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  1. The Chevrolet Monza is a subcompact automobile produced by Chevrolet for the 1975 through 1980 model years. The Monza is based on the Chevrolet Vega , sharing its wheelbase , width, and standard inline-four engine.

    • 1975–1980
    • 1974–1980
  2. Apr 10, 2018 · The Monza was born a looker, but its fatal curse was being born at the wrong time. As a child of the ’70s, it carried the triple whammy of lifeless performance, sketchy build quality, and badge engineering run amok. In addition to the Monza, GM cranked out 524,000 Pontiac Sunbirds, 144,000 Buick Skyhawks, and 125,000 Oldsmobile Starfires.

  3. Mar 5, 2021 · Important Points About the Chevy Monza. 1. A Larger Vega. This 1978 Chevrolet Monza wagon is based on the Vega. GM stuck with the Vega when creating its H-body cars, which means the Monza was the same size between the wheels, although it was four inches longer and weighed 180 pounds more than the Vega. The first body style released was a 2+2 ...

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  5. Mar 9, 2015 · Now, it wasn’t much of a V8. It was actually the smallest V8 Chevy ever put into a production car. Just 4.3 liters (262 cubes, in pre-metric ’70s car jargon). It sipped gas — remember, it was 1975 — through a tiny two-barrel Rochester carburetor and the result was 110 hp at 3,600 RPM.

  6. The Monza debuted in November 2018 at the Guangzhou Auto Show. Since 21 March 2019, it is sold in China. It is built on the GM-PATAC K platform that the Buick Excelle GT and the Buick GL6 use.

    • Chevrolet Cavalier (Mexico)
    • SAIC-GM
    • 2019–present
  7. Jun 29, 2022 · Bowtie Boneyard – Marvelous Monzas. By Steve Magnante – Photography by the Author. Seen by many as either a pint-sized Camaro or a grown-up Vega, the Monza was a product of GM’s response to the 1973 OPEC Oil Embargo. When the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries decided to deprive Uncle Sam of oil for mainly political reasons ...

  8. Height. 42 in (1,067 mm) The Chevrolet Corvair Monza GT (XP-777) was a mid-engined experimental prototype automobile built in 1962 and based on the early model Chevrolet Corvair series. As it was essentially a concept car, the Monza GT did not enter production.