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1972 Chevrolet C10

$49,997

1972 Chevrolet C10

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

C10

Year

1972

Mileage

47,370 miles

VIN

CCE142A168893

Body Type

Pickup Truck

Transmission

Automatic

Engine

350-300hp V8

Description

1972 Chevrolet C10 Short Bed — Custom Street Truck with 350 V8 and Show-Quality Finish Why This Car Is Special The 1967—1972 Chevrolet C10 generation is widely regarded as the most desirable body style Chevy ever put on a light-duty truck. Collectors and custom builders have been chasing this body style for decades, and for good reason. The lines are clean and angular without being aggressive, the cab is wide enough to be comfortable, and the short bed proportions on a two-wheel-drive truck like this one give it a low, purposeful stance that longer configurations simply cannot match.

Chevy sold enormous numbers of C10s during this generation, but the combination of age, years of daily use, and the popularity of the custom truck scene means that solid, well-built examples like this one have become genuinely difficult to find. The 1972 model year was the last of that beloved first-generation design. Chevy made a few detail changes from the 1971 trucks — most notably the amber front parking light lenses, which help identify a true 1972 at a glance.

The following year brought an entirely new body style, which means this 1972 Chevrolet C10 holds the distinction of being the final expression of one of the most iconic truck designs in American automotive history. This particular truck has been built as a custom street truck — not a trailer queen, not a rough weekend driver, but a thoughtfully assembled vehicle that drives as well as it presents. The VIN decodes this as a C10 short bed, two-wheel-drive, built at the Flint, Michigan assembly plant.

The short bed configuration on the 1972 C10 was always the sportier choice, and the lowered stance on this truck reinforces that character without going so low that it becomes impractical. Features List - 350 cubic inch V8, rated at 300 horsepower - 462 double hump angle plug cylinder heads - Chrome air cleaner - Finned aluminum valve covers - Dual exhaust - Automatic transmission - Power steering - Power front disc brakes - Vintage air conditioning - Auxiliary gauge cluster - Bucket seats with center console - Wood-grain dash trim - Aftermarket stereo with door-mounted speakers - Factory short bed configuration - Lowered stance - 20-inch chrome US Mag wheels - Chrome front and rear bumpers - Wood-grain tailgate panel - Spray-in bed liner - Tinted glass - Black exterior - Black vinyl interior Mechanical The engine in this 1972 Chevrolet C10 is a 350 cubic inch small block Chevy rated at 300 horsepower. What sets this engine apart from a standard 350 is what is sitting on top of it — a set of 462 double-hump cylinder heads.

Enthusiasts know these heads well. The double-hump, or fuelie, castings were originally developed for high-performance Corvette and Camaro applications in the 1960s and carried over into the early 1970s. The casting number 462 identifies these as the angle-plug variant, which positions the spark plugs at an angle that improves access and can benefit combustion efficiency.

These heads flow better than the standard truck castings that would have come on a base 350 of this era, and finding them on a C10 tells you something about how seriously this truck was built. The engine bay presentation matches the performance hardware. Finned aluminum valve covers and a chrome air cleaner give the engine compartment a clean, period-correct custom look that complements the original Chevy orange block and red plug wires visible in the photos.

The dual exhaust runs the length of the truck and exits at the rear, providing both the sound and the flow improvement you expect from a properly set up 350. Backing the engine is an automatic transmission, which is the right choice for a truck built to be driven regularly. Power steering and power front disc brakes have been fitted, meaning this 1972 C10 stops and steers like a vehicle you can actually use in modern traffic without second-guessing yourself at every intersection.

Vintage air conditioning rounds out the mechanical

Classic Chevrolet C10 Buyer's Guide

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1960–1987
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Complete buying guide for classic Chevrolet C10 pickups (1960-1987). Generation breakdown, frame inspection essentials, common issues by year, restomod vs original valuation, and current market prices.
This guide covers
10-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
5 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Chevrolet C10 Market Overview

Based on 326 Chevrolet C10 listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

326
Listed Now
$30,376
Avg. Asking Price
1937–1995
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Above Average
This car: $49,997
Low: $4,500 High: $114,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 68% ◄
Manual 21%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 7%
Good 12%
Fair 3%
Poor 0%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 326 listings →
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Classic Chevrolet C10 Buyer's Guide

The Chevrolet C10 is the most popular classic American truck on the road today, and that popularity has driven values up considerably over the last decade. Whether you're after a clean 1967-1972 short-bed Fleetside or a square-body restomod, this guide will help you spot the good, the bad, and the cleverly disguised.

