Chevrolet
definitely got caught with their britches down in April 1964 when Ford
unleashed the Mustang. It took over 2 years to modify a Nova chassis
and drive train and create a unique shape for Chevy’s pony
car. The Camaro was an instant sales success, not the cultural event
the Mustang was, but a success just the same.
It just so happened that the Camaro was perfect for Trans-Am racing, so
Chevrolet created the quasi-off-the-showroon-floor-racer, option code
number Z-28. The car was not entirely unlike the Shelby Mustang in that
it came with lots of go-fast, racer-type hardware. Roger Penske and
Mark Donahue raced a Sunoco sponsored Z-28 in ‘68 and
‘69, dominating the class.
The Z-28 (and the Trans-Am Firebird) went on to outlive the entire
muscle car field. The cars were consistently made from ‘69 up
until ‘03, although there was one year that Chevy did not
offer a Z-28 (they must have had brain-lock that year). Apparently GM
decided to not put much development into the Camaro/Firebird cars over
the last few years and actual “officially” dropped
both cars after ‘03.
However, we are now learning that that decision had more to do with the
assembly plant being rebuilt and moved. Rest assured, the Z-28 and
Trans-Am will be back.