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GMC Topkick

Chevrolet Kodiak/GMC TopKick
Overview
Manufacturer General Motors
Production 1980–2009
Assembly Pontiac, Michigan
Toluca, Mexico
Montreal, Quebec
Bogota, Colombia
Tejerías, Venezuela
Janesville, Wisconsin

São José dos Campos, Brazil (GMC 12-170/14-190/16-220)
Body and chassis
Class Medium Duty Truck
Layout Front engine, rear-wheel drive / four-wheel drive
First generation
ReggioLA MobileCommandPost (detail).jpg
1980-1989 Chevrolet Kodiak towing mobile police command post
Overview
Production 1980-1989
Body and chassis
Body style 2-door truck
4-door truck
Powertrain
Engine

Gasoline

Diesel

Second generation
Chevrolet Kodiak.png
1990-1994 Chevrolet Kodiak
Overview
Production

1990–2002

1990-2008 (Mexico)
Body and chassis
Body style 2-door truck
4-door truck
Platform GMT530
Powertrain
Engine 8.1 liter V8 Big-Block gasoline
7.4 liter Vortec V8 gasoline
7.2 liter I6 diesel Caterpillar 3126B/E
6.6 Caterpillar 3116
Third generation
GMC C5500 diesel crew cab, LIRR vehicle.jpg
GMC TopKick C5500 crew cab utility vehicle
Overview
Also called Isuzu H-Series
Production 2003–2009
Body and chassis
Body style 2-door truck
4-door truck
2-door cutaway
Platform GMT560
Related Chevrolet Express/GMC Savana
"Cadillac One"
Powertrain
Engine 6.6 L Duramax V8 diesel V8
7.8 L LG4 diesel I6
8.1 L L18 V8 gasoline
Transmission 5-speed manual
6-speed manual
9-speed manual
10-speed manual
5-speed automatic
6-speed automatic

The Chevrolet Kodiak (also called GMC TopKick) is a line of medium duty trucks that was marketed and sold by General Motors from 1980 to 2009, when the company exited the medium-duty truck segment.

The Kodiak/TopKick were commonly used as a basis for work trucks, cargo haulers, dump trucks, and similar vehicles which required medium duty torque, GVWR, towing capacity. There are aftermarket coachbuilders that built them as pickup trucks and commercial trucks for consumers.

Gasoline

Diesel

For 1980, General Motors introduced the Chevrolet Kodiak and GMC TopKick as Class 5-7 conventional trucks. Slotted above the medium-duty C/K trucks and slightly below the Chevrolet Bruin/GMC Brigadier, the Kodiak/TopKick combined the updated cab of the C/K with a heavier-duty GVWR and a larger hood, allowing for mid-range diesel engines, up to the Caterpillar 3208 V8. Two-door and four-door cab configurations were available.

Distinguished from the medium duty C/K by its larger hood, the Kodiak/TopKick was given a full-width grille. In place of twin headlights inside the grille, the trucks were given quad rectangular headlights mounted below the grille; the Chevrolet/GMC emblem was moved from inside the grille to the grille. The Kodiak followed the Chevrolet naming tradition of "frontier beast" names for heavy conventionals (Chevrolet Bison and the Chevrolet Bruin) while the TopKick was a military slang term (in line with the GMC Brigadier and GMC General).

Shared with the C/K, the Kodiak/TopKick had two Chevrolet big-block engines for the gasoline engine lineup: a 6.0L V8 and a 7.0L V8. Two diesel engines were available: a Detroit Diesel 8.2L V8 (in turbocharged and naturally-aspirated "Fuel Pincher" form) and a Caterpillar 3208 turbocharged V8.

1990–2002

For 1990, General Motors redesigned the Kodiak/TopKick model lines as part of a redesign that consolidated its multiple large truck lines into a single product line. The GMC General and Astro had already been discontinued by Volvo GM, and General Motors consolidated the Chevrolet Bruin/GMC Brigadier, the medium-duty C/K, and the Kodiak/TopKick lines into the newly introduced 1990 Chevrolet Kodiak/GMC TopKick. Based on the all-new GMT530 architecture, the conventionals adopted their cabs from the GMT400 C/K pickup introduced in 1988. As before, two-door and four-door cab configurations were available; a raised-roof cab was an optional configuration.


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Wikipedia

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