What to Check Before Buying

Inspect frame rails under cab — Use flashlight and screwdriver. Stab gently at boxed sections. Solid metal resists; rotted metal flakes.
Pull floor mats and check floor pans — Both driver and passenger sides. Look for filler over rust holes — common shortcut by previous owners.
Examine cab corner rust — Visible from inside through kick panels. Rust here often migrates upward into the door hinge area.
Look at cowl drain area — Where windshield meets firewall. Plugged drains rot the cowl from inside out. Big repair if rotten.
Lift bed if possible — Inspect bed floor, bed sides, and bed support crossmembers. New paint hides damage; lift it up.
Check engine block stamps and casting numbers — Verify if the engine claimed (350, 396, 454) matches what's actually installed. Casting numbers identify year and displacement.
Verify transmission and rear axle — Stamps and tags identify original equipment. Important for documented original-condition claims.
Test all gauges and electrical — Wire gauge issues are common. Verify oil pressure, temperature, fuel level, alternator. Check headlights, marker lights, interior lights.
Drive on highway and on backroads — Listen for rear differential whine, transmission slip on shifts, brake pulsation, steering wander. Drive at least 30 minutes.
Document with photos before purchase — Photo every panel, frame rail, engine bay, undercarriage, and tag/stamp. Build the case before you wire money.

Common Issues

C10 trucks rust in predictable places. Lower cab corners, behind the rear wheels, the cab mount points to the frame, and the bed floor are all classic rust zones. The cab corner rust often hides behind cosmetic patches — always remove the kick panels and look up into the corner from underneath. Frame rust is the silent killer. The frame rails directly under the cab can rot from the inside out, especially on trucks that lived in salt-belt states. Check the boxed frame sections with a hammer or screwdriver — solid steel rings, rotten metal flakes. Mechanically, C10s are dead-simple — that's part of their appeal. The 250 inline-six, the 305 small block, and the 350 small block are all bulletproof. The Saginaw and Muncie manuals and the TH350/TH400 automatics are equally robust. The leaks and tired components on most surviving trucks are easy fixes — but compounded leaks can mean a tired engine that needs a refresh.

What to Look For

Two things matter most when shopping a C10: the frame and the cab. Everything else is replaceable. The frame should be solid, especially through the section directly under the cab and at the cab mount points. A flashlight under the truck is mandatory. Don't trust shiny paint on the frame — fresh paint can hide flake rust. The cab is the second non-negotiable. Cab corners can be replaced (they're a reproduction part you can buy for $200), but a totally rusted cab base is a job that justifies finding a different truck. Lift the floor mat, pull the kick panels, and look at the floor pans. Patch panels welded sloppily over rotten metal is a 'restoration' that's actually a re-rotting in slow motion. For square-body C10s (1973-1987), look closely at the cowl seam where the windshield base meets the firewall. Water collects there and rots both downward into the cab and forward into the firewall. This is one of the more expensive repairs on this generation.

Price Guide

C10 prices have moved dramatically since 2018. A driver-quality 1967-1972 short-bed Fleetside small-block runs $28,000-$48,000 today, with show-quality examples hitting $60,000-$95,000. Long-bed Fleetside trucks are $8,000-$15,000 less than equivalent short-beds — they're slower to appreciate but offer the most truck for the money. Square-body C10s (1973-1987) have been the breakout segment of the last five years. A clean 1981-1987 short-bed Silverado runs $22,000-$45,000, with restomods (LS-swapped, modern wheels, air ride) commanding $50,000-$95,000. Step-side beds are slightly less popular than Fleetsides but uniquely characterful. Project trucks (running but rough) start around $8,000-$15,000. Stripped frame-up restoration candidates can be had for $3,500-$7,000, but be honest about what the restoration will cost — $30,000-$60,000 is realistic before you're done with paint and interior.

Did You Know?

The 1967 C10 introduced the curved windshield that became the signature design element of the second-generation truck. Before 1967, all GM trucks had flat glass. The 'short-bed' versus 'long-bed' distinction comes down to wheelbase: 115 inches for short-beds, 127 inches for long-beds. The short-bed Fleetside is the most desirable configuration in today's collector market by a wide margin. The term 'square-body' for the 1973-1987 generation didn't exist when the trucks were new — it's a nickname adopted by enthusiasts in the 2000s and 2010s when this generation entered the collector market.

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