1997
Chevrolet S-10

Starts at:
$17,680
Shop options
New 1997 Chevrolet S-10
See ratings
Consumer rating
Owner reviewed vehicle score
Not rated
Safety rating
NHTSA tested vehicle score
Consumer rating
Owner reviewed vehicle score
Not rated
Safety rating
NHTSA tested vehicle score
Shop Cars.com
Browse cars & save your favorites
Dealers near you
Find & contact a dealership near you
no listings

We're not finding any listings in your area.
Change your location or search Cars.com to see more!

Change location

Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • Reg Cab 108.3" WB
    Starts at
    $11,703
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,171 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 117.9" WB
    Starts at
    $12,003
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,509 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 108.3" WB LS (CMI)
    Starts at
    $12,360
    23 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,171 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 108.3" WB LS
    Starts at
    $12,553
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,171 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 117.9" WB LS
    Starts at
    $12,853
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,509 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab Sportside 108.3" WB LS
    Starts at
    $13,003
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,165 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Ext Cab 122.9" WB LS 4-Cyl (CMI)
    Starts at
    $14,160
    23 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,368 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Ext Cab 122.9" WB LS
    Starts at
    $14,553
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,368 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Ext Cab Sportside 122.9" WB LS
    Starts at
    $15,003
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,362 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Ext Cab 122.9" WB LS V6 (CMI)
    Starts at
    $15,115
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,368 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 108.3" WB 4WD
    Starts at
    $16,353
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,094 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 117.9" WB 4WD
    Starts at
    $16,685
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,509 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 108.3" WB 4WD LS
    Starts at
    $17,253
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,094 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab 117.9" WB 4WD LS
    Starts at
    $17,680
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,509 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Reg Cab Sportside 108.3" WB 4WD LS
    Starts at
    $17,703
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    1,089 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Ext Cab 122.9" WB 4WD LS
    Starts at
    $19,153
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    896 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs
  • Ext Cab Sportside 122.9" WB 4WD LS
    Starts at
    $19,603
    16 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    891 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    See all specs

The good & the bad

This vehicle doesn't have any good or bad insights yet.

Use our comparison tool to look at this model side-by-side with other vehicles or view the full specifications list .

Start your comparison

Expert 1997 Chevrolet S-10 review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By
Full article
our expert's take

SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, Tex.-Electric vehicles could work on this tropical tip of Texas. The year-round temperature is right, averaging about 76 degrees Fahrenheit. Commuting is a cinch — five miles of road from the top to the bottom of the town proper, and the island is 2.5 miles across at its widest point.

Assuming you had business in Port Isabel, which lies two miles west of the Queen Isabella Causeway, you could make the round trip in an electric vehicle with little or no hassle.

Also, the civic attitude in these parts is perfect for battery-car advocates. Seems as if everyone, from shrimpers to the managers of recreational vehicle parks, is into the environment in a big way.

But electric vehicles in the Washington area, where I tested the 1997 Chevrolet S10 Electric pickup? Getoutta here! As presently constituted, electric vehicles are of little use for the long commutes, high speeds, heavy traffic and whimsical weather of a metropolitan environment such as the District and its suburbs.

A week in the S10 Electric proved that much.

Background: Electric vehicles aren’t new. They were among the first vehicles on the world’s roads. But they didn’t make it then for the same reason they’re having a hard time making it now: lousy travel range.

That is why General Motors is marketing the S10 Electric as a fleet truck to be used on dedicated, short-distance routes. But here’s betting that, even in such a limited application, the S10 Electric will find itself parked more often than conventional, gasoline-powered trucks. It isn’t hard to figure why.

With its advanced lead-acid battery pack, the S10 Electric is designed to run at least 50 miles between charges at a constant speed of 45 miles per hour, carrying two occupants weighing a total of 322 pounds.

But it takes little to upset the S10 Electric’s range calculation, as demonstrated by three trips between Arlington and the District, including one uninterrupted 18-mile round trip and two more nine-mile commutes at the beginning and end of a business day.

