This 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air convertible is powered by a 283ci V8 linked with a two-speed automatic transmission and is finished in black over a red and gray vinyl interior. Equipment includes a power-operated black convertible top, a matching top boot, a Continental spare tire kit, and 14″ steel wheels with whitewall tires in addition to power-assisted steering and brakes, a dual exhaust system, air conditioning, an analog clock, and a glove box-mounted Kenwood stereo linked to aftermarket rear speakers. The car resided in Florida before it was acquired by the current owner and their spouse in 2014. This Bel Air is now offered by the seller on behalf of the owners with a 2007 service record, manufacturer’s literature, and a clean Florida title.
The car is finished in black and features a power-operated black convertible top and a matching top boot. Additional exterior details include a wrap-around windshield, twin wind splits, hooded headlights, and chrome bumpers along with aluminum quarter-panel trim inserts, gold badging, chrome trim on the rear tail fins, and polished exhaust finishers.
Steel 14″ wheels wear bright covers and are mounted with 7.50-14 whitewall tires. A spare is located in the folding rear Continental kit. The car is equipped with power steering, and braking is handled by power-assisted drums at all four corners.
The cabin features front and rear bench seats upholstered in red and patterned gray vinyl, and matching upholstery extends to the door panels. Equipment includes a heater/defroster, air conditioning, an analog clock, and a glove box-mounted Kenwood stereo linked to aftermarket speakers in the rear side panels.
The two-spoke steering wheel features a chrome horn ring and frames a 120-mph speedometer flanked by gauges for engine temperature and fuel level. The five-digit mechanical odometer shows 6k miles, though total mileage is unknown.
The 283ci V8 is painted orange and features a black air cleaner assembly and Chevrolet script on the valve covers.
Power is sent to the rear wheels through a two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission. Corrosion is visible on underside components.
The current Florida title is listed as a duplicate. There is currently a lien on the car, and the seller’s lender will need to be paid off before the title can be transferred to the next owner.