Best Budget Muscle Car

Best Budget Muscle Car

The sales literature from 1968 said the second year Camaro was for the "fun crowd" and that it was a "husky performer and looks it." Chevrolet Marketing

  • The Rally Sport or RS package consisted of concealed headlights and several other appearance upgrades. It was optional on any version including the base model, the Super Sport or the Z/28. Of the 235,137 Camaros produced in 1968, 40,977 had the $105.35 option.
  • A single 1968 Z/28 convertible was built for then Chevrolet general manager Elliott "Pete" Estes.
  • General Motors finally decided to market the Z/28. At first they were not sure about offering the production race car to the masses. Sales took off with almost 7,200 being sold in 1968 compared to sales of a little over 600 in 1967.

Muscle Car Specifications

Performance Model

1968 Chevrolet Camaro SS/RS 396

Quarter Mile

15.6 sec @ 92.0 mph

Little changed for the second year of Camaro production. Minor changes were made to the front and rear of the car. The square headlights from the 1967 Camaro were replaced with rectangular ones. Side markers were added and the vents were removed from the windows. All minor stuff which says that overall the designers got it right the first time. Pony Car fans were well satisfied with the car also. In 1967, Chevrolet sold about 221,000 Camaros. In 1968, sales were over 235,000. The car was well received.

The base Camaro continued to be the car that emphasized looks over performance. The largest engine available in the base lineup was the 327ci small block. It was a good engine but it couldn't compete with the big blocks or the high performance 302ci found in the Z/28s. The Super Sport or SS continued to be the ground pounder of the group. It was a ¼ mile machine. The Z/28 continued to display its road racing roots. While the SS may have been the power lifter the Z/28 was the tri-athlete of the group.

Super Sport 396

The Super Sport 396 package included a unique hood with twin banks of four square simulated air intakes, big SS 396 emblems and a host of other performance upgrades. Of course the heart of the car was the 396ci big block. Several versions were offered and they all offered very good performance. The straight line performance of the SS396 was very similar to the Z/28. Because the SS was much cheaper than the Z/28 GM sold about four Super Sports for every Z/28 sold.

Z28

General Motors decided to let the public have their Z/28 in 1968. It was still a bare knuckles race car. Air conditioning was not an option. Neither was an automatic transmission. Disk brakes were a mandatory option. All the suspension Components were beefed up and many of the other critical drive train Components were built up. This was the real thing. Not some badged up pretend muscle car.

Finally, for those not content with the SS396, one chevy dealership offered a more powerful Camaro and became a legend in the process.  The "Super Yenko Camaro" or SYC was billed as the ultimate Camaro. It's easy to see why. The fine people at Yenko Sports in Canonsburg Pennsylvania ripped the 396ci big blocks out of about 100 Camaros and replaced it with a 427ci L72 Corvette engine producing at least 425hp. After the engine transfer, they beefed up a few other Components, added a unique hood and threw in a few badges for good measure. The result was a $3800 Camaro that could do 0-60 in less than 4 seconds and the ¼ mile in the low 12 second range.

Pony Car Competition

More manufacturers entered the pony car market in 1968. American Motors introduced the 1968 AMX and the 1968 Javelin in an attempt gain share in the rapidly growing market segment. The AMC AMX and AMC Javelin were similar cars with the main difference was the deletion of the back seat in the AMX. Other than the 1968 Corvette, the AMX was the only two seater widely available in the marketplace. The Camaro's big sister, the 1968 Firebird, remained largely unchanged. Plymouth went all in with its 1968 Barracuda. They dropped a 426 Hemi in the engine bay. Seventy lucky owners got a pony car that was ridiculously powerful and, more than likely, ridiculously hard to keep on the road. Ford answered the sales challenge from the Camaro and the horse power challenge by adding the 427 Cobra and 428 Cobra Jet engines to the lineup for the 1968 Mustang.

The 1969 Camaro was the last of the first generation Camaros. The body was updated to make it appear "longer and lower." Many consider it the main inspiration for the reintroduced 2009 Camaro.

  • 1968 Camaro Specs
  • 1968 Camaro Pictures
  • 1968 Camaro Reviews

Engine Specifications

Type Size Carb Horse Power Tourqe
STD I6 230ci 1x1bbl 140 hp @ 4400 rpm 220 lb-ft @ 1600 rpm
L22 I6 250ci 1x1bbl 155 hp @ 4200 rpm 235 lb-ft @ 1600 rpm
Z28 302ci 1x4bbl 290 hp @ 5800 rpm 290 lb-ft @ 4200 rpm
L30 327ci 1x4bbl 275 hp @ 4800 rpm 335 lb-ft @ 3200 rpm
STD V8 327ci 1x2bbl 210 hp @ 4600 rpm 320 lb-ft @ 2400 rpm
L48 350ci 1x4bbl 295 hp @ 4800 rpm 380 lb-ft @ 3200 rpm
L78/L79 396ci 1x4bbl 375 hp @ 5600 rpm 415 lb-ft @ 3600 rpm
L34 396ci 1x4bbl 350 hp @ 5200 rpm 415 lb-ft @ 3600 rpm
L35 396ci 1x4bbl 325 hp @ 4800 rpm 410 lb-ft @ 3200 rpm
L72 427ci 1x4bbl 425 hp @ 5400 rpm 460 lb-ft @ 3600 rpm

Performance Statistics

0 to 60 mph Quarter Mile Engine Source
n/a 14.1 sec @ 99.0 mph 396ci/375hp Popular Hot Rod
5.5 sec 13.8 sec @ 107.0 mph 302ci/290hp Hi Perf Cars 1968
6.6 sec 15.0 sec @ 94.0 mph 396ci/325hp Estimate
7.4 sec 14.9 sec @ 101.4 mph 302ci/290hp Car Life
7.8 sec 15.6 sec @ 92.0 mph 396ci/325hp Motor Trend
Overall rating 3.8
Looks 5.0
Performance 3.0
Parts Availability 4.0
Collectability 3.0

The redneck county porsche.

Overall rating 5.0
Looks 5.0
Performance 5.0
Parts Availability 5.0
Collectability 5.0

Sill On Of The Best Looking Cars Ever

Best Budget Muscle Car

Source: https://www.musclecarfacts.com/chevrolet-camaro/58-1968-camaro/

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