ASTORIA CHAS: KO-MOTION L88 STING RAY

Corvette Report’s Scott Teeters blogs about New York’s ASTORIA CHAS: KO-MOTION L88 STING RAY, the Buddy Holly of drag racing!

ASTORIA CHAS: KO-MOTION L88 STING RAY

As a lad growing up during the muscle car era in the South Jersey/Philadelphia area, http://Hi-Performance CARS Magazine was my favorite car magazine. The publication had a definite East Coast flavor, and slightly favored Chevys, which was perfectly fine with me at the time.

One of my favorite cars of the day was the KO-MOTION L88, 1967 http://427 L88 drag racer, “In Memory of Astoria-Chas” 427 L-88 Corvette roadster. The story has all the elements of a legend: brutally fast, a quick car, great-looking, owned and driven to national prominence by a young fellow, not much older than myself and my Chevy pals.

Fortunately, the car is still around and looks the way it did when it set the AHRA National Record of 11.04 @ 129 mph. Later, the car ran a best-ever 10.47 et. While the L88 still runs, the current owner,http://Glen Spielberg, does not “run” the car on the strip, as he has given his word to the Snyder family that he would not restore or race the car.

Besides, the car still has its original, 40-year-old tires! Stock ‘67 L71 427/435 Corvettes were solid high 13-second cars. A Mid-10-second version was MIND BLOWING back then!

ASTORIA CHAS: KO-MOTION L88 STING RAY

PHOTOS: Martyn L. Schorr 

Continue reading ASTORIA CHAS: KO-MOTION L88 STING RAY @ http://www.corvettereport.com/from-the-archives-of-cars-magazine-in-memory-of-astoria-chas-1967-427-l88-corvette-roadster/

’67 CORVETTE STING RAY

For the ’67 CORVETTE STING RAY, Chevrolet saved the last of the C2 Series for the best, especially regarding power options! OVER-DRIVE Magazine covers the last Sting Ray.

’67 CORVETTE STING RAYThe ‘67 CORVETTE STING RAY was the last C2 Corvette. It is said that the ’67 was meant to be the first of the new-design cars, but the C3 Stingray was found to have aerodynamic inconsistencies. GM decided that more time in the wind tunnel would be required before it went into production. Thus, while the 1967 was a carryover, it became the most refined C2 produced.

As a carryover, changes were small. with 5 smaller front fender vents replacing the previous three rather large ones, and a flat-finished rocker panel without the previous ribbing that gave the busy a lower look. A single backup light, mounted above the license plate allowed for two tail lights per side and wheel covers were replaced by six-inch wide Rally wheels with chrome beauty rings. Interior alterations included revised upholstery, and the hand brake moved from beneath the dash to between the seats. The convertible’s optional hardtop was offered with a black vinyl cover, emulating what was seen on larger cars.

The 427 CID V-8 was available with Rochester three two-barrel carburetors, called RPO L71, producing 435 horsepower at 5,800 RPM with 460 pound-feet of torque at 4,000 rpm. It replaced the L72 425 horsepower version of 1966 albeit with a different mechanical camshaft. Another three two-barrel engine was released to fit between the L71 and the L36, the RPO L68. It featured the L36 hydraulic camshaft but had the multiple carburetors. As stated, the L36 remained. The two 327 CID V-8 were retained: the L79 350 and the standard 300 horsepower units. With potential buyers anticipating the car’s overdue redesign, sales for the ’67 CORVETTE STING RAY final year totaled 22,940, down over 5,000 units from 1966. Of note was that 88 percent of 1967 Corvettes were fitted with 4-speed manual transmission and only 10.1 percent had the Powerglide automatic transmission. The remaining 1.9 percent were equipped with the standard 3-speed manual transmission and the mandatory 300 horsepower 327 CID V-8.

’67 CORVETTE STING RAY

Later in the year, the ultimate Corvette engine was added, the RPO L88. Fitted with aluminum heads with bigger ports, it came with an even more aggressive camshaft and a 12.5:1 compression ratio. The option also required an aluminum radiator, a small-diameter flywheel, and a single Holley 850 cfm race-bred four-barrel carburetor. The factory rated the L88 at 430 horsepower at 4,600 rpm, less than the L89, but the true rating was estimated to be about 560 horsepower at 6,400 rpm. Given the ultra-high compression ratio and the camshaft fitted, it is clear that this was not an engine for the street.

Chevrolet made several individual options mandatory on the L88, including Positraction, transistorized ignition, heavy-duty suspension, and power brakes, as well as RPO C48, which deleted the heater and defroster. This option was an additional $1,500. Given the price and lack of street manners, the L88 reached only 20 buyers that year.

’67 CORVETTE STING RAYFor the full story on the ’67 CORVETTE STING RAY, factory sales brochure, print advertisements, specification sheets, magazine road tests and production numbers, please visit OVER-DRIVE Magazine @ https://over-drive-magazine.com/2024/12/30/1967-corvette-fact-sheet/

GARAGE STYLE: IN THE GARAGE W/ JIM PALAM!

GARAGE STYLE: IN THE GARAGE W/ JIM PALAM!

Our man on the Left Coast spends some time in front of the camera in his garage while Cindy Meitle profiles him for Garage Style magazine.

GARAGE STYLE: IN THE GARAGE W/ JIM PALAM!GARAGE STYLE: IN THE GARAGE W/ JIM PALAM!I first met Jim Palam more than a half-century ago when he was a kid on the pit crew of the legendary “Astoria Chas” Snyder’s ‘67 Corvette powered by an L88 engine, below. The car was KO-MOTION, it was built at Motion Performance, Baldwin, NY, raced by Chas, and I was Editor of Hi-Performance CARS magazine. CARS was one of the Corvette’s sponsors. Chas became a friend.

Everything changed in 1968 when 19-year-old Charlie Snyder lost his life in Vietnam, while serving with the First Cavalry. KO-MOTION went on to win the AHRA A/Corvette World Record at 129 mph in 11.04 seconds. The record was set in Chas’ name by his old team, supported by Motion Performance and still sponsored by CARS.

In 2008 Jim and I met at 303 Gallery in New York City for the opening on my daughter Collier Schorr’s show, THERE I WAS, about Charlie’s short life and his iconic KO-MOTION. It was also the subject of a book – THERE I WAS – written by Collier. It was great seeing Jim again, surrounded by my daughter’s artwork and memorabilia from Charlie’s family and from Glen Spielberg, owner of the legendary KO-MOTION.

THERE I WASKO-MOTION & crew at New York National in 1967. Jim Palam is wearing the Navy Blue shirt.

GARAGE STYLE: IN THE GARAGE W/ JIM PALAM!For the last few years Jim, owner and Creative Director, Jim Palam & Partners in Solvang, CA, has been a valued contributor to CarGuyChronicles. He’s also responsible for the blog’s home page design. Congrats, my friend!

For more information about Jim Palam & Partners, please visit https://www.jimpalam.com/

Check out Garage Style magazine, https://www.garagestylemagazine.com/

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