Let New Smyrna Chevrolet help you with your next Chevrolet purchase.
Serving New Smyrna Beach, Edgewater, Oak Hill, Daytona Beach, Port Orange, South Daytona, Ormond, Ormond Beach, Deland, Deltona, Debary, Orange City, Sanford, Orlando, and all surrounding areas.
Our dealership is one of the premier Chevrolet dealerships in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Alabama.
New Smyrna Chevrolet offers quality pre-owned vehicles. Each vehicle comes with a 121 point inspection, 3 day exchange policy and CARFAX is available. Stop by and see our HUGE selection of pre-owned Chevrolet, Ford, Dodge, Chrysler, Toyota, Nissan, BMW, Mercedes, other domestics and imports.
90 DAY WARRANTY ON ALL USED VEHICLES SOLD
Our commitment to customer service is second to none. We offer Genuine GM Parts and one of the most comprehensive parts and service departments in New Smyrna Beach, Edgewater, Oak Hill, Daytona Beach, Port Orange, South Daytona, Ormond, Ormond Beach, Deland, Deltona, Debary, Orange City, Sanford, Orlando, and all surrounding areas.
Our primary concern is the satisfaction of our customers. Our online dealership was created to enhance the buying experience for each and every one of our internet customers. Please feel free to call us at 1-800-347-5232 or send us an email.
Chevy History
Chevrolet
was co-founded by Louis Chevrolet and William C. Durant. Louis.
Chevrolet was a race-car driver, born on December 25, 1878, in La Chaux
de Fonds, Switzerland. William Durant, founder of General Motors, had
been forced out of GM in 1910 and wanted to use Louis Chevrolet's
designs to rebuild his own reputation as a force in the automobile
industry. As head of Buick Motor Company, prior to founding GM, Durant
had hired Chevrolet to drive Buicks in promotional races. On November
3, 1911, Chevrolet entered the automobile market to compete with the
Ford Model T. A year later, the "Classic Six" was introduced. The
Classic Six was a five-passenger touring sedan equipped with a 299
in (4.9 L), six-cylinder engine capable of taking the car to a top
speed of 65 miles per hour (104 km/h). Chevrolet first used its
"bowtie"[1] logo in 1913. This logo is said to have been designed from
wallpaper Durant once saw in a French hotel. Another theory of the
design of the mark is from the Swiss cross, because Louis Chevrolet was
from Switzerland. In 1915, Durant made a trip to Toronto, Ontario to
determine the possibility of setting up production facilities in
Canada. After meeting with "Colonel Sam" McLaughlin, whose McLaughlin
Motor Car Company manufactured the McLaughlin-Buick, it was agreed
that,the Chevrolet Motor Car Company of Canada, operated by McLaughlin,
would be created to build Chevrolet cars in Canada. Three years later,
the two Canadian companies were purchased by GM to become General
Motors of Canada Ltd. By 1916 Chevrolet was profitable enough to allow
Durant to buy a majority of shares in GM. After the deal was completed
in 1917, Durant was president of General Motors, and Chevrolet was
merged into GM, becoming a separate division. In the 1918 model year
Chevrolet introduced the Model D V-8 series 4-passenger roadster and 5
passenger touring. These cars had 288ci, 35 hp engines with Zenith
carburetors and 3 speed transmissions. In the 1955 model year Chevrolet
introduced the so-called "small block V-8," arguably the most famous
and versatile V8 engine ever produced in the post-World War II era. It
came out with 265 cubic inches and was offered in three versions. The
basic 265 had a two-barrel carburetor and was rated at 162 H.P in its
initial 1955 iteration. Horsepower was increased to 180 with the
addition of a four-barrel carburetor and dual exhausts, and an
underrated 195 hp version, called the "power pack", was installed in
most 1955 Corvettes and was available in regular sedans on special
order. It had a high lift solid lifter cam, high compression heads, and
dual exhaust. This engine became a hit with hot rodders and almost
overnight became the engine of choice, replacing the flathead Ford
engine as the hot rodder's preferred motor. The earliest years of the
small block Chevrolet engine's development were especially eventful. In
1955 the 265-cubic-inch engine was one of the smallest V8 engines
offered by the big three U.S. automakers (see 264 Buick Nailhead, 241
Plymouth non-Hemi and 241 Dodge Hemi), however it gave similar-sized
cars with far larger engines--like the 88-series Oldsmobile with its
324 cubic-inch "Rocket" engine 324 Oldsmobile--a run for their money.
