- smooth-sided,
fenderless trucks were introduced, such as the
Chevrolet Fleetside, the
Chevrolet El Camino, the
Dodge Sweptline, and in 1957, Ford's purpose-built...
- was only
available with the 4.3L V6,
regular cab, and 8' bed (a 6.5'
Fleetside bed was
later available); the 454SS
combined elements of the
Sport Equipment...
- "styleside" all-steel bed
replaces the Cameo/Suburban versions;
called "
Fleetside" by
Chevrolet and "Wideside" by GMC,
available in 6.5 ft (2.0 m) and 8 ft...
- C-series trucks, GM
introduced the
Longhorn option,
including an 81⁄2-foot
Fleetside/Wideside
pickup bed. For 1969, the
interior underwent some
component changes...
- was only
available on
regular cabs and low-trim 2WD
extended cabs with
Fleetside box and 6.5' bed. and the 6.0 L was only
available on the 2500 series...
- a
shoulder line
wrapped from
fender to
fender around the
vehicle (on
Fleetside/Wideside beds). To
further reduce noise, the mast
antenna was removed...
- straight-sided
Fleetside bed made its
return alongside the
traditional fendered Stepside bed (GMC
Wideside and Fenderside, respectively). Both the
Fleetside and...
- time as Chevy's
Cameo in
March 1958 when GM
released the new all-steel "
Fleetside" bed
option replacing the Cameo/Suburban
Pickup fibergl**** bedsides. The...
-
Beatnik Bandit Custom El
Dorado Custom Camaro Custom Corvette Custom Fleetside Deora Custom Mustang Custom T-Bird Hot Heap Ford J-Car
Custom Cougar Custom...
- 6 ft 8 in (2,030 mm). For the 908,
either a
Standard or a Bonus-Load (
fleetside) bed was on offer. The 908B was
advertised as "the
lowest priced V-8 pickup...