One Bad Nova
Super Chevy|December 2017

With big racing numbers on the doors, Torq-Thrusts at each corner, and Bill Thomas’s name lettered on the front fenders, this 1962 Chevy II isn’t exactly a sleeper. But there’s little about the compact Chevy that indicates how much Corvette Thomas stuffed inside its squarish body.

Drew Hardin
One Bad Nova

Thomas built the car to go road racing, and he took aim at the fancy European sports cars he’d be dicing with by installing a fuel-injected Corvette engine under hood and the ’63 Vette’s independent rearend out back.

Hot Rod magazine’s Don Francisco took an in-depth look at this “new, hot version of the Deuce” in the July 1963 issue, providing so much detail that you could almost build a replica using his thorough descriptions.

Among the highlights: Thomas turned the 327 fuelie mill into a 380-inch, 412hp race engine. A Moldex forged-steel crank stroked to 3.750 inches mounted Buick rods with Forged true pistons sized to fit the engine’s new 4.030-inch bore. Thomas used the fuelie cylinder heads but enlarged the ports, reshaped the combustion chambers, and paired the stock intake valves with modified 409 exhaust valves with 1 5/8-inch heads. The Rochester fuel-injection was left pretty much alone, other than having the air-bleed openings in its nozzles enlarged. Cold air fed the system via a fat flexible hose that opened at the radiator support.

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