The round-trip run was at midnight — mild temperatures, light traffic — at speeds ranging from 20 miles per hour to 55 mph. The result:53 percent of the S10 Electric’s battery power was discharged.

The first nine-mile, workday commute was in morning rush hour — temperature in the mid-eighties, heavy traffic, lots of stop-and-go — with a speed range matching the midnight run. Result: Nearly 65 percent of S10 Electric’s battery power discharged. The second nine-mile commute the same day in lighter, late-evening traffic and mild temperatures nearly wiped out what was left of the battery charge.

The midnight run included one 180-pound occupant and another weighing 110 pounds. The business day commutes involved only the 180-pound driver and an 11-pound briefcase. None of the commutes involved the use of the S10 Electric’s available sound system or air conditioner.

The S10 Electric is equipped with Delphi Energy Systems’ 85-kilowatt, three-phase, liquid-cooled AC (alternating current) motor, which produces the gasoline engine equivalent of 114 horsepower. Using Delphi’s Magne Charge inductive charging system, the motor’s batteries can be recharged in 2.5 hours (going from a 15 percent to a 95 percent state of charge) at 70 degrees Fahrenheit.

The Delphi charging system is remarkably fast, as electric vehicle charging systems go. But the S10 Electric’s travel range will do little to move this truck from heavily subsidized fleet sales to retail marketplaces in the urban Northeast and Midwest.

1997 Chevrolet S10 Electric Pickup

Complaint: Travel range that can vary widely with temperature and traffic levels; a real-world drive to work can drain the battery in a big hurry, even without running the air conditioner or using the radio.

Praise: Electric vehicles have a real market opportunity in places such as Texas’s South Padre Island. Electric-powered bikes, scoote rs and two-seaters already are being used as getaway vehicles in a variety of recreational vehicle parks. People want them here and in other leisure environments.

Head-turning quotient: Zip.

Ride, acceleration and handling: Bad ride. Battery weight on light suspension makes the truck bounce and bottom like crazy on bumpy streets. Acceleration is 0 mph to 60 mph in 13.5 seconds — something akin to eternity in auto speed terms. Handling is affected by an overloaded, squiggly feeling, largely because of the weight of the underbody batteries. Braking is nothing to cheer — 182.2 feet from 60 mph to 0 mph ondry roads; substantially longer on wet roads and in panic braking.

Price: A regular, base S10 pickup will run about $12,000. The electric version costs about $20,000, not including the cost of the Magne Charge inductive charging system, which runs about $2,100.

Purse-strings note: It’s gasoline, until somebody comes up with a battery-powered vehicle that offers comparable range, speed, reliability and utility at a gasoline-powered price.

1997 Chevrolet S-10 review: Our expert's take
By

SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, Tex.-Electric vehicles could work on this tropical tip of Texas. The year-round temperature is right, averaging about 76 degrees Fahrenheit. Commuting is a cinch — five miles of road from the top to the bottom of the town proper, and the island is 2.5 miles across at its widest point.

Assuming you had business in Port Isabel, which lies two miles west of the Queen Isabella Causeway, you could make the round trip in an electric vehicle with little or no hassle.

Also, the civic attitude in these parts is perfect for battery-car advocates. Seems as if everyone, from shrimpers to the managers of recreational vehicle parks, is into the environment in a big way.

But electric vehicles in the Washington area, where I tested the 1997 Chevrolet S10 Electric pickup? Getoutta here! As presently constituted, electric vehicles are of little use for the long commutes, high speeds, heavy traffic and whimsical weather of a metropolitan environment such as the District and its suburbs.

A week in the S10 Electric proved that much.

Background: Electric vehicles aren’t new. They were among the first vehicles on the world’s roads. But they didn’t make it then for the same reason they’re having a hard time making it now: lousy travel range.

