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1DUCE
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renus
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6Deuce
QUOTE(1DUCE @ Feb 28 2007, 02:06 PM) *
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916 265-8259

Nice deuce, But if it's an SS, Where's the grab bar, bucket seats, floor shifter,
SS trim, ect.?????
Cadillac Heaven
doesnt look like as ss but still very nice! any trades?
1DUCE
Back then you could buy them with buckets or with out. and the vin says it a SS. and it does have ss trim.
4~DA~LUV~OF~MONEY
YES They made 62 impala ss with shifter on top...


NICE 62 SS cool.gif wink.gif
1DUCE
Thanks !
El raider
very niceeeeeeeeeee cool.gif
1DUCE
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topless_66

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Mr Impala
QUOTE(1DUCE @ Feb 28 2007, 03:31 PM) *
Back then you could buy them with buckets or with out. and the vin says it a SS. and it does have ss trim.



vins dont tell u if its a SS the cowl does (until 1964) and thats not SS trim thats a regular impala, SS trim has engine turned aluminum in it not red paint and theres no buckets no console no grab bar thats just a nice regular impala wink.gif
1DUCE
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A SS Vin # will have 1847 in it if it is a ss look in classic kelly blue book.This cars Vin # starts 21847!
Mr Impala
2 means its a 62 18 means its a v8 impala 47 means its a 2dr ht

VIN: 21847L333666
Year: 1962
Series: Impala V8
Body Style: 2-dr Sport coupe (hardtop)
Assembly Plant: Los Angeles, CA
Serial Number: 333666


thtashow it breaks down, chevy did not make SS its own car until 1964 before that it was only a trim option, you have a nice 2dr ht but its not an SS even if someone did change the rear panels atone time it is missing the console buckets grab bar and correct side trim. not hating your car is nice just not an SS wink.gif
Mr Impala
better idea of how a SS interior would look

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slo
QUOTE(Mr Impala @ Mar 1 2007, 12:02 PM) *
vins dont tell u if its a SS the cowl does (until 1964) and thats not SS trim thats a regular impala, SS trim has engine turned aluminum in it not red paint and theres no buckets no console no grab bar thats just a nice regular impala  wink.gif

x2

clean ass HT impala bit high, but nice damn nice
6Deuce
QUOTE(Mr Impala @ Mar 1 2007, 04:01 PM) *
2 means its a 62 18 means its a v8 impala 47 means its a 2dr ht

VIN: 21847L333666 
Year: 1962 
Series: Impala V8 
Body Style: 2-dr Sport coupe (hardtop) 
Assembly Plant: Los Angeles, CA 
Serial Number: 333666 
thtashow it breaks down, chevy did not make SS its own car until 1964 before that it was only a trim option, you have a nice 2dr ht but its not an SS even if someone did change the rear panels atone time it is missing the console buckets grab bar and correct side trim. not hating your car is nice just not an SS wink.gif

thumbsup.gif
1DUCE
The bucket seats dose smile.gif smile.gif smile.gif nt matter because in 62 they could be ordered both ways. The side trim was painted because the SS side trim is very exspensive.And 1847 in classic kelly blue book means SS.
6Deuce
QUOTE(1DUCE @ Mar 1 2007, 06:25 PM) *
The bucket seats dose smile.gif  smile.gif  smile.gif nt matter because in 62 they could be ordered both ways. The side trim was painted because the SS side trim is very exspensive.And 1847 in classic kelly blue book means SS.

It's still a clean deuce......Not tryin to knock it homie!!!!!

When most people think of a impala SS, They think of the the bucket seats, the
grab bar, the center console, basically the SS package....

and to me and most people your car doesn't have any of these SS options, exept
the SS emblems and rear trunk lid trim....thats it...

Here is some good knowlege of an SS......

Classiccar.com


Chevrolet Impala SS
A look at the history of this venerable vehicle, a shining example of engineering and marketing combined to yield a winner

STORY TOOLS
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At the dawn of the 1960's, Kennedy, the new President-elect, spoke of a "new frontier." He was talking of new age of post-war prosperity and specifically, America's quest for reaching the Moon. For the big three, the new frontier was one of technical and marketing innovations. Combining the two became an essential element in the rapidly maturing market.

