- Custom 1970 Camaro with twin superchargers once won multiple ISCA championships in the ’80s.
- Peculiar interior features include a pecan wood dash and diamond-shaped display plates.
- The twin-supercharged V8 engine offers raw potential but currently needs a starter to run.
Don’t adjust the brightness and contrast on your computer, this 1970 Chevrolet Camaro really does look like a fever dream. In fact, the deeper we dig into this creation, the wilder things get. It has two superchargers, it has Tangerine paint, a hand-cut aluminum grille, a velour interior with a wrap-around rear seat, and the photographs and design are even crazier. Buckle up, this is going to be one trippy ride.
Dubbed the “Endless Dream” by its creators, this car is the product of Millard Edward “Ed” Haney for competition in International Show Car Association (ISCA) events. To that end, basically nothing is stock compared to an original 1970 Camaro. The body is completely bespoke. It features a totally reworked front end with a waterfall grille. The rear has horizontal lights and the side has shaved door handles.
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None of that really speaks to how crazy the interior is. The dash is wood and not the type of smooth artfully rounded off design most cars have. It looks almost as if one went to Home Depot, grabbed a bunch of timber, and put the dash together with a ruler. The ends don’t even match the sweep of the door cards.
At the same time, the wood itself is original and from a Pecan tree. The center console has a real TV in it too. At the rear of the center console is a diamond-shaped (again, why????) display plate where the name “Endless Dream” appears.
Perhaps nothing is as crazy as the wrap-around rear seat. Honestly, one could probably fit six or seven toddlers back there though this is absolutely not the kind of car one should transport kids in. Then, there’s the “coffered headliner,” which, again, is just crazy lookin.
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Honestly, this entire listing feels like a fever dream. Take a deeper look at the photographs and they’re wild all on their own. The vast majority are in portrait orientation which can be okay, but they’re so close to the car that it’s sometimes tough to see what we’re even supposed to focus on.
In others, the photographer literally uses a mirror to show the underside of the car rather than actually just take a picture of the underside of the car. On top of that, at some point, someone did take photos of the actual car so it’s unclear why the mirror shots are included at all.
We’re not done yet either because there’s another twist in this story. This same exact car was available for sale in 2015 through VoloCars. At the time, they wanted $150,000 for it. According to the folks at Bring A Trailer, this car “is believed to have won 15 regional ISCA championships, two Atlantic divisional championships, and was the 1986 ISCA Champion overall.”
On top of everything, the car doesn’t even run in its current condition. The seller says that the engine does turn over manually but that it needs a starter. As of this writing, the high bid is up to just $14,250 which is a lot for “another man’s project”, but considering the history here and the engine on offer, it might be a deal for the buyer.
If you’re brave enough—or perhaps just curious—check out the listing on BaT here. Who knows, maybe you’ll be the one to take this fever dream of a car off someone’s hands.