Elite Dealer

1961 Chevrolet C/K Series

$10,995

1961 Chevrolet C/K Series

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

C/K Series

Year

1961

VIN

AAH32260

Body Type

Pickup Truck

Transmission

Manual

Engine

307

Description

1961 Chevy fleet side short bed with a rebuilt 307 engine ( never been started, needs break in ), 4 speed saginaw transmission, custom rims. Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Classic Chevrolet C/K Series Buyer's Guide (1960–1987)

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1960–1987
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The C/K naming system covers three decades of Chevrolet trucks β€” the 1960–1966 originals, the iconic 1967–1972 Action Line, and the beloved Square Body era. Here's how the generations differ and what to look for in each.
This guide covers
βœ“ 12-point inspection checklist
βœ“ Common issues & what to avoid
βœ“ In-person inspection guide
βœ“ Market pricing by year & condition
βœ“ 5 FAQs answered
βœ“ History & fun facts

Chevrolet C/K Series Market Overview

Based on 60 Chevrolet C/K Series listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

60
Listed Now
$18,493
Avg. Asking Price
1960–1994
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Average Range
This car: $10,995
Low: $4,495 High: $74,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 45%
Manual 18% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 7%
Good 3%
Fair 12%
Poor 2%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 60 listings →
πŸ’°

What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1961 Chevrolet C/K Series

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Classic Chevrolet C/K Series Buyer's Guide (1960–1987)

When Chevrolet reorganized its truck lineup in 1960, the letters C and K became the foundation of an American institution. C for conventional two-wheel drive, K for four-wheel drive β€” simple, clear, and enduring. For twenty-seven years, the C/K series covered everything from half-ton haulers to one-ton workhorses across three distinct styling generations. If you're looking at a Chevrolet truck from this era and it isn't specifically labeled C10 or K10 in the listing, the buying principles here apply across the whole family.

What to Check Before Buying

Frame rail inspection β€” Probe full length of both rails with screwdriver β€” kick-ups and mid-section
Cab corners β€” Tap from outside; inspect lower door channel from inside for water damage
Inner cab structure β€” Inspect behind outer cab corner for deeper rust
Bed floor condition β€” Assess original steel, replacement wood, or aftermarket panels
VIN decode β€” Decode VIN before inspection to verify claimed engine, transmission, trim
4WD engagement (K models) β€” Test 2H, 4H, 4L β€” clean engagement with no grinding
Engine cold start β€” Listen for valve train or bearing noise; check oil condition
Transmission function β€” Smooth engagement in all ranges, no delayed Drive from cold
Rocker panels and door bottoms β€” Check lower door edges and rockers for rust
Firewall integrity β€” Check firewall for front collision evidence
Cab mounts (Square Body) β€” Check lower rear cab panels above cab mounts for rust β€” common on '73–'87
Axle seals (K models) β€” Inspect front knuckle seals and differential fill levels

Common Issues

Cab corner rust is universal across all C/K generations β€” the drainage channel routes water directly into the corner structure. Reproduction corners exist but inner structure must be assessed. Frame rust at kick-up sections is the structural concern. The 350 and 454 V8s are robust with enormous aftermarket support but high-mileage engines commonly need valve train work. On K-series trucks the Dana 44 front axle develops knuckle seal leaks and limited-slip wear. The TH350 and TH400 automatics are generally durable β€” delayed engagement from cold indicates a seal issue. Square Body trucks (1973–1987) rust at the lower rear cab panels above the cab mounts.

What to Look For

Frame rails front-to-back β€” probe with screwdriver at kick-up sections and mid-frame. Cab corners β€” tap from outside and inspect inside lower door channel; reproduction panels available. Bed floor β€” assess original steel vs. replaced wood or panels. Inner cab structure behind outer corners β€” more expensive rust damage often hidden. Engine bay firewall for accident damage. Decode VIN before visiting to verify claimed trim level and engine. Check transfer case engagement on K (4WD) models. Inspect driver's side frame behind cab on Square Body for bracket-area corrosion. Check rocker panels and door bottoms.

Price Guide

1967–1972 Action Line: short-wheelbase driver $22,000–$35,000; show quality $50,000–$80,000. Square Body 1973–1987: driver $18,000–$30,000; show $38,000–$60,000. First gen 1960–1966: undervalued at $16,000–$28,000 driver. K-series 4WD carries 10–20% premium over equivalent C-series. Big-block documented trucks command meaningful premiums.

Did You Know?

The 1967 redesign was shaped by GM's truck design studio, later GM's VP of Design. "Like a Rock" first appeared in 1991 advertising for the final Square Body years. The 1967–1972 C10 and its GMC sibling were the first American trucks offered with a factory full-floating rear axle as standard on heavy-duty variants.

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