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I own a 1987 Chevrolet full-size pickup truck that is about to become a classic in a few years. My question is how can I find out, if it is the last of its kind. ’87 was the last model year for the rounded line style pickups. My particular Chevy truck completed assembly in June of 1987, at General Motors manufacturing plant in St. Louis. This is significant because the all new Chevrolet trucks for 1988 started showing up at dealerships in June. This is the only information I have been able to find out using the VIN number and the manufacture’s date on the drivers door. I don’t know if the GM plant in St. Louis still exists or how I can find out, how to tell if the truck is the last one to roll off the assembly line. ANY Information would be helpful. Thanks!

2006-08-06 07:50:22 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Cars & Transportation Car Makes Chevrolet

8 answers

you can take the numbers off from it and have them run through G M web site,,and they can tell you the production number of it,,and how close it is to being the last one,,or if it is the last one,,other than that,,there are not many good sites that have accurate information on them,,year one don't know for sure,,nor does any other parts supplier,,only gm has the exact numbers,,it may take you a while but you can find this out,i did it on a corvette through gm,,and they hit it right on the head,,come find out i had the second vette built that year,,i hope you find out maybe this will help.

2006-08-06 08:04:20 · answer #1 · answered by dodge man 7 · 1 0

1

2016-12-25 14:26:14 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

85-87 were the highest produced numbers of that bodystyle regular cab.
the crewcab,blazer,suburban all continued until 91 so only the standard trucks of that body style stopped,you may be able to go to the gm website and check,but honestly most final production cars and trucks are not sold to the public and end up in some museum or showroom,they know that the very last one will be worth some money and they tend to hold on to em

2006-08-06 11:48:07 · answer #3 · answered by dragnoldmetal 2 · 0 0

Please do not confuse the term "Classic" with "Collectible". I can tell you right now your pick-up truck with NEVER attain "Classic" status. There is an internationally recognized organization that decides whether a car is "Classic" or not. Right now there are no...repeat...NO post WW2 cars designated as "Classic"...not even the venerable 1957 Chevy has attained this coveted ranking yet! While you state DMV may grant you a license plate designating your truck as "Classic" or "Antique" you can rest assured in the real world it will never be considered a classic.

2006-08-06 15:33:30 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

2

2017-03-08 15:44:00 · answer #5 · answered by Ellen 3 · 0 0

U can discover an ancient nova or chevelle u can get like a seventy nine camaro for Ur cost, most of the time the frame is eh however an individual shoved a bbc or whatever cool beneath the hood ande they only didnt wish to color it

2016-08-28 11:51:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Check it out with your local chevy dealer.

2006-08-06 08:51:30 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

LMC.COM or YEARONE.COM might be able to help.

2006-08-06 07:56:06 · answer #8 · answered by Christian 7 · 0 0

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