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− | '''Chevrolet Concours (X-car). 1976–7 (prod. n/a). 2-, 3- and 4-door sedan. F/R, 250 in³ (I6 OHV), 305, 350 in³ (V8 OHV).''' Nova LN renamed, giving Chevrolet an additional compact nameplate, but focused on the plush, luxury end of the market, and similar to where [[Buick Skylark (1975–9)]] was positioned. Nova roots never hidden. Replaced by Malibu when that model downsized for 1978. | + | '''Chevrolet Concours (X-car). 1976–7 (prod. n/a). 4-door sedan, 2- and 3-door coupé. F/R, 250 in³ (I6 OHV), 305, 350 in³ (V8 OHV).''' Nova LN renamed, giving Chevrolet an additional compact nameplate, but focused on the plush, luxury end of the market, and similar to where [[Buick Skylark (1975–9)]] was positioned. Nova roots never hidden. Replaced by Malibu when that model downsized for 1978. |
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Revision as of 14:14, 1 June 2014
Chevrolet Concours (X-car). 1976–7 (prod. n/a). 4-door sedan, 2- and 3-door coupé. F/R, 250 in³ (I6 OHV), 305, 350 in³ (V8 OHV). Nova LN renamed, giving Chevrolet an additional compact nameplate, but focused on the plush, luxury end of the market, and similar to where Buick Skylark (1975–9) was positioned. Nova roots never hidden. Replaced by Malibu when that model downsized for 1978.
Manufacturing locations: Van Nuys, California, USA; Tarrytown, NY, USA; Willow Run, Michigan, USA; Oshawa, Ontario, Canada; Sainte-Thérèse, Québec, Canada
Marque: Chevrolet | Predecessor: Chevrolet Nova (1975–9) | Successor: Chevrolet Malibu (1978–83)