Street Machine

NEALE WHITE 1966 CHEVY II NOVA

> BRISBANE, QLD

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NEALE White’s ’66 Chevy II Nova is a ripper sleeper, as you’d scarcely believe such an original-looking body is hiding a cammed 5.7-litre LS1, six-speed manual and 12-bolt. Having owned a few Aussie V8s, Neale turned his attention to what many consider the smallest, lightest Chevy to cop a bent-eight.

“A ’64-model Chevy II was the first Nova I saw and, having had Toranas and V8 HKS, I was after something a bit smaller, but still with a V8,” says Neale. “The LS craze was happening around this time and I wanted to be a part of that. I wanted to mix the old and new, and I knew I wanted the LS, air con, power steer, and a 12-bolt in it.”

Neale turned to the USA to find himself a good base to start with, and managed to find what many Nova fiends regard as the holy grail for a pro touring build: a base-model 100-series two-door sedan.

“Seven years ago, I found a ’66 two-door post sedan with the right patina and colour from Oklahoma, and brought it over,” he says. “It took two years to fix it up to make it roadworthy. When I got the car from America there was a lot to do to get it ready to hit the road. Considerab­le time was spent upgrading the electrics for its new drivetrain.

“Funnily enough, the engine and Tremec ’box in my car is from an export Aussie GTO Pontiac, so it has done some miles going to the USA and back!” Neale continues. “My car also has a ’98 F-body Camaro sump, PCM and wiring loom. It has a GM Hot Cam in it, but it isn’t too lumpy or aggressive.”

HAVING HAD TORANAS AND V8 HKS, I WAS AFTER SOMETHING A BIT SMALLER, BUT STILL WITH A V8

I WANTED TO MIX THE OLD AND NEW, AND I KNEW I WANTED THE LS, AIR CON, POWER STEER AND 12-BOLT IN IT

Novas were never known for stellar handling or braking capabiliti­es, so Neale knew to upgrade the undercarri­age of his car. “The chassis connectors and gearbox crossmembe­r are from 417 Motorsport­s, and they’re really nice,” he explains. “I sent them informatio­n about the Queensland engineerin­g rules and they made them as a bolt-in piece to suit those regulation­s, instead of the normal weld-in type.

“The front end is a Mustang II from Jim Weimer Rod Garage in Wisconsin. It has fabricated upper and lower arms with coil-over type shocks from QA1, and it uses factory spindles, a Ford Granada disc – similar to our XB Falcon, but in Chev stud pattern – with Camaro calipers on the front end.”

Up the back is a heavy-duty Chevy 12-bolt diff with 4.11 gears and an LSD, hanging off factory-style mono-leaf springs with Caltracs bars and double-adjustable QA1 shocks.

“I ran it at the drags once, where it did a 13.6@108mph on a slow 2.6-second 60-foot. People tell me the mph equates to a mid-12, but I didn’t try much after that as I wanted to drive it home.”

Despite the work that’s gone into it, Neale says the time has come to sell the Nova.

“This is a car I wanted to keep, but I have to move it on, as I have a ’57 Chevy stepside ex-us Navy truck that had been sitting around since ’84 before I got it out of Arizona,” he explains. “I have a Magnuson-supercharg­ed six-litre and Tremec to go in that, which was meant for the Nova originally.”

We can’t wait to see what he does with the pick-up!

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 ??  ?? INTERIOR: “I had Super Trim in Coburg, Melbourne, cut the seat covers apart and install the cloth inserts,” Neale says. “My father and I fitted them to the seats ourselves. The a/c is a Southern Rods Maxi Kooler system, with full electric heat and...
INTERIOR: “I had Super Trim in Coburg, Melbourne, cut the seat covers apart and install the cloth inserts,” Neale says. “My father and I fitted them to the seats ourselves. The a/c is a Southern Rods Maxi Kooler system, with full electric heat and...

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