With almost 23,000 units built, the Chevrolet Nomad is arguably the rarest version of the 1955-to-1957 Tri-Five. And if we split that number between model years, the 1957 variant comes on top as the ...
At the 1954 GM Motorama, Chevrolet debuted the Chevy Nomad two-door sport wagon with front end styling lifted from the Chevy Corvette. The oval grille, with its thirteen chrome “teeth” and headlights ...
In 1954, Chevrolet unveiled the Nomad concept car to the world. Part of the GM Motorama line of "dream cars," the Nomad was a two-door wagon with a Corvette front clip. Following positive reactions ...
A long-lost 1957 show car Chevy Nomad sports original Rochester Ramjet and column-shifted three-speed manual for an OG street-sleeper vibe. The annual SEMA trade show in Las Vegas is massive, and to ...
The Chevy Nomad debuted as a concept car at the 1954 GM Motorama. Front-end styling came from the Chevy Corvette, with thirteen heavy chrome “teeth” in an oval grille, chrome stone guard covered ...
The 1957 Chevrolet Nomad wagon owned by Phil Steiner of Lima has been called the “the beauty queen of all station wagons.” LIMA – Pick a car. That’s a decision Phil Steiner has fun making. Would he ...
Tri-Five Chevys, meaning those built in the 1955-1957 model years, got the attention of hot rodders pretty fast. Consider the fact that the second most popular car in American Graffiti, set in 1962, ...
Introduced as the first of a trio of Corvette-style concept cars at the 1954 General Motors Motorama, the Chevrolet Nomad was introduced in the 1955 model year along with Pontiac's Safari as the ...