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The Chevrolet S-10 is a compact pickup truck produced by Chevrolet.It was the first domestically-built compact pickup of the big three American automakers. When it was first introduced as a "quarter-ton pickup" in 1981 for the 1982 model year, the GMC version was known as the S-15 and later renamed the GMC Sonoma.
Chevrolet's car based on A platform Series M Copper-Cooled: 1923 1923 GM A: 1 Chevrolet's car based on Superior with air cooling system Series AA Capitol: 1927 1927 GM A: 1 Chevrolet's mid sized car that competed against the Ford Model A: Series AB National: 1928 1928 GM A: 1 Chevrolet's mid sized car that replaced Series AA Capitol Series AC ...
Production ended for all longitudinal 60° V6s in 1996. GM's performance-parts division continued production of a related crate engine after 1999. 2.8 Applications: 1986–1993 Chevrolet S-10/GMC S-15 Sonoma; 1986–1993 Chevrolet S-10 Blazer/GMC S-15 Jimmy; 1988–1991 Isuzu Trooper II; 3.1 Applications: 1991–1994 Isuzu Pickup; 1991–1992 ...
General Motors started with a regular-cab, short-box (6-foot (180 cm) bed) S-10 pickup, with a base-level trim package plus a half-tonneau cover. In place of a typical inline four cylinder or V-6 internal combustion engine, the Electric S-10 EV was equipped with an 85-kilowatt (114 hp) three-phase, liquid-cooled AC induction motor, based on GM's EV1 electric coupe.
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1909–1915, 1917–1918 Buick OHV [12] (Model 10 had OHV-4) 1917–1924 Buick Series 30 OHV 170 cu in (2.8 L) inline-4 [13] 1909 Oakland Model 40 [9] [14] (acquired as part of the founding of GM) 1913–1928 Chevrolet inline-4 (acquired as part of Chevrolet's merger into GM) 1923 Chevrolet Series M Copper-Cooled; 1937–1965 Opel Olympia OHV