Marketing scored with the invention of youth-oriented cars such as the Mustang and Barracuda. The engineers scored with thin wall casting and improved reciprocating assemblies from the rotating valve lifter to the use of Teflon buttons in pistons to prevent scuffing. When good engineering and marketing combine, the effect is shattering. The Impala SS of the 1960's was an excellent example.

The Impala had become the top model in '59, replacing Bel-Air's position. In '58, Impala was a top of the line Bel-Air. Over the years, it had grown in wheelbase from 115 inches to 119 inches. The far out styling was immediately toned down for 1960. A new package had been developed in 1961 to help secure Chevy's sales' dominance in the full-size arena. It was called the Super Sport, or SS, for short.

It was a complete deal, comprising of exterior badges against the Impala crest on the quarter panels, bucket seats, floor shift trim plate, a steering mounted tachometer, a passenger dash grab handle, special trim and a modified LPO 111 suspension package, power steering, power brakes, and wheel covers. The origins of this package came from a show car.

The 1961 SS Impalas weren't standardized in appearance. You could order the package on a four-door car, a six-cylinder powered coupe or you could go "top drawer" and get a slant back sports-roof with the hot 348 engine. It was basically a sales code without formal restrictions, although that would change soon enough.

Chevy had great options available in short runs, but no easy 1-step option that gave you the basics to go racing. The 1961 SS Impala changed all that. Previously, there were the Fuel Injected Ramjet and Ramjet Special 283's, but they vanished by the end of '59. Likewise, you could get LPO 1108, which was a heavy-duty suspension for Police Cars. This gave you metallic brakes, H.D. ball joints, bigger shocks, stiffer springs and better wheel bearings front and back. Available on every model, but certainly not advertised!

The sales of four speed cars had sky rocketed sharply in 1961, guaranteeing the future of the SS. New for '62 was a full-length console. The fancy wheel covers were a necessity, the slots helped cool down the brakes. What did change were the engines. The 409 was about to have its fifteen minutes of infamy. The 409 has been a controversial engine. Denigrators call it a truck engine. Fans call it the early sixty's track god. It was a little of both as we'll see.

Starting with the 348 block, Chevrolet changed much of the hardware to create a racing engine to compete against the Ford 390 Interceptor from 1960. The crankshaft was forged, as were the aluminum pistons. A performance solid-lifter cam, raised compression to 11.25:1 and used a Carter AFB carburetor on an aluminum manifold. It made 360 horsepower @ 5800 rpm and torque was a legendary 409 lbs.-ft @ 3600 rpm. A real brute of a motor.

The cylinder heads were different from the 348's and used stiffer springs and heavy-duty pushrods. Nineteen sixty-one SS Impalas were scarce with only 453 made. As for an SS 409, you'd have better luck meeting Elvis because only 142 made it. The transmissions were either Powerglide, Warner T-10 or the three-speed standard.

Nineteen sixty-two brought the SS Impala package onboard and the 409 was more obtainable. Those eager beavers that placed orders for early 62's must have been annoyed when Chevy announced a dual-quad 409. At least the four-barrel engine had been improved with power up to 380 horses. The dual-quad engine put out 409 horses @ 6000 rpm. A hair more than 15,000 units sold that year. As the drag-strip wars heated up, Chevy brought out special aluminum front end Impalas. But there was no official racing going on, just some "off-road" and "fleet service" parts being sold over the counter.


Nineteen sixty-three brought a facelift to the grille and side panels with two chrome blocks on the fenders and a lower spear resting above the rear wheel well. The badges moved from above the bumper to behind the front wheel. The beautiful spinner hubcaps changed to a variation of the 1961 Impala model with the SS logo prominently displayed. New that year was the detuned 409 mill @ 340 horsepower. A 400 horse 409 existed midway through the range with solid lifters and the dual-quad 425-horsepower 409 had a lower 11:1 compression ratio.

Still, Chevy hadn't gone soft on us. The Z-11 was the latest doomsday machine and was a 430-horse version with the displacement at 427 CID. Strictly for drag racing, these cars were sold to connected guys such as Dave Strickler and Hayden Profitt.

