1957 CHEVROLET CAMEO CARRIER

283ci V8RWDMANUALgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$48,924 maintenance + known platform issues
~$9,785/yr · 820¢/mile equivalent · $37,703 maintenance + $10,521 expected platform issues
Compare this engine
vs
235ci I6
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1957 Cameo Carrier represents Chevrolet's upscale pickup with unique fiberglass side panels and was only produced for three years. These are 65+ year-old trucks now, so you're dealing with comprehensive restoration needs rather than typical wear items—expect every seal, bushing, and bearing to need attention regardless of claimed mileage.

Complete Engine Rebuilds (235 I6 and 283 V8)

Common · high severity
Symptoms: excessive oil consumption (1+ quart per 500 miles), blue smoke on startup and acceleration, low compression across multiple cylinders, knocking from worn main or rod bearings, metal particles in oil
Fix: At this age, original engines are long past service life. Full rebuild includes boring cylinders, new pistons/rings, bearing replacement, valve job, and all gaskets. Expect 40-60 labor hours for complete teardown and rebuild. Many owners opt for modern rebuild kits with hardened valve seats for unleaded fuel. The 235 I6 is simpler and cheaper; the 283 V8 costs more but parts availability is excellent due to popularity.
Estimated cost: $3,500-6,500

Transmission Rebuilds (Manual and Powerglide Automatic)

Common · high severity
Symptoms: slipping out of gear under load, hard shifting or grinding (manual), no forward movement or delayed engagement (Powerglide), metal shavings in fluid, fluid leaking from every seal
Fix: The 3-speed manual and 2-speed Powerglide are both simple by modern standards but suffer from decades of wear and dried seals. Manual needs synchro replacement, bearing sets, and all seals (20-25 hours). Powerglide requires band adjustment or replacement, clutch pack service, and complete reseal (18-24 hours). Transmission mounts fail universally due to age—replace during any trans work.
Estimated cost: $2,200-4,000

Fiberglass Side Panel Cracking and Delamination

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: stress cracks around mounting points, separation from steel substructure, spider-webbing in gelcoat, panels flexing or rattling over bumps, water intrusion behind panels causing bed rust
Fix: The Cameo's defining feature is also its biggest headache. Fiberglass panels were bonded and bolted to steel framework—the bond fails over time. Proper repair requires removing panels, stripping old adhesive, repairing any steel rust, and re-bonding with modern epoxy plus mechanical fasteners. Figure 15-20 hours for both sides if caught early. Replacement panels are NLA from GM; you're looking at custom fabrication or used parts.
Estimated cost: $2,000-5,000

Fuel System Corrosion and Varnish Buildup

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: hard starting when cold, stalling after warmup, rough idle and hesitation, fuel leaks from tank or lines, fuel pump failure
Fix: Original steel fuel tanks rust from inside out, especially if truck sat for years. Lines are steel and corrode at fittings. Carter mechanical fuel pumps fail due to dried diaphragms. Complete fuel system refresh includes tank removal/cleaning or replacement, all new steel or stainless lines, new pump, filter, and carburetor rebuild. The Rochester or Carter carbs are simple but every gasket and accelerator pump will be shot. Budget 12-16 hours for comprehensive service.
Estimated cost: $800-1,800

Front Suspension Wear (Kingpins and Bushings)

Common · high severity
Symptoms: wandering steering requiring constant correction, clunking over bumps, excessive play in wheels when jacked up, uneven tire wear, shimmy at highway speeds
Fix: The 1957 uses kingpin front suspension (not ball joints). Kingpins wear oval, bushings collapse, and thrust bearings fail. Proper rebuild requires pressing out kingpins, reaming bushings to fit, installing new pins with fresh bushings and bearings. Also replace all tie rod ends and steering linkage. This is specialized work requiring specific tools and knowledge—figure 14-18 hours for complete front end rebuild including alignment.
Estimated cost: $1,500-2,800

Brake System Complete Overhaul Needs

Common · high severity
Symptoms: spongy pedal requiring excessive travel, pulling to one side, complete pedal fade, seized wheel cylinders, brake fluid leaking at all four corners
Fix: Single-circuit drum brake system with no power assist on most trucks. Every wheel cylinder will be seized or leaking, master cylinder dried out, brake lines rusted, and drums scored or cracked. This isn't a pad job—it's complete system replacement: master cylinder, all four wheel cylinders, hard lines, flex hoses, shoes, springs, hardware, drums turned or replaced. Many owners convert to dual-circuit master for safety. Budget 16-20 hours including bleeding and adjustment.
Estimated cost: $1,200-2,200

Electrical System Deterioration (6-Volt System)

Common · low severity
Symptoms: dim lights, slow cranking, intermittent gauge operation, corroded wiring connections, generator not charging properly
Fix: Original 6-volt positive-ground system with generator (not alternator). Wiring insulation becomes brittle and cracks, connections corrode, generator brushes wear, and voltage regulator points pit. Minimum service includes new battery cables, cleaning all grounds, generator rebuild or replacement, and voltage regulator service (8-12 hours). Many owners convert to 12-volt with alternator for reliability—adds $500-1000 but dramatically improves starting and charging.
Estimated cost: $600-1,500
Owner tips
  • If buying a Cameo, assume it needs everything unless you see recent receipts—these trucks are old enough that 'runs and drives' means nothing about actual mechanical condition
  • The fiberglass panels are irreplaceable and define the Cameo's value—inspect carefully for cracks and prior body filler repairs before buying
  • Parts for the drivetrain are excellent (shared with passenger cars), but Cameo-specific trim and fiberglass components are unobtanium—factor this into purchase price
  • Budget $15,000-25,000 minimum for a complete mechanical restoration even if the body looks decent—there are no shortcuts on 65+ year-old vehicles
  • Join a Tri-Five Chevy club before buying—community knowledge is essential for finding the right specialists and sourcing parts
Buy only if you're committed to a full restoration or it's already been comprehensively rebuilt with documentation—these are collectible project trucks, not drivers, and the unique fiberglass panels make Cameos significantly more complex than standard 1957 Chevy pickups.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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