Steering Wheel - Glass T-Tops - Full Factory Gauge Cluster
with Tachometer - AM/FM Cassette Radio - Air Conditioning with
Center Console Dash Vents - Chrome 350 Corvette Air Cleaner -
Aluminum Valve Covers - Dual Exhaust with Dual Mufflers -
Independent Rear Suspension - Power Steering - Power Brakes -
Aluminum Wheels - BF Goodrich Radial T/A Tires - Tan Leather Door
Panels - Matching Tan Carpet - Clean Undercarriage Mechanical Under
the hood is the L81 350ci 5.7-liter V8, identified by its chrome
Corvette air cleaner and polished aluminum valve covers �€" both
details that were specific to the Corvette application and set this
engine apart visually from other small-block installations of the
era. The engine breathes through a dual exhaust system with dual
mufflers, routed through the independent rear suspension cradle and
exiting at the rear corners in the classic C3 configuration. The
4-speed manual gearbox is the correct-ratio close-ratio unit
available on the 1981 Corvette. Selecting this transmission was not
the default choice �€" by 1981, the automatic outsold the manual by
a significant margin. The presence of a 4-speed in this car means
the original buyer was specifically interested in driver
engagement, not just transportation. The shifter sits in the center
console where it belongs, and the gear pattern plate is clearly
visible in the photographs. The independent rear suspension is one
of the C3's defining engineering features. Unlike most American
production cars of t
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.