1946 Chevy Custom Rat Rod Truck Built 2011 350 Crate Engine 3" Drop Suspension on 2040-cars
Johnstown, Pennsylvania, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Make: Chevrolet
Drive Type: 350 TURBO TRANSMISSION
Model: Other Pickups
Mileage: 3,500
Trim: CUSTOM
This auction is for a 1946 CHEVY CUSTOM RAT ROD this is on a 1982 3" DROP CHEVY S10 FRAME WITH ALL NEW SUSPENSION PARTS this has a 350 CHEVY CRATE ENGINE AND A 350 TURBO TRANNY SOME OF THE NEW PARTS ARE NEW CROSS FLOW RADIATOR B&M SHIFFTER NEW GAUGES AND SPEEDO this has POWER STEERING AND POWER BRAKES, AM/FM/CD PLAYER this has 3500 MILES ON IT SINCE IT WAS BUILT IN 2011 it HAS A CLEAR PA STREET ROD TITLE IT WAS CUSTOM PIN STRIPED BY CASEY AT THE FAMOUS PAINT CHOP i am listing this for a friend he is starting another project and no longer has the room for this AUCTTHE TRAILER IS SELLING IN A SEPARATE AUCTION IT IS LISTED UNDER TEAR DROP TRAILERS IT WAS ALSO PIN STRIPED BY THE PAINT CHOP this is selling as is WITH NO RESERVE if you have any questions please call me 814-659-6304 thanks for looking
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Tue, Sep 29 2015The effects of Volkswagen's long-running diesel emissions evasion are starting to spill over to other automakers, but General Motors is taking things in stride. The 2.8-liter, four-cylinder Duramax in the 2016 Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon is the first engine to get extra scrutiny by the Environmental Protection Agency and the California Air Resources Board, Automotive News reports. Rather than just the usual in-lab test, it's also being checked on the road. However, the extra evaluation shouldn't have any impact on when the trucks with his mill hit dealers later this fall. "We're in our final stages of the EPA certification, and our launch is on track," Chevy spokesperson Otie McKinley tells Autoblog. The four-cylinder diesel in the trucks makes 181 horsepower and 369 pound-feet of torque, and the automaker is touting low NOx production. In the announcement for the Colorado's specs, the company calls it "the cleanest diesel truck engine ever produced by General Motors." The tech includes exhaust gas recirculation to lower combustion temperatures and improve emissions. There's also a urea tank like on the bigger diesels for full-size trucks, and it gets refilled in time with oil changes. An indication on the instrument panel lets drivers know when that's needed, too. Even with the more demanding testing, the company doesn't seem too worried about the four-cylinder passing. "Part of our development process is on-road and off-road [laboratory] testing," Scott Yackley, Chevy Trucks assistant chief engineer, said to Automotive News. In the wake of the VW scandal, the EPA has pledged more rigorous testing. Before, on-road emissions evaluations were largely limited to heavy-duty vehicles, but the agency has decided to apply the checks more often to other models. There's also now greater cooperation with Canadian authorities.
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