About the Camaro Research Group
The Camaro Research Group
The Camaro Research Group (CRG) was started on 10 Sep 1997
by three Camaro enthusiasts with similar interests that met
via the internet. (The germ of the concept for the group
really started with a fourth member, and though he never
became an actual active CRG participant, we include him as a
co-founding member for this reason.) Research projects were
defined and work began. Within six months, a more formal set
of goals and approach was mutually agreed upon and
documented, and with time a number of like-minded
members were added. Our early FAQ site
was first opened on a borrowed server (thanks jC!) near the
time of our first anniversary, and our official CRG
camaros.org domain name and web site debuted
half-way through our second year.
A debt of gratitude is owed to Rich Fields, the CRG coordinator
for over 10 years, for guiding the CRG through those early
years and his work on establishing the initial website content.
The CRG also owes a debt of gratitude to, and our works stand on
the shoulders of, those Camaro enthusiasts whose previous
and ongoing documentation efforts we now attempt to extend
with our research projects. We encourage you to investigate
these
resources that
can provide you with specific additional help.
The first-generation Camaro is a complex topic to research - which
is why we are intrigued by it. There have been few other models in the
course of automotive history that have been produced in such
numbers, with such an incredible, even unbelievable, variety
of options, and with so proportionally little
remaining factory documentation available on many of the
details. Anyone that might mistakenly believe that
everything is known about the first-gen Camaro simply hasnt
looked into it very deeply!
The CRG long-term goal is to be able to describe the production
configuration of every major first-generation Camaro model and option,
including mid-year changes. To this end we have amassed an extensive
CRG resource library that includes
all the major pieces of original GM documentation and
virtually every secondary reference that has ever been
written about the first-generation Camaro. We continue to
acquire additional documentation as we find it (donations
are welcome, by the way!).
Most of the research projects we start are very difficult
and this means that they usually take a long time to
complete (of course if they were simple they would already
have been completed and documented by someone else). We
have started many more projects than we have completed; our
incomplete research "works-in-progress" are numerous - but
hopefully each will eventually come to a conclusion and see
the light of day on this web site. While we frankly dont
ever expect to finish our long-term goal - we enjoy the
challenge. It is our interest in the research itself - the
journey, and not the destination - that causes us to persist
in this thing.
Best Wishes and Happy Restoring!
The Camaro Research Group
New CRG Memberships
CRG is a restricted organization. This is not to exclude anyone -
in fact all of our released documentation is open
to public view on this web site - it is to allow us some
sanity in the control of our process. We are each very
time-limited, CRG membership is very time-intensive, and
each new member requires several months to get "spun-up" on
our goals, process, and on the growing number of previously
discussed and archived topics that have become work-in-process.
We can ill-afford to spend our time "training" someone only to
lose them due to lack of available time or an incompatibility
of interest. So we are careful how frequently we add members
and who we select for trials. Membership is also not trivial
in the amount of resources required - each member must already
possess or else acquire some minimum computing and research resources
that are not inexpensive.
Nevertheless, after this brief attempt to discourage those
of only casual interest, if any think they still might be
interested in joining the CRG, send us a "resume" of your
relevant experience (Camaro restoration, GM or GM
division/supplier employment, software development,
technical writing, graphical arts, database development,
general automotive knowledge,
etc.) and well give
your qualifications and interest fair consideration.
Current CRG Members
Without listing too many boring details, or getting overly
personal, here are some basic background data on and
credentials for the current CRG members. Requirements for
CRG membership include: deep interest in the subject,
internet capability, ability to communicate and get along
with others, and the time to contribute by researching,
writing, and/or reviewing. While not a requirement for
membership, our members, coincidentally, have nearly always
been technically trained, educated, and/or employed. Being
Camaro owners ourselves, we have a personal interest in
traceable, accurate information. As a group, our personal
cars run the gamut of first-generation Camaro models and
years. For many of the members, the Camaro(s) listed below is
far from their first Camaro.
While CRG membership changes with time, the CRG currently is
composed of (in chronological order of membership) the
following:
Name |
Rich Fields |
Martin Foltz |
Greg Davies |
Wayne Guinn |
Kurt Sonen |
Jon Mello |
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CRG co-founder, Coordinator Emeritus, and core member |
CRG co-founder and associate member |
CRG co-founder and associate member |
CRG co-founder and liasion member to CUS web site |
CRG Coordinator, Webmaster, database maintainer, and core member |
CRG core member |
Current 1st Gen Camaro |
1968 L30/M20 RallySport coupe |
1968 L35/M20 SS396 |
1968 L35/M20 SS396 convertible |
no current Camaros |
1969 RS/Z28
1969 SS396 |
1967 Z28 (two) |
Occupation |
Engineer at a US aerospace organization |
Engineer at a US electronics organization |
VP Operations for a Canadian financial center |
Writer, Chevrolet historian, and WW Quality Systems Analyst, JNJ |
Former automotive engineer |
Engineer at a US aerospace organization |
|
Name |
Bill Glowacki |
Mark Canning |
Doug DePew |
Alan Colvin |
Jerry MacNeish |
John Hinckley |
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CRG core member |
CRG associate member |
CRG liaison member for Site Server |
CRG liaison member to CBTN |
CRG core member |
CRG core member - deceased |
Current 1st Gen Camaro |
(none - prior owner of several) |
69 Pace car |
(none - prior owner of several) |
(none - prior owner of several) |
1967 Z28
1968 Z28 (two)
"OLD RELIABLE" NHRA 1968 Z28 race car |
1969 Z28 |
Occupation |
Industrial engineer, former professional restorer |
Electrical engineer |
Computer consultant and sponsor of the CRG website. |
Consultant, automotive author of CBTN, & former Corvette Fever Magazine editor |
Automotive author, professional restorer, certified
appraiser for first-generation Camaros |
Retired automotive assembly plant manager and former automotive engineer |
|
Name |
Troy Criscillis |
Daniel Coffman |
Ed Bertrand |
Warren Leunig |
Steve Wright |
Bryon Miller |
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CRG associate member |
CRG core member |
CRG core member |
CRG liaison member to FCRG |
CRG associate member |
CRG core member |
Current 1st Gen Camaro |
1968 SS396 |
1967 RS/SS 350 |
1968 RS/SS L89 Convertible |
(1967 Impala SS396) |
1968 RS/SS396 |
1968 SS396 |
Occupation |
Car restoration |
Electronics engineer |
Network engineer for a major medical company |
Teacher |
Scientist |
Meteorologist |
Other Resources
Camaro Untold-Secrets
Camaro Untold-Secrets is the classic book by Wayne Guinn which has several articles
on the first-generation Camaro. The website of the same name does not exist anymore
though some of the artcles are on Waynes other site,
Guinns Engineering.
Chevy Nova Research Project
The Chevrolet
Nova
Research Project is modeled after the CRG in scope and purpose,
and is devoted to information on the 1968-1972 Chevrolet Nova.
Full-Size Chevrolet Research Group
The
Full-Size Chevrolet
Research Group is also modeled after the CRG in scope and purpose,
and is devoted to information on the 1965-1972 Chevrolet Full-Size
models (i.e. Impalas, Biscaynes, Caprices, etc).