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1987 1996 L-body: 1 Chevrolet's front wheel drive compact car Beretta: 1987 1996 L-body: 1 Chevrolet's front wheel drive coupe based on the Chevy Corsica GMT400: 1987 2000 GMT400 1 Chevrolet's full-sized pickup trucks offered in light-duty or heavy-duty configurations with rear-wheel or four-wheel drive applications using GTM400 Platform Lumina ...
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; 1960–1963 Pontiac Trophy 4 (derived from the Pontiac 389) 1961–1992 Chevrolet 153 (derived from the Chevrolet inline-six) 1962–1993 Opel OHV "Kadett" 1963–1983 Vauxhall Viva OHV; 1965 ...
The Aero was a range of concept car studies created by General Motors as a testbed for future aerodynamic improvements to car bodies. The first model was the 1981 Aero X , a five-door hatchback . In 1982 the Aero 2000 was shown, a smaller two-door car, it had several unique features, such as front and rear fender skirts , a kammback design, and ...
The Chevrolet Aerovette was a concept car created by Chevrolet, beginning life as Experimental Project 882 (XP-882) in the late 1960s. It had a mid-engine configuration using a transverse mounting of its V8 engine . [ 1 ]
Following the 1987 exit of GM from heavy-truck production, the Kodiak/TopKick became the largest vehicles produced by the company. Offered as both a Class 6–8 truck and as a cowled bus chassis, the GMT530 chassis was offered with the big-block 6.0 L, 7.0 L, and 7.4 L gasoline V8s (developed for commercial use); these were replaced by the 8.1 ...
For 1973, GM redesigned its medium-duty (Class 5–7) truck range for Chevrolet and GMC, slotted between 1-ton trucks and the Class 7–8 H/J and C/M heavy conventional trucks (designed by GMC). Designed by Chevrolet, the trucks mated the Rounded-Line cabs to a heavier-duty frame and a taller hood; with the exception of the steering column and ...
Geo models were manufactured by GM in joint ventures with three Japanese automakers: Toyota, Isuzu, and Suzuki.The Prizm was produced at the GM/Toyota joint-venture NUMMI assembly plant in Fremont, California in the United States, and the Metro and Tracker models were produced at the GM/Suzuki joint-venture CAMI assembly plant in Ingersoll, Ontario in Canada.
In as little as 3 hours, a full-size truck could be converted into a 4x4 "Mountain Goat" that would climb steep inclines with ease. Just as easily, the kit could be removed and re-used on another truck, and this was used as a selling point. The retail price of NAPCO Powr-Pak kit in 1955 was $995.