Concept Cars Home
1976 Monza Image Right
 

1975 Chevrolet Monza news, pictures, and information

The Chevrolet Monza was produced from 1975 through 1980. It served as a replacement for the Chevrolet Vega, though there was a three-year overlap. It had not been created to replace the Vega, it had been intended to house GM's Wankel engine. The Wankel engine was not used, in its place was a four-cylinder as standard and a V8 engine offered as optional equipment. The eight-cylinder engine just barely fit into the cramped engine bay. Not only was the eight-cylinder engine large, it was also very heavy and often accounted for severe driveline vibrations. There was a third engine option offered, another version of the V8 in 350 cubic-inch size. The option package was called the California/High Altitude edition. The Monza was a rear-wheel drive vehicle built atop of GM's H-platform and offered as a hatchback, coupe, and wagon.

1975 was not the first time the name 'Monza' was used on a GM vehicle; it had been used prior on the Corvair line of vehicles. The 1975 Monza was awarded Motor Trend's Car of the Year award.

In 1976 another V8 engine was added to the line-up - GM's new 305 V8. in 1977 the 262 cubic-inch V8 was discontinued. This left the 305 cubic-inch version of the V8 engine the only optional engine offered.

1976 saw the introduction of the Monza Spyder which would remain in production until 1980. It could be ordered with a performance package which saw improvements to the vehicles suspension, brakes and other areas. The Monza Mirage was introduced in 1977, the only year it was offered. It was offered by Michigan Auto Techniques which was an aftermarket company contracted by GM. The Mirage was basically a styling option; it was adorned in cameo white paint with red and blue racing stripes that ran the entire length of the car. The body panels were flared to give the vehicle a more aggressive stance. In total there were about 4097 examples created.

In 1978, a station wagon bodystyle was added to the Monza. The Monza S was also introduced in 1978 of which, less than 3000 examples created.

The Dekon Monza was a racing version of the car used in IMSA Camel GT road racing series in the US.

By Daniel Vaughan | Jan 2007
For more information and related vehicles, click here


Arrow Right 1975 Chevrolet models
Chevrolet Camaro
Chevrolet Caprice Classic
Chevrolet Corvette C3
Chevrolet Corvette Wide-body
Chevrolet Nova
Chevrolet Vega

Similar Vehicles
Chevrolet Monza1975 Chevrolet Monza
Ford Kemp Cobra II1976 Ford Kemp Cobra II

Similar Automakers
CadillacChrysler
DodgeFord
GMCHummer
JeepLincoln
MercuryPontiac
Saturn
Similarly Sized Vehicles from 1975
Alfa Romeo Alfetta
Chevrolet Vega
Lancia Beta
Porsche 934 911 RSR
Saab 99
Triumph TR7

 
Chevrolet: 1971-1980
Similar Automakers
Chevrolet History
Other models by Chevrolet
Manufacturer Website
Vehicle Recall Information

Related Articles and Event Coverage
Zippo U.S. Vintage Grand Prix at Watkins Glen
2005 Jefferson 500

Chevrolet
Monthly Sales FiguresVolume
April 2013172,460 
March 2013173,859 
February 2013158,541 
January 2013137,304 
December 2012167,091 
November 2012128,867 
October 2012135,305 
September 2012149,801 
August 2012169,978 
July 2012138,942 
June 2012180,098 
May 2012177,943 
(More Details)

 
150
210
Astro
Avalanche
Aveo
Bel Air
Biscayne
C10 / K10
Camaro
Cameo
Caprice
Cavalier
Chevelle
Citation
Cobalt
Colorado
Corvair
Corvette
Corvette GTP
Cruze
Deluxe Series
El Camino
El Morocco
Equinox
Express
Fleetline
HHR
Impala
Kingswood
Malibu
Metro
Model 3100
Model H
Monte Carlo
Monza
Nova
Prizm
RPO B2K Twin Turbo
S-10
Series 490
Series C
Series L
Silverado
Sonic
Spark
Special Series
SS
SSR
Styleline
Suburban
Tahoe
Tracker
TrailBlazer
Traverse
Uplander
Vega
Venture

1976 Monza Image Right
© 1998-2012. All rights reserved. The material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.