Replacing the iconic Chevrolet Camaro with a fully electric crossover is a bold and controversial move, but if it worked for Ford, could it work for GM too? Although such a sacrilegious move would be ...
Some cars have fixed roofs; others have folding cloth roofs – and a very special few have small removable sections of the roof that let the sunshine in when they’re out, and let a tiny bit of rain in ...
Chevrolet may be preparing to bring the Camaro name back—but there's going to be a massive catch. Chevrolet could revive the Camaro nameplate in 2026 as a fully electric performance crossover aimed at ...
What It Is The Chevrolet Camaro was originally created as a Ford Mustang foil. History now appears ready to repeat itself as Chevy prepares to reintroduce the Camaro nameplate to the market. This time ...
Hyundai and Kia can take a step back from grand theft auto limelight, as new figures from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety-Highway Loss Data Institute shows that a muscle car now has the ...
So much of our editorial focus is about modernizing older cars and trucks, usually for better braking or engine performance, but that quest can be undertaken in the interior, and that’s just what we ...
Chevrolet’s next-gen Camaro has been delayed indefinitely, but that doesn’t mean it’s not still in the works. Let’s take a look at what we could see from Chevy in the years to come. Using generative ...
Update: A GM spokesperson reached out to clarify that the report of executives shutting down the project are speculative, and that ‘nothing has been confirmed by GM.’ The original story follows below.
GM has issued special coverage for certain 2021 Chevy Camaro units affected by a condition that may cause the engine coolant thermostat to switch on at an incorrectly low temperature. The Special ...
The Chevrolet Camaro is, currently, dead. While it might come back as an electric vehicle someday, you can still find a high-horsepower version that does nothing but burn dinosaur juice and rubber for ...
Some headlines seem so incredible, you must read them twice, and then you may be scratching your head wondering if it’s some kind of typo. That was the double-take we did when we got word from Summit ...