Nineteen sixty-four was the final year of this body style Impala. For the last go-round, Chevy gave us better rear end choices with our four-gear cars and a sharp-edged car that attempted to emulate the new thin gauged sheet metal cars with uni-bodies like the Chryslers and smaller GM offerings that year. Engine-wise, there wasn't anything new to report. Let's clear up the misconceptions about 409 engines. First, it is related to the 348 W motor of the late '50s in that the block casting started out the same. Pretty soon afterwards, the 409 developed a life of its own. From the start, it was intended to replace the 348 and provide more power for bigger bodied cars. 348's were used frequently in trucks and their outward similarity probably made people conclude the 409 was the same. In fact, the early 1961 four-barrel mills seemed pretty tame.

Demand was strong for this motor so the early 1962 409 was unchanged from last year spec wise. You got a cam with 0.440 lift and 317/301 duration with dual point ignition. These early distributors had no vacuum advance provisions.Later in '62, the dual-quad was improved. This engine had increased airflow, better cam specs with 0.480 lift and 322/320 duration. The ignition was switched to single points.

Allowing use of vacuum advance on this engine. Head gaskets were used to change the compression ratios. Two gaskets per head yielded 10.2:1. For hotter competition, one was removed each side to give 11.04:1. By altering gasket arrangements, compression ratios could go up to 11.4:1. Regarding block identification, there are a few variations you should be aware of.

The early '61 409 block had casting number 3795623. The '61 to '62 solid cam engines used number 3788068. The 1962 to '63 block employed number 3839752 while 3860386 was for 1962 to 1964 blocks. The '64 solid cam block used 3844422 number and the fabled Z-11 mill was casting 3830814. One block to avoid for proper resto purposes is 3798962, a juice cammed truck engine.

Cylinder head castings are numerous; the early '61 castings were 3795586, the hi-perf '62s and 63's are 3814690, the 1963 std head was 3830817 and the RPO- Z11 head was 383 7731. There was also a 3852583 casting for 1964 hi-perf along with the std head from '63. Truck heads are recognized as 3819353.

Intake manifolds are expensive and a plethora of them exist. 3844463 is the steel 1x4 manifold used in 1961 and 1964 engines. A 1962 version has numbers 3814678 and was aluminum. It was also used in '63. A service replacement carried numbers 3822928. The dual quad manifold was 3814881 while the Rochester 4-barrel versions were 3794129 and 3830831 for 1963. An aluminum 1x4 manifold came out as 3814678 in '63. The Z-11 manifold was two pieces, the top one was 3830623, the bottom was 3830733.

By 1963, Chevy knew they had a winner deserving of a special reward. The upcoming 50-millionth Chevy was rapidly due to be assembled in Tarrytown, New York. The powers that be made sure car 50,000 000 was an SS 409 Impala. A whole promotional blitz ensued with New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller driving that car off the line while GM brass watched. The car was a four-barrel sports coupe with special-order paint code 927. This was a 1962 color called anniversary gold used previously to commemorate Chevy's 50th year in business.

Though it was late in the year, GM had released a small run of replica cars in that color. With 13 Chevy plants, it was possible that their goal of 7000 special cars made it. The 50 millionth car was made June 10 and has survived in immaculate condition from deep storage. It was a grand gesture to celebrate a great muscle car. The 409 passed the torch of fame and power to the 396 engine as the decade passed.
6Deuce
And Just so you know MR. Impala is right on the VIN info, cause I'm
looking at my title which has the VIN on it and and it starts out as
21847S------- and mine is not an SS homie!!!!!
http://www.yearone.com/updatedsinglepages/...lszvinplts.html

So I firmly believe your deuce is not an SS and just has a couple of
SS items on it.....

Peace and good luck with your sale....

It is still a very nice impala!!!! biggrin.gif cool.gif
1DUCE
QUOTE(6Deuce @ Mar 1 2007, 07:22 PM) *
And Just so you know MR. Impala is right on the VIN info, cause I'm
looking at my title which has the VIN on it and and it starts out as
21847S------- and mine is not an SS homie!!!!!
http://www.yearone.com/updatedsinglepages/...lszvinplts.html

So I firmly believe your deuce is not an SS and just has a couple of
SS items on it.....

Peace and good luck with your sale....