For example, a Chevy equipped with the power-pack engine and a
three-speed manual shift transmission can achieve 60 miles per hour
from a standstill in 8.4 seconds, an astonishing feat for the time.
Because his engine was placed in production only 15 weeks after
authorization was given by management, the engineers did not have the
necessary time to do the proper dynamometer testing and rate its
horsepower prior to release. The untested engine rated at 185 H.P. when
released in 1955 but was rated at 205 H.P. in 1956 after dynamometer
testing. Because of its exceptional breathing ability, a 225 H.P.
option was available by adding two four-barrel carbs. The power-pack
engine for 1956 also had two four-barrel carburetors and was rated at
245 H.P. In 1957 the engine was increased to 283 cubic inches. This
engine also had heads with larger valves and ports, and the four-barrel
carburetor engine was rated at 220 H.P. Two four-barrel's gave 245 H.P.
A high-performance version, with a high-lift solid cam and fitted with
heads that had even larger intake valves, called fuel-injection heads
by enthusiasts, was rated at 270 H.P. Fuel injection was also offered
that year. Rated at 283 H.P., this was often referred to as the first
engine offered by U.S. auto manufactures to produce 1 H.P. per cubic
inch. This rating, however, was again incorrect due to delayed
production schedules for the Rochester fuel injection unit. After
proper dynamometer testing, it was rated at 290 H.P. in 1958.
Enthusiasts affectionately called this engine the "fuelie." It should
be noted that although Chevy is commonly credited with breaking the 1
horespower per cubic inch benchmark, a year earlier Chrysler offered
their 1956 300B model with 354 cu inches and 355 horespower, and
DeSoto's 1957 Adventurer provided 345 cu inches with 345 horespower,
thus beating Chevy's well publicized feat in terms of both time (1956
vs.1957) and power (354 vs. 283). Famous Chevy models include the large
and luxurious Impala (1958) and the innovative air-cooled rear-engined
Corvair (1960 - 1969). Chevrolet had a great influence on the American
automobile market during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1963, one out of every
ten cars sold in the United States was a Chevrolet. The basic Chevrolet
small-block V-8 design has remained in continuous production since its
debut in 1955, longer than any other mass-produced engine design in the
world auto industry, though current versions share few if any parts
interchangeable directly with the original. Descendants of the basic
small-block OHV V-8 design platform in production today have been much
modified with advances such as aluminum block and heads, electronic
engine management, and sequential port fuel injection, to name just a
few improvements over the 54-model-year design life of the engine
concept to date. The small block Chevrolet V-8 is used in current
production model (2008) Impala sedans, a variety of light and medium
duty Chevrolet trucks, and the current generation Corvette sports car.
Depending on the vehicle type in which they're installed, they are
built in diaplacements from 5.3 to 7 litres with outputs ranging from
303 to over 500 horsepower as installed at the factory. It will also be
used as a performance option in the forthcoming (2009 model year)
revival of the Chevrolet Camaro. The engine design has also been used
over the years in GM products built and sold under the Pontiac.
Oldsmobile, Buick, Opel (Germany) and Holden (Australia) nameplates.
Recently, 6-litre, 400 horsepower versions of the small-block V-8
designed initially for the C-5 and C-6 Corvettes have been installed in
factory-built high performance versions of the Cadillac CTS sedan known
as the CTS-V.
1919 N. Dixie Freeway
New Smyrna Beach, FL 32168