Anything anyone posts here is going to be their *interpretation* of the rules, unless they are an NHRA Tech Inspector.
This NHRA Quick Reference Chart
This NHRA quick reference chart breaks down required safety equipment by ET and in some cases MPH within an ET range.
I'll tell you how *i* read it, but you'd be best served by calling your regional NHRA Tech Inspector. Good luck finding out who that is and how to contact them, as I have no suggestions there and i'm likely the smartest person you know.
the top of the first section tells you how to decode the symbols numbers etc.
so it says that Roll Bars in compliance with general reg 4:10 are allowable in any car all the way down to 10.00 ET / up to 135 mph, but are *required* in Convertibles running 13.49 and quicker, and also are required in non-Convertibles running 11.49 and quicker.
in the very next line it says that Roll Cages in compliance with general reg 4:11 are allowable in any car but are *required* in all cars quicker than 9.99_OR_faster than 135 mph.
General Reg 4:10 describes and illustrates a legal roll bar in terms of materials, dimensions, and attachment points.
General Reg 4:11 describes but does not illustrate a legal roll *cage* in terms of materials, dimensions, and attachment points.
4:10 defines attachment of roll bar for "...cars with an OEM frame..." as well as for "cars without frame" ie unibody. this rule does not specify or require that the OEM frame has to be OEM _for_that_car_. In your case, you have an OEM Corvette frame inside a Corvair car that was a unibody but no longer has OE structure, so my interpretation is that you'd follow the OEM frame attachment method. In my case, since I've retained the Corvair unibody structure, i would follow the "without a frame" attachment method.