Member Login
eMail:
Password:
Remember Me
Forgot your password?
SCM Site Search
Get Our Weekly Newsletter
First Name
Last Name
eMail Address



Email this article | Print this article
American  |  Profiles, Reviews and Buyer's Guides from the August, 1998 Issue

1956 Chevrolet Corvette Roadster Review and Buyer's Guide

1956 Chevrolet Corvette Roadster

In 1956, Ford was building the two-seat Thunderbird, and outselling Corvette four to one. After two disastrous sales years, the Corvette had to change or die. And change it did. First, it received a new body to replace the classic roadster style body of the previous three years. Still in fiberglass, it now had external door handles, wind-up windows and a stylish \"cove\" or indent in the side, outlined with a polished, stainless-steel strip. Corvette also began to get some real engines as Zora Arkus-Duntov’s influence started to have its effect.

The top-of-the-line engine for ’56 was the dual-quad, 225-hp, 283-cubic-inch engine, as in the car shown here. It was also the only engine GM shipped until June ’56, when the single-carb, 210-hp version became standard and the dual-quad an option (RPO 469). Nearly two-thirds of the year’s Corvettes were delivered with the dual-quad engine.

One hundred and eleven buyers of the 225-hp dual-quad engine opted for the RPO 449 special camshaft, the fabled \"Duntov\" solid-lifter cam, which boosted the engine’s power to an estimated 240 hp and was the same camshaft used by Duntov to post a speed of 150.583 mph on the sand at Daytona during Speed Week 1956. These very rare RPO 449 cars are identified by their block numbers: GU for the 240 hp engine, which was available only with a 3-speed manual transmission. The 225 engines had FG and GR block number suffixes, FK and GV for the 210. Fs are Powerglide, Gs are 3-speed. Production figures for 1956 are among the lowest in Corvette’s post-’53 history, with only 3,467 built.

The car described here is finished in Aztec Copper with beige coves, a color scheme that is believed to be original. It has a 4-speed manual transmission and a power convertible top, but no hard top. The car is believed to have been sold new to a woman in San Mateo, California, who owned it for 34 years, accounting for its unusually original condition. Its intervening history is not known, until it was sold to a German enthusiast in 1991 for a reported $90,000 (Canadian)! It is believed that all its important mechanical components are \"numbers matching.\" This is a highly-desirable car from one of the lowest production years with a high-performance engine that is quintessentially \"Corvette.\"

This 1956 Chevrolet Corvette Roadster Review and Buyer's Guide appeared in the August, 1998 Issue of Sports Car Market Magazine.

  The SCM Analysis 
Details
Years Produced
Number Produced
Original List Price
SCM Valuation
Tune-up Cost
Distributor Caps
Chassis # Location
Engine # Location
Club Info
Websiteclick to visit
Alternatives
Investment Grade

This car did not sell at AutoClassic's auction in Vancouver, BC on April 17-18, 1998. The high bid was $27,690.