1957 Chevrolet Bel Air Convertible
The Rochester Ramjet fuel-injection system, introduced for 1957, transformed Chevrolet’s 283 cubic-inch small-block V-8 into something genuinely remarkable: a production passenger car engine making one horsepower per cubic inch.
A continuous-flow mechanical design, the Rochester unit distributed fuel to each cylinder through a central “spider” of injection lines.
At $484.20 on the options sheet (in addition to the cost of the V-8), it was an extravagant choice, priced at roughly one-quarter of a base Bel Air sedan’s sticker, and was engineered primarily for the Corvette before finding its way into the regular passenger-car lineup.
The ’57 model received meaningful updates over 1956, including revised front and rear styling, a wider grille, and more pronounced tailfins with a distinctly Cadillac-like flavor. These changes combined to give the car a lower, longer, and more upscale appearance.
The convertible body, with its long horizontal chrome trim and clean beltline, remains one of the better executions of the form from that period.
Ford edged Chevrolet in total 1957 sales, but the “five-seven” has consistently held the stronger position in the collector market.
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