In 1965, Popular Hot Rodding magazine embarked upon a long-term project car to experiment with various engines and performance parts. Starting from a basic 1957 Chevrolet 210 that cost $250, the ...
One of the more attention-grabbing vehicles that General Motos brought to this year’s SEMA Show was the 1957 Chevy Project X Concept – a Chevy 210 that has eschewed its gasoline V8 engine for a more ...
Four 1957 Chevy Bel Air and 150 project cars are up for auction in Montana as one no-reserve lot. Bidding is $500 and ends February 18, 2026.
One of the most famous cars Chevrolet ever built is now an electric vehicle. The company teamed up with Cagnazzi Racing and Hot Rod publisher MotorTrend to electrify the 1957 Chevy Project X vehicle.
Chevy's back at the SEMA show for 2021, and it's bringing an iconic car along for the ride, with help from Cagnazzi Racing and Motor Trend. Meet Project X, a 1957 Chevy Bel Air with its ...
We might as well get it out in the open and say, yes, our car does look oddly similar to the legendary Project X, theproject car that began in the 1980s, but that will eventually change. Over the ...
It started in 1965 with an idea and 250 bucks from thePopular Hot Roddingedit budget. Of course, $250 was a lot more money back then and a 1957 210 Chevy was just a seven-year-old used car; not quite ...
The "Project X" is a $250 car bought in 1965 by the now-defunct "Popular Hot Rodding" magazine by MotorTrend. Now, this vehicle is the center for a modern modification that would change the soul of ...
Hollywood. Love it or hate it, there's no arguing it often captures—and sometimes even shapes—our car culture. One such movie that did both is the 1980 cult classic flickThe Hollywood Knights. But to ...