Real Deal NAPCO: 1957 Chevy 3600 4×4

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We take for granted that most every pickup truck sold in the U.S. these days either comes standard with 4WD or has it available as an option. This wasn’t always the case as even stalwarts like GM had to find outsourced partners to make a four wheel drive truck a reality when the idea first began gaining traction with consumers in the 1950s. Enter the Northwestern Auto Parts Company, or NAPCO, which helped GM bring a 4×4 pickup to the masses in 1957. This truck is one of just 500 sold in ’57 and offered for sale with no reserve.

The NAPCO-converted rigs are already rare machines, but some might say 1957 is the rarest of all. Like so many innovations you see over the course of a lifetime, the first year something is introduced is not necessarily its most popular incarnation of the product or feature. Now, the bulk of consumers can’t seem to fathom the thought of owning a vehicle without AWD or 4WD. The NAPCOs came with special badges and an instruction guide on how to engage 4WD inside the glovebox, but I don’t see either detail on this truck, which was previously repainted – and is likely when the fender badges went missing.

1957 is a popular year for Chevy products in general among enthusiasts, so it’s of little surprise see’re seeing the bidding activity we are. Think about a ’57 Corvette, or a ’57 Bel Air – imagine having those two icons and parking one of Chevy’s first 4WD pickups next to them in the same garage. The pickup came with either a 235-cu.in. OHV I6 or a “Taskmaster” 265-cu.in. V8, with this NAPCO sporting the latter. Combine that with the 4WD setup and you have the makings of a very desirable rig, even with the non-original paint job and some tired interior cosmetics.

The bed looks tidy with no obvious rust holes, and the same can be said of the body. The seller notes that there are some surface rust spots here and there but it overall seems like a very well preserved truck. The NAPCO is a legitimate collector’s item, with owners of classic car museums and celebrities like Tim Allen both among the legions of owners who have one or several in their collections. Bidding seems light at the moment, in my opinion, with bids to just $14,100 here on eBay. What do you think a largely original example like this ’57 NAPCO should fetch once the auction is over?

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Comments

  1. Bo

    Looks like all the rust is rattled can camouflaged!

    Like 3
    • jwaltb

      Little rust in the bed because most of it’s wood. And most of the wood planks have rotted spots.

      Like 1
  2. TimS

    “Gaining traction.” I see what you did there.

    Like 1
  3. Nelson C

    Cool truck. You’re not going to find one like this everyday. Nice to see it’s a four speed. The paint looks like it’s been gone over with ATF or some other mop-n-glow.

    Like 1
  4. M

    Used Cars movie special right there

    Like 1
  5. Budster

    NAPCO you say? Here’s an original. Go to youtube and type in “The Called” makings of a perfect day. Watch just the first 8 minutes. Did you notice the driveshaft in the bed of the truck? It is a Jennifer Mac film with Juan. I would paste a link but don’t believe they allow that here. This is a 1953 NAPCO GMC.

    Like 0
  6. Bob_in_TN Bob_in_TNMember

    Good observation Jeff, how 4WD (for trucks) and AWD (for cars) has become very common on modern vehicles. Another of the many automotive changes over the decades.

    Like 0
  7. guggie

    Dad Had a Chevy version of this back in57 rare truck at the time ,had a snow plow for it plowed a lot of snow until the tin worm caught up with it!

    Like 2
  8. Paul Alexander

    Rust? Wood rot? I drove a 57 Chevy truck for many years. It never needed anything more than regular maintenance and consumables for the nearly 100K I put on top of the 76K it had when I bought it. A drunk driver totaled it, but his car looked a lot worse than my truck. I kept it and sold the whole wreck for way more than I paid for it. Amazing trucks!

    Like 1

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