General Motors Restoration Packages

Updated December 4, 2010

The GM Heritage Center now has the GM "restoration" kits available online in .PDF document format. Note that .PDF files require Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Year Model
1964 Chevelle El Camino     Chevy II/Nova
1965 Chevelle El Camino     Chevy II/Nova
1966 Chevelle El Camino Chevy II/Nova
1967 Chevelle El Camino Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1968 Chevelle El Camino   Camaro Chevy II/Nova - Coupe
Chevy II/Nova - Sedan
1969 Chevelle El Camino   Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1970 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1971 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1972 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1973 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1974 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1975 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1976 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova
1977 Chevelle El Camino Monte Carlo Camaro Chevy II/Nova

Other Chevrolet models are also available online such as Camaro, Nova, Impala, Caprice, trucks, etc. http://www.gmheritagecenter.com/gm-heritage-archive/vehicle-information-kits.html

If your car was originally sold or built in Canada, you will have to contact Vintage Vehicle Services. There is a fee for this service but they'll send you, what I refer to as a 'confirmation sheet' showing when/where the car was built along with all the options it came with. Latest information I have of the cost is $119.00 CDN as of October 2013; for U.S dollars, whatever the current exchange rate is. See here for more details.

Chevrolet produced more vehicles than all the other GM divisions combined and thereby generated a much higher volume of records which were a storage problem.

After the end of a year's production, the build records have very little business value to Chevrolet and therefore were not considered to be high priority for retention. GM record retention policy required the assembly plants to retain said documents for only about six months. Some records (including build sheets) were retained longer at the Corvette assembly plants, St. Louis and Flint. However, when Corvette production ceased at these locations, the records were pitched. It should be noted that the current Corvette Assembly Plant in Bowling Green, KY, retained the 1981-present vehicle manifests that are available now through the National Corvette Museum. This was against all odds, as there were many movements over the years within GM to destroy them because they had no business value to GM.

Meanwhile, back at the Tech Center in Warren, Michigan, the Chevrolet Engineering Records Retention Policy called for periodic destruction of non-essential records, of which the build documents were one, and this was carried out on a routine basis. The other GM divisions, Cadillac, Pontiac, etc., had much smaller production volumes and interpreted the GM Records Retention Policy differently and therefore retained said documents.

If GM changes the links to any of the files above, please let me know so I can track them down. As a last resort I have copies of ALL of these plus full size Chevrolets from 1955 through 1972 and Corvettes from 1953 through 2006.