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No Carmaker Has The Guts To Make A Chevrolet 454 SS Today

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Back in 1990, General Motors stuck a 7.4-liter V8 into a 1500 chassis Chevy pickup and created an icon. The 454 SS was little more than black paint, a red logo on the side and dual exhausts rumbling out the back, but it was great in a way that I can’t imagine being reproduced today.

Look at today’s performance trucks. The Raptor, for instance, is covered in graphics and lights. All the speedy Jeeps are a mass of vents. Every Ram is covered in huge labels reading RAM. What I mean to say is the performance trucks and SUVs of today advertise, loudly, their intentions.

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The 454 SS was less brash.

But there is something about them that every time you see one, it stands out. Blocks away in traffic, one rolls by. Duggity-duggity-duggity. The altered front bumper looks low like it’s sniffing at the ground. Prowling a bit. Mean.

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The actual performance of the truck, sold from 1990 to 1993, is questionable. Though it had a vaunted 454 under the hood, it only made 230 horsepower and 385 lb-ft of torque, as it had for years in the front of bigger, bulkier trucks and Suburbans. The main newness was that it was in the relatively small short bed, half-ton, single cab, 2WD frame, with better gearing, cooling, Bilstein shocks, a front anti-roll bar and quicker steering. The whole package cost you $18,295 and also collected a nice red interior with, at first at least, a tach.

But its the subtle meanness of the truck beyond any outright numbers. It’s a spirit that you just wouldn’t see today, a little sticker and little else but a sound of tip off those in the know.