Vehicle Description
When your grandparents were working hard for a living to build this
great country of ours, trucks like this 1941 Chevrolet � Ton were
responsible for all the heavy lifting around town. Capable of
moving massive loads, they were perfect for hard work in the days
before Eisenhower brought home the modern highway system, resulting
in regular interstate travel. Today, they're fun and practical,
especially when restored and upgraded to the level of this
particular beauty. With a bright paint job, custom stake bed,
modern interior, and a 350 V8 crate motor under the hood, this
converted 4x4 truck is one of the coolest pre-war haulers we've
ever featured.
Chevy restyled their 'AK' series trucks just in time for the war,
so this was the freshest face in the workforce. It remains one of
the most popular looks, and it's easy to see why with the
popularity of Art Deco design today. Sleek and modern, particularly
compared to the trucks just a few years earlier, it has an honest
face that looks like it doesn't mind a little hard work. The bright
orange paint is nicely applied to a driver-grade standard, not
over-done, but about what you'd expect from a blue-collar worker
like this. Black fenders and running boards tone things down a bit,
in a good way, and they give the truck a very unique look that
doesn't keep it trapped in a foregone era. In 1941, chrome was
getting expensive and scarce with the war exploding overseas, so to
find so much shiny stuff on a truck like this is an absolute treat.
The iconic front grille sets the tone up front, with the flanking
headlight surrounds, hood trim, and front bumper all adding to the
flash. Out back, the modified wood stake bed is practical as well
as handsome and is perhaps the most appealing aspect of an old
truck like this, combining natural materials and their warmth with
a vintage look that most folks find hard to resist. And unlike most
stake beds, it actually has a roof and rear tailgate, so this truck
can be used year-round, regardless of the weather. For safety,
that's the fuel tank relocated to under the bed and shined up to
look good, because the original lived behind the driver's seat.
Whether it's used to promote a business, or to haul the family unit
coast-to-coast, this Chevy is going to look darn good doing it.
Open the big steel doors and you'll see that there's not a lot of
pre-war left inside this 4x4. High-back captain's bucket seats were
swapped in up front (likely from a Suburban or similar vehicle from
the looks of them), and a matching rear split-bench was neatly
installed in the back. These are heavy-duty seats wrapped in
durable materials that wear like iron, but they're still supple
enough to provide the all-day comfort people demand from modern
SUVs. Custom door panels and a gray-metallic dash add to the custom
feel inside, and a big custom center console splits the seats up
front and provides plenty of storage space. Down below the flooring
is heavy-duty and protected with thick rubber floor mats, and
although it's designed to take a beating it still manages to be
sophisticated enough to feel very classy inside. The reworked dash
has a lot to do with that higher-end feel, with a full array of
AutoMeter gauges and a Grant GT steering wheel atop a modern tilt
column anchoring the cockpit. Other options include an under-dash
Vintage A/C unit that blows ice-cold R134a air, seatbelts, a column
shifter, and a Pioneer AM/FM/CD/AUX head unit that pumps tunes
through the update speakers inside. Out back, there's enough room
to carry several tons of cargo, and it's all been finished to a
very presentable level with finished panels and diamond plate
flooring.
Now some of you might be alarmed that there's no flathead V8 under
the hood, but that's nostalgia getting the better of you. If you
really want to drive this truck and enjoy yourself, there's nothing
better than the 350 V8 small block crate motor powering this
hauler. This SBC Chevy is as reliable as they come, without the
associated overheating problems that plague some of its V8
siblings, and it's certainly powerful enough to handle all that
added weight. With only 1,918 miles on the 2019 build, it's ready
to work for years to come, and if it ever needs to be serviced any
Chevy dealer can certainly handle the work. Power steering and
power front disc brakes drastically improve the driver's
experience, and with long-tube headers feeding into a true dual
exhaust, the sound is unbeatable. The powerful small block spins a
700R4 4-speed automatic with overdrive, and with a durable 10-bolt
rear end with 3.73 gears inside highway cruising is definitely on
the menu. Underneath, the lifted 4x4 suspension is heavy-duty
enough to support a railroad car, and it's also tall enough to go
over just about any obstacle in its way. Slick 17-inch alloys match
the bodywork perfectly, and they're wrapped with 265/70/17 General
Grabber radials with plenty of tread.
Heavy-duty haulers like this are the next big thing in car
collecting, and this restomod '41 Chevrolet 4x4 is one of the
better examples we've ever seen. Call today!