Original Parts Group, Inc. Receives Third Consecutive Best GM Restored Vehicle Award
Seal Beach, Calif. – General Motors awarded Original Parts Group, Inc., the “Best GM Restored Vehicle” for the company’s 1967 Buick GS during the 2009 Specialty Equipment Manufacturer's Association (SEMA) annual convention in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The coveted GM Design Award recognizes Original Parts Group’s quality and originality in their restoration products. In 2008, Original Parts Group’s 1968 GTO was recognized and in 2007 the company’s 1966 Chevelle SS 396 was awarded making this three consecutive years the company has received the honor.
The Buick GS 400 underwent a complete frame-off restoration at J&H Restorations in Riverside, California. Tony Genty, chief of operations for Original Parts Group, Inc. provided off-the-shelf parts and teamed with Joel Hoffman of J&H to assist in coordinating the build.
Original Parts Group celebrates 28 years of business in 2010, manufacturing and retailing GM restoration parts and accessories. Original Parts Group is recognized as the number one supplier and manufacturer of quality GM ”A“ Body parts and is committed to retaining the reputation for years to come.
RIVIERA CATALOG NOW AVAILABLE
Original Parts Group’s new Buick Riviera catalog will be shipping January 2010! The new catalog will feature over one hundred pages of moldings, sheet metal, lenses, literature, soft trim, interior parts, underbody, suspension and much more.
Now for the first time ever, Riviera parts online .
Chevelle... The Beginning
Formed more or less in clay by March 1962, Chevrolet’s
A-body image
took on various identities before final transformation into sheet metal. Another clay seen a month later clearly looked like an upsized Chevy II, and a mockup photographed in January 1963 even carried “Chevy II Nova” identification. “Indications are very strong that Chevrolet will modify the current Chevy II, making it wider and longer,” predicted in an August 1963 Motor Trend review. Mentioned, too, was the claim that the new model “might get a new name in the bargain.”
Indeed,
initial plans called for trading the Chevy II for the new A-body
intermediate, with the thinking being another model line would surely
eat into the division’s proven four-tiered sales structure. Such worries,
however, quickly faded, and the decision was made late in February 1963 to
put a fifth choice on the menu. The Nova didn’t burn out, and one month
later the “Malibu” moniker made its first appearance on an A-body
mockup. But, like the Nova badge, this tag too represented icing on the cake.
Per Chevy tradition, the true model name had to begin with a “C,”
thus came “Chevelle.”
General Manager Bunkie Knudsen introduced the Chevelle to the press in August
1963. “Impressed by its clean and handsome styling, Detroit’s
normally undemonstrative auto reporters broke into spontaneous applause,”
announced a Time magazine report. “The only complaint about Chevelle
was that dealers couldn’t get enough of them,” added Automotive
News in September.
Within three months, Chevelle was the second hottest-selling Chevy, taking
up to 18 percent of the company’s production schedule. When the smoke
cleared, the final count for the 1964 Chevelle (discounting its second-generation
El Camino derivative) totaled 338,296, tops in the intermediate ranks and
some 60,000 greater than that year’s Ford Fairlane tally.
Along with that El Camino rendition (marketed as a truck), the Chevelle line
included the base “300” series, available in two- and four-door
sedan and two- and four-door station wagon forms, and the upscale Malibu,
offered as a four-door sedan, two-door sport coupe or convertible, and two-
or four-door station wagon. Extra trim and more standard equipment typically
set the top-shelf Malibu apart from the plain-Jane Chevelle 300. Both series
featured six-cylinder and V-8 lines, and, like their 1964 B-O-P A-body counterparts,
all models rolled on a 115-inch wheelbase and featured coil springs at all
four corners.
Excerpt taken from chapter 5, pages 157 through 158 of, “The Complete
Book Of Classic GM Muscle” by Mike Mueller. First published in 2008
by Motorbooks, an imprint of MBI Publishing.
OPGI’s Spotlight - Colin’s Corner
Hello folks, my name is Colin Date. What’s so special about me?
Not much. What’s my connection with OPGI? Well, I’ll get
to that here in a bit. I’m just a car dude like you. I’m a workin’
man, in my early 50s, married with two grown kids. In the
extremely little amounts of spare time I have, I’m trying to restore
a ’69 Buick Special. It’s taken the better part of 10 years,
and just this past summer, I tore it all apart (again) because,
well, I’m way too fussy at that kind of stuff. It was my
first shot at a resto, and I made more than a few mistakes along
the way. By the way, that’s the car right here on this page. Looks good,
I know, but trust me, it’s a “20 footer.” Right now, the car
is gutted, in primer, and ready for paint. I’ll keep ya’ll updatedas
we move along.
As I mentioned earlier, I’m just a car guy. Over the years, I've owned
Fords and Mopars, but by far, cars by “the General” have taken up
my garage space. Here’s a brief rundown: ’75 Vega GT (fresh outta
high school), ’75 Buick Century (relentlessly Colin’s Corner raced
against my buddy’s ’71 4-4-2), ’78 Chevette (don’t laugh
too hard, I’d just gotten married and saving money was the name of the
game), ’79 Camaro (OK, the saving money part didn’t last too long).
From here, the lines get blurry. Too much of “life” going on. I
owned a few Cavaliers, a Citation, and a Corsica (life in the ’80s). Near
the end of that decade, I bought a new ’87 IROC-Z. Then onto an ’89
Suburban, then a Celebrity. Other GM stuff over the decades included an ’88
Park Avenue, an Olds Calais, a Ciera, and even an ’87 Cutlass.Whew, outta
breath...
So, what’s my connection with Original Parts Group? Well, other than utilizing
hundreds of OPGI parts for my ’69, I actually worked there, for almost
6 years. Awesome times with the coolest bunch of car crazy guys. A dream job
if there ever was one! They must have liked me enough to invite me back—’cause
here I am with my own little piece of OPGI cyberspace real estate!
Anyways, I’ll be writing on a fairly regular basis here. I won’t
always be babbling on and on about my cars (bet you’re relieved). I’ll
be doing a few things though. A little tech here and there, maybe some wild
and wacky quizzes, short stories on rare and little known cars and facts, “General”
tidbits...you get the idea. I promise to keep it light, entertaining, and hopefully
a little educational at the same time.
Until next time,
1770 Saturn Way, Seal Beach, CA 90740
Copyright © 2009 Original Parts Group Incorporated All Rights Reserved