Vintage-style featured image for OldChevys Weekly Issue #1. Retro cream background with bold heading ‘Weekly Classic Chevy Roundup – Issue #1 – September 7, 2025’. Includes a teal 1957 Chevy Bel Air photo below the title, with bullet points highlighting restoration tips, carburetor quick fix, Camaro and C10 parts deals, and market trends.

📰 Weekly Classic Chevy Roundup – Issue #1 (September 7, 2025)

  • Post category:Newsletter
  • Reading time:2 mins read

In Issue #1: ’57 Bel Air restoration tips, carburetor quick fix, Camaro & C10 parts deals, and classic Chevy market trends. Subscribe for weekly updates.

✨ Feature: Restoring a ’57 Chevy Bel Air – What to Check First

If you’re eyeing a 1957 Chevy Bel Air — one of the most iconic classics of all time — knowing where to begin your restoration can save you thousands.

Here are three must-check areas before you put money down:

  • Frame integrity: Crawl underneath and look for rust near suspension mounts. Frame damage is costly to repair.
  • Engine originality: Check casting numbers and VIN stamp to confirm it matches the car’s documentation. An original 283 V8 adds huge value.
  • Trim pieces: Replacements exist, but original chrome and stainless trim are pricey and harder to source.

👉 Related guides on OldChevys.com:


🔧 Tech Tip: Quick Trick for Better Carb Performance

If your small-block Chevy V8 hesitates on acceleration, check your accelerator pump diaphragm. After decades, many dry out or crack. Swapping it takes less than 30 minutes and instantly improves throttle response.


🛒 Parts & Deals

  • Reproduction ’69 Camaro Grille – Perfect for daily drivers, fits first-gen models. View part
  • OEM-style Floor Pans for C10 (’67–’72) – Saves hours of fabrication. View part
  • Vintage Old Chevy Bel Air Tee (Find of the Week) Vintage Old Chevy tee on sale at Amazon for only $18.99.

📈 Market Watch

  • Recent sale: A 1972 Chevy C10 Stepside, frame-off restored, sold for $52,000 on Bring a Trailer. That’s 15% higher than the same model two years ago — showing strong demand for well-restored trucks.
  • Trend: First-gen Camaros (’67–’69) in driver condition are holding steady, while concours-level restorations are commanding record premiums.

👥 Community Spotlight

This week’s spotlight goes to tangelo96, who just spent weeks getting this 68 Camaro cleaned, painted, and all set up with fuel, cooling, and a @holleyperformance ECU. He documented the whole process on his Instagram @tangelo96 — worth a follow if you’re into Camaro upgrades.


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