1966 Chevelle SS396
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The 1966 Chevelle SS396 was a separate series from the 300, 300 Deluxe & Malibu series and can be readily identified by both the Fisher Body Number plate (a.k.a. trim tag, cowl tag, etc.) and the Vehicle Identification plate (VIN).
The 1966 SS396 was available in both sport coupe (17) and convertible (67) models and the 396 cid Mark-IV engine was the base engine. Gone was the Malibu SS with either a L6 or V8 engine in the U.S, Canada still offered a Malibu SS. The Fisher Body style numbers 13817 & 13867 and VINs beginning with 13817 & 13867 will note an SS396. As with all years of Super Sports, the VIN only depicts the base engine and does not indicate any optional engine. The base 396 engine was the (L35) 325hp engine with two optional 396 engines, the L34 360hp version and a L78 375hp version.
Although the El Camino could be ordered with any 396 engine, there are no SS396 1966 El Caminos; no SS396 badging, no Super Sport hood and no SS396 rocker panel moldings. A 396-optioned El Camino would have the 396 Turbo-Jet flags on the front fender however.
Contrary to popular belief bucket seats, gauges, and 4-speeds were not standard equipment. A front bench seat, no gauges (except speedometer, clock, and fuel gauge), and a 3-speed heavy duty floor shifted transmission were standard with the SS396.
Distinctive blacked out grille, Super Sport trim, a special SS396 hood with faux twin scoops, SS396 emblems on the grille and rear cove, Super Sport script on the rear quarter panels, and ribbed rocker panel and quarter panel moldings.

Note special SS396 hood with twin faux scoops, blacked-out grille
with SS396 emblem, blacked-out headlamp bezels, and Argent Silver
bumper filler panel.


There is some debate as to whether the rear cove was blacked-out or
body color. Early Atlanta cars are known to have had blacked-out
panels but due to demand and costs this practice was stopped at
Atlanta early the the production year.
Whether other plants followed suit or not is debatable. It is known
many dealers blacked-out the rear cove because the cars sold better.

Note the ribbed lower trim pieces, the Super Sport rear quarter
panel script and the 396 Turbo-Jet front fender emblems.

The 1966 SS396 dash received a Super Sport emblem on the bezel above
the glove compartment which was simply glued over the existing
Malibu script.
It should be noted that Canada produced a Malibu SS in 1966. This was a standard 135/136xx Malibu with a special package called The Sports Option. This Malibu SS continued to use the Malibu SS quarter panel trim from the 1965 Malibu SS but could be ordered with any available engine. See The Obscure Malibu SS of 1966/67 for more specifics on this Canadian option.

All SS396 Chevelles came with a 12-bolt rear end but Positraction
was still an option; an open rear end was standard. However, a
12-bolt rear end, as well as Positraction, was available on non-SS396
Chevelles as well so the presence of a 12-bolt (with or without
Positraction) is not an indication of a 1966 SS396 Chevelle.
All SS396 Chevelles also came with rear frame reinforcements but
could easily be added to any Malibu coupe or convertible.

Many people mistakenly think numbers stamped in the trunk area of
the quarter panels show whether the car is a Malibu (13617) or SS396
(13817). This is not the case. These stamped numbers have nothing to
do with the Chevrolet series. This example shows "1381720" but is on
a 13617 Malibu sport coupe. Both 1966 & 1967 Chevelles had these
stampings.

Want more information on 1966 Chevelles in general? Take a test drive of my
1966 Chevelle Reference
CD.