The 57' Chevy still remains a legendary icon today, they were still popular on Saturday nights cruising the boulevard in the 70's. My first car was a Nova similar to this.
Some street racers weren’t attention seekers. They got their kicks by humbling flashy, high-buck muscle cars, shutting them down in an ambush of speed and stealth. The 1969 Chevrolet Nova SS 396 seemed ideal for such duty. But looks can be deceiving.

Chevy had redesigned its compact for ’68, but the look was still pretty tame. The chassis design, however, was shared with the Camaro, so big blocks finally fit. Sure enough, the 396-cid V-8 appeared as a Super Sport option partway through ’68. For ’69, the 396 was back in 350-bhp tune and -- for those who knew how to play the order form -- as the 375-bhp L78.
SS badges, black-accented grille and tail, and simulated hood air intakes marked the exterior, but nothing shouted supercar. Still, all stealthiness seemed to dissolve with the L78. What the “396” numerals on the fender suggested, the racket of solid lifters and the ominous rumble from dual exhausts confirmed. An SS Nova was no sleeper in 375-bhp L78 form. The clatter of solid lifters and the rumble from its dual exhausts attracted too many eyes to those “396″ badges.
“The junior Chevy with the senior engine... is an instantly recognized and feared street cleaner,” reported Car and Driver. “The 396 Chevy II sure wasn’t the invisible sleeper we had expected, but it was every bit as wild as we hoped.”
