Oct 17, 2017 • Uncategorized •

To quote Nicolas Cage in Gone In Sixty Seconds, “I saw three of these parked outside the local Starbucks this morning.” Suffice it to say this will not be an issue with this Camaro! You won’t even see three of these at your local mud-hole. Many and likely most muscle car enthusiasts have a burning hatred for 4×4 chassis mounted cars, but I am not one of them. What’s done is done, and it looks like it is done decently well for what it is. Though enthusiasts have been known to buy cars like this and revert them to their original configuration, it just might be more fun to have a 1969 Camaro mud-truck (car?). Find this homegrown custom here on eBay in Ohio as a packaged deal with the trailer it sits on for $13,500 or best offer.

I grew up in the city, but have spent the last several years living in rural Kansas. If you don’t think mudding is fun, I have a suspicion you have never tried it! Mounted on a ’70s K5 Blazer chassis, this Camaro is clearly capable of tearing it up with the best of them. It sits on 35″ Super Swamper mud tires and naturally is equipped with a Chevrolet 350 V8. Under the hood you will find not only the aforementioned engine, but also an Edelbrock 4-barrel intake and 4-barrel carburetor. The front fenders are fiberglass, and hopefully this means they are one-piece inner and outer so as to keep mud from getting into the engine bay.

This Camaro has thus far led a life unlike most. I’ve seen ‘Cudas, Chevelles, Mercedes, and even Dodge Rampages sitting high on 4×4 chassis, so this isn’t a brand new idea but it is definitely a fun idea! Not only will this car turn heads on the street or at any event, it will turn heads in a sea of lifted trucks at your favorite mudding sanctuary. Looking at this picture of this Camaro sunk in the mud nearly up to its fenders makes me wonder where this car started life, and how it ended up here.

The first picture is how the car currently looks, this picture is how it looked previously. It looks like the seller may have stripped the paint down to repair damages to the body, but perhaps lost interest or ran out of funds. According to the ad, it is a running, driving project ready to be finished as the buyer sees fit. Love it or hate it, this Camaro is already attached to a Blazer chassis and ready to be enjoyed. While it would be a neat story to tell if this car was reverted to original, it might not be as neat as having a four wheel drive Camaro sitting in your driveway.