Vehicle Description
This 1971 Chevrolet C10 Restomod pickup is probably more muscle car
than pickup truck. With 427 cubic inches of LS7 power built up to
output north of 600 horses, a 4-speed 4L80E transmission that
manages the power, a suspension designed to plant the truck on the
road, and 4-wheel disc brakes that stop it on a dime, this C-10 is
one of those 'Dream Trucks' you hear professional builders talking
about all the time. And even with all those performance upgrades,
what everyone will likely be talking about it is that killer paint
job and slick interior, because the look of this truck really
steals the show.
These 2nd generation C/K series trucks are some of the most
handsome to ever come out of GM's styling studios, but this one has
a decidedly road racing vibe to it that turns the timeless design
up to 11. Part of it comes from the lowered and raked stance (we'll
talk more about the suspension in a moment) but part of it comes
from the attention-grabbing yellow paint, which is further enhanced
by the white SS-style stripes on the hood and hard tonneau cover
over the bed. Finish work is very good with hardly any signs of
use, with a high gloss finish that shines up great, as should be
expected of a truck with less than 8k on the build. It's not a
perfect a trailer queen that was never meant to be driven, as
evidenced by all the performance goodies under its skin, but it's
certainly nice enough to go dominate your local car show or cruise
in. The steel cowl induction hood (complete with '427' badges on
each side), billet grille inserts, smoothed tailgate and rear roll
pan, along with all that killer 'SS' and 'LS7' badging help
reinforce the performance vibe that this truck gives off at long
range. Those with a trained and experienced eye will note that the
front clip of this truck from a '67-'68 model C-10, but all that
extra chrome and intricate design up front blends perfectly with
the bright front bumper with its integrated fog lights. This truck
was purposely designed to turn heads, and it does that superbly,
dropping jaws everywhere it goes. The bed was covered with spray-in
bedliner inside, so it's still functional, an aftermarket gas tank
was relocated back there as well (a safety and performance feature
that costs a good amount of time and money to complete), and it's
all protected by a paint-matched hard tonneau cover that's strut
assisted and finished the look of this truck cleanly.
The interior was nicely upgraded at the time of the build yet still
manages to keep a stock-style vibe, with comfortable low-back
bucket seats that can surprisingly seat three, or two with the
middle seat folded down into a big, roomy arm rest. The chairs are
obviously modern and they work rather well with the rest of the
C10's interior, covered in a plush black vinyl that's in good
shape. There's a taut headliner above, plush black carpets below,
and Cheyenne-style door panels include Western-scroll designs,
while the black dash pad provides a nice contrast to the yellow
stock dash it protects. The factory gauges in the stock bezel were
replaced by white-face Classic Instruments dials and it that's not
enough, an auxiliary fuel gage was mounted under the dash as well.
There's also a kickin' Sony bluetooth stereo system, functional
factory-style air-conditioning with R134a refrigerant that blows
ice cold, and a three-spoke steering wheel atop a billet tilt
column to manage the helm.
Open the hood and you'll see where the good stuff is, starting with
a built LS7 V8 (427 CI V8 from a C6 Corvette Z06) topped by a
Holley Hi-Ram modular intake and fuel injection system. It's got a
healthy cam and has ARP head studs, Crank cross bolts, billet fuel
rails, a 105mm throttle body, and FAST Precision-Flow fuel
injectors. It's all beautifully fitted and with an LSX coil
relocation kit, GMMP cast Chevrolet valve covers, and a serpentine
accessory drive system, all work and looks like it's always
belonged in this C-10. There's a big aluminum radiator up front to
keep it all cool, and Hedman long-tube headers feed into a custom
3-inch X-pipe dual exhaust with Borla race mufflers for an
unmistakable sound that will surely scare the neighbors. The 4L80E
4-speed automatic overdrive transmission with a 3500 stall
convertor is aided with a shift kit and turns a new driveshaft
connected to a Strange Engineering 9-inch rear end, offering the
best of acceleration and cruising abilities. Power Wilwood 4-wheel
disc brakes, dropped spindles, fat sway bars, and trailing arms
with coil springs out back give it that crouching stance and
impressive handling on the street. A professional tune means that
it runs and drives like a stocker but unleashes all the fury when
you drop the pedal, a remarkable achievement. And the 600HP
estimate that we were given we think is extremely conservative,
simply because the motor alone is 505HP stock, and this one is far
from stock with all the top-shelf performance parts that were
added. The point is whether you want to dominate the strip or the
street, you'll surely succeed. Polished Centerline wheels and
255/60/15 front and 295/65/15 Mickey Thompson rear radials in back
try to hook it all up and mostly succeed.
If you've taken a good look at this truck, you know it's something
special. Don't let the reasonable asking price fool you, there's a
huge pile of cash spent to make it reliable and streetable, and the
next kid in a warmed-over exotic won't even know what hit him. Call
today!