Dance at your Own Risk
Chevy High Performance|January 2017

Dave Terry and friends prosecute his umpteenth L79 Nova.

Ro McGonegal
Dance at your Own Risk

MY OLDER BROTHER LOVED CARS. When I realized that I wasn’t going to be a professional baseball or football player … I had to have something to do.” So began Dave Terry’s long association with the internal combustion engine and the sheetmetal it adheres to. In those 50 years, he’d built numbers-matching 1966 L79 Novas. He was beyond burnout with that fussy discipline.

“After selling my Nova parts and getting into early Corvettes, a friend brought over a ’66 sedan he’d just bought. It had a MagnaCharger supercharged LS motor in it. I drove it and that was it! It was a rocket—an L79 Nova on steroids,” said Dave, as balls of sweat rolled down his flanks. “Luckily, I’d held onto a sedan. So I got started, tore my car apart and after getting into it, I realized that it needed everything! I’d found it on eBay. It was a lot rustier than advertised.

“Knowing it wasn’t worth squat torn apart, we decided to go ahead and build it. As such, the philosophy morphed on a familiar sentiment. The goal was to build a ’60’s-style hot rod—something that I would have driven when I was a kid, but with a modern kick.” The “we” Dave refers to includes old friends with expertise in the key realms; each of them putting their own signature to it. Those who prosecuted the Nova with Dave were Tom Thomason, Larry Blalock, Fred Maddox, Mike Lloyd, and Dave’s son J.D.

This story is from the January 2017 edition of Chevy High Performance.

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This story is from the January 2017 edition of Chevy High Performance.

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