Dry Lake Racer? 1928 Chevrolet National

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Before and after is how I’d describe this 1928 Chevrolet National as it is pictorially presented in two different forms – more on that to follow. As the seller states, “Not your average Ford model A which are all over the place still“. So with that thought in mind, let’s see what, if anything, is special about this old bowtie. It is located in Littleton, Colorado and is available, here on craigslist for $17,000. Thanks to MattR for this tip!

To my surprise, I discovered that the 1928 Chevrolet National, known as a Series AB, was a one-year-only offering. It followed the AA Capitol of 1927 and was succeeded by the AC International of 1929. Production was brisk with almost 1.2 MM copies being assembled that year and surprisingly topped Ford’s uber-successful Model A’s output of just over 700K units. The National’s body styles included two-door coupes and roadsters and four-door sedans and tourers.

So, what happened here? The seller states, “Planned to make it into a dry lake racer style hotrod and drive it in this year’s hotrod hill climb in Central City but the event was canceled“. So that explains what happened to the missing body parts. And the parts aren’t actually missing as they’ll go with the sale. In stripped-down form, this Chevy presents well, the seller adds, “The back quarters are a custom handmade fiberglass that are perfect. All new oak framing throughout the entire car“.  All of that said, I would have been hard-pressed to convert this formerly beautiful Chevy into some kind of hot rod – personal preference of course, but I would have left it as is. I’m not sure I understand the motivation to sell due to a canceled event. There’s always next year, right?

Under the hood resides the original, rebuilt 171 CI in-line four-cylinder engine. We are advised that a 40 MPH top speed is about all she wrote; so much for dry lake racing. But wait, there’s more! An 80 HP, 216 CI “Stovebolt” in-line six-cylinder motor will get thrown in with the deal too. I’m assuming that it will fit, but that’s just an assumption. The typical three-speed manual transmission drives this National’s rear wheels.

I always like to provide the low down on the interior of every car that I review but I can’t in this case because there is no image or description. Safe to say, it’s a small, spartan environment. I can show you the interior of the trunk, which I know is a poor substitute for one of the interior, but it does detail the fine oak framework. The curvature of the trunk lid frame is especially impressive!

It’s what to do with it time! I’d put it back together as it was before the seller messed with it. If I were going to go hot-rod racing, I’d emulate Ford and go with a small V8 and forget about the Stovebolt. In original form, however, it was a fine-looking car and a great alternative to the ubiquitous Ford Model A. Methinks this one should be preserved as originally intended. But that’s just my ranting for today, what would you do with this 1928 Chevrolet National?

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Comments

  1. bobhess bobhessMember

    I vote for putting it back together. With everything available and in good condition to do so it would be shame not to. Don’t see something like this that often. Could be again a great car.

    Like 19
  2. Christopher Gush

    Considering the overall assembly of the car being reasonably nicely done, the engine bay fuel line treatment is cringeworthy, tethered with a white coat hanger and dangerously unsecured. Marketing a photo as such is incomprehensible. Perhaps the seller will correct this and re photograph.

    Like 4
  3. GOM

    Looks like the fuel line was a stop-gap repair for a vacuum tank that wasn’t working (but is still present and presumably repairable; they were more troublesome than a conventional fuel pump.)

    Like 0
  4. Kenn

    That’s hardly a stock engine. An overhead valve head is on it, so no telling what’s inside re: pistons, etc.

    Like 0
    • Mance Morris

      Chevy OHC 4 cylinder was introduced in 1916 and replaced with OHC 6 cylinder in 1929.

      Like 3
      • Bullethead

        OHValve, not OHCam. And yes, it’s the stock engine, seller also includes a 216 I6 with the deal.

        Big plus that the bodywork framing is done, you could have the best of both worlds: strip it when you want to do an event like a hillclimb or TROG, bolt everything back on for tours. Nice price for what it is, too.

        Like 3
  5. Kenn

    My BIG mistake! I didn’t know Chevy had an OHC engine – just assumed it would be like the Ford engine. The more I visit this site, the more I learn. Thanks for no snarky comments about my uninformed post.

    Like 7
    • Johnny C.

      This thing is pretty cool. Taking the fenders and what-not off to have a completely different car is a fun way to stir things up a bit according to how you want to enjoy the car on a given day. Oh, by the way, they didn’t make OHC (cam) engines, they made OHV (valve) engines… And the 216 is not an L6… (an L6 is a flathead 6 cyl.)… the 216 is an OHV… geeze Louise! I’ve got a headache…

      Like 3
  6. dogwater

    For someone who likes these old things 17k is not a bad price for a turn key car

    Like 2
  7. Howie Mueler

    Very cool, posted 9 days ago.

    Like 1
  8. Yep banned

    I bid, let’s game them, let them send car ads, then “charge” them $5 a month while they do the work. Amazing

    Like 0
  9. 427Turbojet 427TurbojetMember

    1928 Chevrolets came with a longer wheelbase and longer hood/front end in anticipation of the 6 cylinder introduced in 1929. You can see the fan shroud to help in cooling the “far away” 4 cylinder!

    Like 0
  10. Al

    Put Humpty back together.

    Like 1

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