Every truck has a history, but many keep it a secret so that the owner who gets it last never knows anything about the one who got it first. Roger and Tammy Gleaves are lucky. Not only do they know the background of their out-of-the-ordinary ’65 Chevy C10 four-door, but that history is pretty colorful.
Many people have never seen a rare six-man crew cab. When they do, they might think it’s a custom build. In a way, they’re right. In the ’60s, Chevy dealers could commission these conversions from coach companies—in this case, Stageway Coaches.
Stageway was a distributor for Armbruster & Company. Armbruster had been in the coaching business since the horse-and-buggy days, catering to settlers moving west. In the early ’60s, the two companies merged. By then, horses had been replaced by engines, and the company was specializing in airport buses, hotel transportation station wagons, stretch limousines, and hearses, as well as six-man crew cab truck conversions.
Armbruster documents from the early ’60s describe these stretched pickups, built from a standard car and chassis. The rear doors were built to match the factory front doors. The chassis was lengthened more than 30 inches to accommodate the extended cabs and retain the original beds. Alternate methods were either to partially extend the chassis and shorten the bed or keep the stock-length chassis and drastically shorten the bed. Roger says that the Stageway conversion on his C10 involved that last method, taking 35½ inches out of the original 8-foot bed.
Denne historien er fra February 2020-utgaven av Classic Trucks.
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Denne historien er fra February 2020-utgaven av Classic Trucks.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
WHEN ONE THING LEADS TO ANOTHER …
The Hollman “Family” Chevys
TOP PRIZE
Raybestos Commissioned This ’53 Chevy and Promptly Gave it Away
TAILGATE
Heavy Chevy
GOLDILOCKS' TRUCK
Careful Attention to Detail Make This Ford Just Right
INFERNO
Frank Dill’s ’52 Ford F-1 Packs a Big Horsepower Punch
Daring To Be Different
Oddball, Orphaned, and Overlooked Trucks
Professor Hammer's Metalworking Tips
Q. I have a Miller Multimatic 215 welder. In the TIG mode, I often weld 20-gauge sheet metal using 1 ⁄16 tungsten at 35 amps, using a 1 ⁄16 filler rod. I have the welding helmet turned as far down as it will go (shade 9) with a closeup lens, and a 100-watt light source close to the weld. I cannot see where I’m going with the weld.
Stealth Mode
David Zambon’s ’53F-100 is an Exercise in Subtlety
Extra Special
This Rare ’65 Chevy C10 Stageway Crew Cab Wears Some Corvette Details
Vintage Lines Powered By Modern Muscle
Modern Supercharged Performance in a ’50s Wrapper