Most modern pickups aren't exactly big on creativity. Looking back at trucks from the '40s and '50s shows how stepside and ...
Back in the 1960s, trucks buyers starting demanding more from their workhorses, with these also serving as personal transport vehicles rather than simply being put to work. Six decades later, the ...
Chevrolet’s Advance-Design light and medium-duty trucks came almost immediately after the war (1947) as the company’s first major redesign of the pickup series. So, even a final model year like this ...
In 1983, Robert Kurhajian bought a 1958 Chevy Stepside pickup with hopes of building a clean, classic cruiser. The Chevy sat for almost 25 years and hadn't been finished. As a surprise, Robert's wife, ...
Before the late 1950s, all pickup trucks would typically sport the same style of bed, which saw the wheel arches mounted on the outside of the bed. In order to fill the gap between the front of the ...
It's not just that this truck was built on the cheap that makes us insane with jealousy. Certainly, there have been scores of other trucks built for less. It's the fact that not only was this truck ...
Stepside,flareside,fenderside,utiline,thriftside, andsportside are all different names for basically the same type of truck,and we're here to explain. As the Bard from England would tell you, "A rose ...