It is still a very nice impala!!!! biggrin.gif  cool.gif

I do think some of what you are saying is true but ive been doing some research and what mr impala said is true its not the vin it the cowl tag.so i whent to go look at my homies 62 ss rag with buckets and grab bar and a/c and his did not say ss on his cowl tag. so we called a couple of classic impala buisness professionals and we got the same answer. in 62 it is very difficult to determine a ss because it really it mattered what plant they came from. and what they put on the tag and most did not lable ss.Go to Xframechevy .com and look under 62 there is no lable for ss they only have sports coup or convertible.So i kept looking and i found a 62 ss that did have a lable of ss on the cowl tag. so what i was told that it depends on what plant it came from and when it came out. But i am slill researching. confused.gif confused.gif
68ss
QUOTE(1DUCE @ Mar 3 2007, 06:47 PM) *
I do think some of what you are saying is true  but ive been doing some research and what mr impala said is true its not the vin it the cowl tag.so i whent to go look at my homies 62 ss rag with buckets and grab bar and a/c and his did not say ss on his cowl tag. so we called a couple of classic impala buisness professionals and we got the same answer. in 62 it is very difficult to determine a ss because it really it mattered what plant they came from. and what they put on the tag and most did not lable ss.Go to Xframechevy .com and look under 62 there is no lable for ss they only have sports coup or convertible.So i kept looking and i found a 62 ss that did have a lable of ss on the cowl tag. so what i was told that it depends on what plant it came from and when it came out. But i am slill researching. confused.gif  confused.gif

banghead.gif banghead.gif banghead.gif banghead.gif dunno.gif dunno.gif dunno.gif
Manuel
like people say its still a clean ride . i never seen a ss without a console maybe you have something rare there either way good luck on the sale. thumbsup.gif
Cadillac Heaven
QUOTE(Cadillac Heaven @ Feb 28 2007, 03:16 PM) *
doesnt look like as ss but still very nice! any trades?

dunno.gif biggrin.gif
ogbrkboy
QUOTE(1DUCE @ Feb 28 2007, 01:06 PM) *
20,000 or B/O user posted image

red]916 265-8259[/color]


What's up homie? I didn't know you were on here. This is Nono we were chillin at William Land this weekend. That duece is clean as fuck in any case. Good luck witht the sale.
68ss
QUOTE(Cadillac Heaven @ Mar 7 2007, 12:47 PM) *
dunno.gif  biggrin.gif

thumbsup.gif thumbsup.gif thumbsup.gif thumbsup.gif thumbsup.gif thumbsup.gif
1DUCE
Its still for sale. smile.gif 20000 or Best offer.

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THE PETE-STA
QUOTE(6Deuce @ Feb 28 2007, 03:11 PM) *
Nice deuce, But if it's an SS, Where's the grab bar, bucket seats, floor shifter,
SS trim, ect.?????

cool.gif
1DUCE
QUOTE(THE PETE-STA @ Mar 17 2007, 10:14 AM) *
cool.gif

banghead.gif
Huggies
QUOTE(1DUCE @ Mar 1 2007, 06:25 PM) *
The bucket seats dose smile.gif  smile.gif  smile.gif nt matter because in 62 they could be ordered both ways. The side trim was painted because the SS side trim is very exspensive.And 1847 in classic kelly blue book means SS.


My 62 has the same first 5 digits... 21847... was a 327 car... 4 speed... ans is NOT an SS... wink.gif
sooner2007
clean ass impala,but 20gs is crazy,unless you have it back to factory specs....ill give you 10gs and im in oklahoma city so ill meet you half way,whitch would be in flag staff? cool.gif cool.gif cool.gif
Huggies
QUOTE(sooner2007 @ Mar 23 2007, 02:19 PM) *
clean ass impala,but 20gs is crazy,unless you have it back to factory specs....ill give you 10gs and im in oklahoma city so ill meet you half way,whitch would be in flag staff? cool.gif  cool.gif  cool.gif


Talk about lowballing... uh.gif
1DUCE
QUOTE(sooner2007 @ Mar 23 2007, 02:19 PM) *
clean ass impala,but 20gs is crazy,unless you have it back to factory specs....ill give you 10gs and im in oklahoma city so ill meet you half way,whitch would be in flag staff? cool.gif  cool.gif  cool.gif

No thanks i got more than that in it.maybe 17500 and you pick up
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