Sliver or Tin Plated Brass Set Screws Grub Screws
Metric Size: M1.4 - M52, Inch Size: 0# - 2"
Hexagon Socket(Allen), Torx Star, Square, Slotted Drive Types
Flat Point, Cup Point, Cone Point, Dog Point
Other Drive and Point Type are also available acc. to customer requirement
Various Surface Finishes
Various Material Grades are available
Please feel free to contact us for more details
CRUISIN CLASSICS is excited to offer a very high quality new build in the form of a 1970 Nova SS tribute. No expense was spared during the build of this extremely clean TRUE muscle car. Starting with a perfect rust free body finished with a show quality silver paint and new black vinyl top, the chrome, glass and bright work are found to be in excellent condition as well. The interior is very nice with excellent dash pad, carpet, door panels and new bucket seats. This Nova sets on 7″ Rally wheels with new trim rings and wrapped with like new Radial T/A tires. Powered by a brand new 383 Stroker engine with only a few hundred miles that was built with only the best of the best (See detailed list below). This awesome power plate is mated to a Muncie 4-speed manual transmission with a Hurst shifter backed by a 10 bolt Posi, 3.55 ratio with a 8.5″ ring gear. While being an absolute beast it is at the same time very driver friendly with power brakes, front Disc -rear drum, power steering and tilt wheel.
383 Stroker (NEW) build details
350 + .030 (4.030) 3.750 Stroke
Casting # 3970010 (4-bolt Main)
Hot tanked, shot peened, magnafluxed
Bored & honed with plate, decked
Brass freeze plugs
Eagle cast steel crank (3.750)
Externally balanced rotating assembly
Eagle I-Beam rods, 3/8 ARP cap screws
King bearings
Speed Pro Flat Pistons (H860CP30)
Hastings Moly rings
Comp Cams 305 Magnum Hyd. Cam & lifters
.525 lift,253 @ .50. 110 Lobe sep.
Liberty performance push rods (.100 Longer)
Scorpion Aluminum roller rockers, 1.5
Cloyes steel billet double roller timing chain
Mellings M-55 oil pump & pick-up
BRODIX IK 200 Aluminum heads
200 cc runners, 70 cc combustion chamber
2.02 & 1.60 Stainless valves, Viton seals
ARP head bolts with hardened washers
Edelbrock Performer RPM air gap intake
All new bolts through-out
All Fel-Pro gaskets
MUCH MORE
If you have any additional questions, please call one of our friendly sales staff at 614-276-7355 or Toll-Free 866-230-2851. We will be glad to help in any way including a walk-around for a more detailed description, any questions on financing, or perhaps an interest in our Sell Your Car Brokerage Program. In business since 1996, we have sold cars all over the world and we insist on giving the best personal service in the industry.
*Please note that we do our best to represent our vehicles honestly in our listings. We will recommend to the buyer, or a representative of the buyer (inspector, friend, family member), to do their due diligence and come up with their own conclusions before purchasing any vehicle.
Thank You from all of us at CRUISIN CLASSICS
For more photos and a video, please go to www.CruisinClassicsInc.com
The Monsanto House of the Future (also known as the Home of the Future) was an attraction at Disneyland in Anaheim, California, USA, from 1957 to 1967.
It was sponsored by Monsanto Company. The design and engineering of the house was done jointly by Monsanto, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Walt Disney Imagineering. The fiberglass components of the house were manufactured by Winner Manufacturing Company in Trenton, New Jersey, and was assembled into the house on-site.
The attraction offered a tour of a home of the future, set in the year 1986, and featured household appliances such as microwave ovens, which eventually became commonplace. The house saw over 435,000 visitors within the first six weeks of opening, and ultimately saw over 20 million visitors before being closed.
The house survived the introduction of New Tomorrowland in 1967, but closed shortly after, as Monsanto’s attention shifted to their new sponsored attraction, Adventure Thru Inner Space. The building was so sturdy that when demolition crews failed to demolish the house using wrecking balls, torches, chainsaws and jackhammers, the building was ultimately demolished by using choker chains to crush it into smaller parts. The reinforced polyester structure was so strong that the half-inch steel bolts used to mount it to its foundation broke before the structure itself did.
The reinforced concrete foundation of the House of the Future was never removed. It currently exists in its original location, now found in the Pixie Hollow attraction. The foundation has been painted green and is currently in use as a planter.