How many of you still own your high school ride? If you’re old enough to remember being told to demand your MTV, we’re going to bet that you do not. Meet someone who still does: Mills Robinson, who has owned his 1967 Camaro since 1982.
As a teen, Mills cut grass in order to buy his first car, a 1968 Camaro. A couple of months later, that car met an untimely demise when Mills was T-boned by an errant driver. He spent 10 days recovering in the hospital.
His parents purchased this ’67 Camaro for him with the insurance money, and the two have been together ever since–in fact, had that first Camaro not been destroyed, Mills and that car would likely still be together.
He drove the ’67 Camaro through high school and college, earning an engineering degree at Virginia Tech. Marriage and the birth of his son took priority over the Camaro, though, so the car was put in storage in 1992.
Eleven long years later, Mills dusted off his Camaro and began transforming it. His goal: Add modern Corvette hardware to that classic Camaro shape, all while on a shoestring budget.
“I wanted to build a modern pro touring-style car out of it, but I didn’t have anywhere near the kind of money you see get put into those types of cars,” he explains. “Most are six-figure cars, so I had to build everything myself to keep up with the Joneses.” He concentrated on making a fast, reliable car, leaving the pretty stuff for later.
First Stop: Engine and Suspension
Like so many other early Camaros, this one started life with a small-block V8 displacing 327 cubic inches and putting 270 horsepower to the solid rear axle. Those parts no longer remain.
Mills replaced the original engine with an LS6 sourced from a C5 Corvette. He then fitted a big Comp Cams roller cam, long-tube headers, an upsized throttle body and a cold-air intake.
The beefed-up LS sends 451 horsepower to the rear wheels through a four-speed transmission purchased from Michael Waltrip Racing. The dog box transmission, which can be shifted without using the clutch, came out of one of Waltrip’s road race trucks. All of that power is fed to a 1996 Corvette rear end that sits in a custom cage that Mills designed and built.
Next: More Custom Work
The cage bolts through the reinforced rear unibody frame rails. The custom rear control arms feature rod ends for easy adjustment and zero deflection. “I think I had the whole thing in and out of the car 10 times before I was happy with how it was all set up,” Mills explains.
The front suspension was built with C5 Corvette Z06 spindles and a K-member with arms again built by the ear’s owner/engineer. He removed the stock subframe and built a jig with all of the frame mounting locations. The new K-member was built with the LS engine mounts in the jig; then Mills started designing the suspension attachment points.
Since the Corvette has a wider front track than the Camaro, the coil-overs had to go through the middle of the upper control arms. Fortunately, unlike the rear, the modified front suspension fit perfectly the first try. Front brakes are from the Z06 and rears are sourced from the C4 Corvette ZR-1. Koni coil-over shocks control the movement of the Hoosier A6 tires on Z06 wheels.
Add in: Aero Enhancements
Mills also addressed the aerodynamics of the nearly 50-year-old car. After helping a friend install a carbon-fiber splitter on a Corvette Z06, he fabricated one for his Camaro. This piece continued the budget theme, since Mills’s was built from materials found at Home Depot. Total cost for the plywood, 2×4, some sheet metal and the threaded rod was $36.
To balance out the downforce, Mills built a diffuser for the rear. He made a template out of cardboard before heading back to Home Depot for supplies: one piece of sheet metal and some 1×6-inch boards.
Result: Pro Touring Performance on a Shoestring Budget
Mills’s rejuvenated Camaro hit the track for the first time in 2013, running Time Trial and HPDE events with NASA. After that, time brought improvements in performance.
At our 2014 Tire Rack Ultimate Track Car Challenge, he lapped VIR’s full course in 2:12.558. He returned for 2015 hoping to break the 2:10 barrier and bring the car home in one piece.
Sixteen of the track’s 18 corners feed the next, so a mistake on one turn penalizes drivers for the next four or five. The Camaro’s first timed session put Mills just above his 2014 best time, showing that his goal was within his reach. Then a 2:10.932 lap put him within one second of his goal. Could he reach it during the event’s final session?
He did, recording exactly one lap below the 2:10 barrier. Two wheels off, unfortunately, negated that lap from the results.
Despite the bobble, Mills proved a point: In a world where six-figure pro touring builds are commonplace, a home-brewed, low-buck Camaro can still shine.
“I wanted to build a modern pro touring-style car, but I didn’t have anywhere near the kind of money you see get put into those types of cars.”
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