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2000 Chevrolet Express


Preview 2000 Chevrolet Express
Preview Express
Preview 2000 Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express
Preview Chevrolet Express

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Engine size - Displacement - Engine capacity:5800 cm3
Transmission Gearbox - Number of speeds:Automatic
Fuel Type:Gasoline
Drive wheels - Traction - Drivetrain:FF
Price (out of date):$22212


The Express comes with the following engine options; a 4.3-liter V-6 with 200 hp; a 5.0-liter V-8 with 220 hp; a 5.7-liter V-8 with 255 hp; 7.4-liter V-8 with 290 hp; or a turbocharged diesel V-8 with 195 hp. All come with a 4-speed automatic. This van sits up to 15 passengers.

2000 Chevrolet Express specs, Engine size 5800cm3, Fuel type Gasoline, Drive wheels FF, Transmission Gearbox Automatic

Chevrolet (IPA: / ˌʃɛvroʊˈleɪ/ - French origin) (also known as Chevy) is a brand of automobile, produced by General Motors (GM). It is the top selling GM marque, with "Chevrolet" or "Chevy" being at times synonymous with GM.

Chevrolet offers 18 vehicles and many different enhanced versions in its home market. The vehicles range from subcompact cars to medium duty commercial trucks. Its number one seller in the United States is the Silverado pickup. Chevrolet continues to be the performance, price, MPG, and value leader for General Motors North America.


North American history

Chevrolet was founded by Louis Chevrolet (Swiss-French) and William C. Durant (American). Louis Chevrolet was a race-car driver, and William Durant, founder of General Motors, had been forced out of GM in 1910. He wanted to use Chevrolet's designs to rebuild his own reputation as a force in the automobile industry. As head of Buick Motor Company, prior to founding GM, Durant had hired Chevrolet to drive Buicks in promotional races.

Chevrolet first used its "bowtie" logo in 1913. It is said to have been designed from wallpaper Durant once saw in a French hotel. Another theory is that it is a stylized version either of the shape of Switzerland or the cross on the flag of Switzerland, Louis Chevrolet's birthplace.

In 1915, Durant was in the process of setting up Chevrolet production facilities in Toronto, Canada. Later that year, during a luncheon meeting in New York with "Colonel Sam" McLaughlin, whose McLaughlin Motor Car Company manufactured McLaughlin-Buick cars, it was agreed that Chevrolets with McLaughlin-designed bodies would be added to the Canadian company's product line. Three years later, the two Canadian operations (Chevrolet was by then a part of GM in the United States) were bought by GM to become General Motors of Canada Ltd.



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