In the late 1980s, few sights captured suburban aspiration quite like a Camaro IROC idling at the curb, its graphics loud, its exhaust louder, and its owner convinced the cul-de-sac had become pit ...
ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. — What was once considered Florida’s most polluted lake is making strides in its road to recovery. Agricultural discharge caused Lake Apopka to lose its submerged aquatic ...
This video features a quarter mile drag race between two American V8 icons: the Corvette C5 Z06 and the Chevrolet Camaro Z28. Both cars deliver strong acceleration and classic muscle car sound.
This fourth-generation Corvette still has the plastic wrapping for its seats and has never been licensed. This 1999 Camaro Z28 has only 71 miles and remains in original condition. Features rare ...
That’s what the seller of this pristine Z28 is asking, and while that’s as much as the going rate for a basic 2026 Ford Mustang GT, it doesn’t seem unreasonable given there may not be another 1999 ...
While Chevy has once again given up on the Camaro, today's Nice Price or No Dice Z28 shows that the company once thought highly enough of the car to throw it a 30th Anniversary party. Let's see if ...
Muscle cars don't have to be a forbidden dream for enthusiasts with a tight budget, especially those looking to get a less classic one. With well-kept examples selling between $10,000 and $20,000, the ...
You don’t need six figures to own a legit muscle car. The fourth-gen Chevy Camaro Z28 offers a V8, six-speed manual, and rear-wheel drive—all for Corolla money. In an era dominated by EVs and ...
The third-generation Chevy Camaro spent many years as the one to get if you wanted a cheap ticket into Camaro ownership. It had a decade-long production run and modest performance compared to the ...
The Chevrolet Camaro trailed behind the Ford Mustang when the pony cars were the talk of Detroit in the sixties, but when it arrived, it rushed in guns blazing, putting every drop of effort behind its ...
HOT ROD wasn’t kidding when staff writer C.J. Baker wrote the original headline “The Best One Yet!” in our December 1981 issue. The rest of the world seemed to agree, as I remember. As a fresh ...