That is why General Motors is marketing the S10 Electric as a fleet truck to be used on dedicated, short-distance routes. But here’s betting that, even in such a limited application, the S10 Electric will find itself parked more often than conventional, gasoline-powered trucks. It isn’t hard to figure why.

With its advanced lead-acid battery pack, the S10 Electric is designed to run at least 50 miles between charges at a constant speed of 45 miles per hour, carrying two occupants weighing a total of 322 pounds.

But it takes little to upset the S10 Electric’s range calculation, as demonstrated by three trips between Arlington and the District, including one uninterrupted 18-mile round trip and two more nine-mile commutes at the beginning and end of a business day.

The round-trip run was at midnight — mild temperatures, light traffic — at speeds ranging from 20 miles per hour to 55 mph. The result:53 percent of the S10 Electric’s battery power was discharged.

The first nine-mile, workday commute was in morning rush hour — temperature in the mid-eighties, heavy traffic, lots of stop-and-go — with a speed range matching the midnight run. Result: Nearly 65 percent of S10 Electric’s battery power discharged. The second nine-mile commute the same day in lighter, late-evening traffic and mild temperatures nearly wiped out what was left of the battery charge.

The midnight run included one 180-pound occupant and another weighing 110 pounds. The business day commutes involved only the 180-pound driver and an 11-pound briefcase. None of the commutes involved the use of the S10 Electric’s available sound system or air conditioner.

The S10 Electric is equipped with Delphi Energy Systems’ 85-kilowatt, three-phase, liquid-cooled AC (alternating current) motor, which produces the gasoline engine equivalent of 114 horsepower. Using Delphi’s Magne Charge inductive charging system, the motor’s batteries can be recharged in 2.5 hours (going from a 15 percent to a 95 percent state of charge) at 70 degrees Fahrenheit.

The Delphi charging system is remarkably fast, as electric vehicle charging systems go. But the S10 Electric’s travel range will do little to move this truck from heavily subsidized fleet sales to retail marketplaces in the urban Northeast and Midwest.

1997 Chevrolet S10 Electric Pickup

Complaint: Travel range that can vary widely with temperature and traffic levels; a real-world drive to work can drain the battery in a big hurry, even without running the air conditioner or using the radio.

Praise: Electric vehicles have a real market opportunity in places such as Texas’s South Padre Island. Electric-powered bikes, scoote rs and two-seaters already are being used as getaway vehicles in a variety of recreational vehicle parks. People want them here and in other leisure environments.

Head-turning quotient: Zip.

Ride, acceleration and handling: Bad ride. Battery weight on light suspension makes the truck bounce and bottom like crazy on bumpy streets. Acceleration is 0 mph to 60 mph in 13.5 seconds — something akin to eternity in auto speed terms. Handling is affected by an overloaded, squiggly feeling, largely because of the weight of the underbody batteries. Braking is nothing to cheer — 182.2 feet from 60 mph to 0 mph ondry roads; substantially longer on wet roads and in panic braking.

Price: A regular, base S10 pickup will run about $12,000. The electric version costs about $20,000, not including the cost of the Magne Charge inductive charging system, which runs about $2,100.

Purse-strings note: It’s gasoline, until somebody comes up with a battery-powered vehicle that offers comparable range, speed, reliability and utility at a gasoline-powered price.

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
3 years / 36,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
5 model years or newer / up to 75,000 miles
Basic
12 months / 12,000 miles bumper-to-bumper original warranty, then may continue to 6 years / 100,000 miles limited (depending on variables)
Dealer certification
172-point inspection

Compare similar vehicles

Select cars to compare for more detailed info.
  • 1997
    4.9
    Chevrolet S-10
    Starts at
    $11,703
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    1,509 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    Compare
  • 1993
    4.0
    GMC Suburban
    Starts at
    $19,408
    -
    MPG
    -
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    -
    Drivetrain
    -
    Payload Capacity
    -
    Towing Capacity
    Compare
  • 1999
    GMC Savana 2500
    Starts at
    $20,509
    15 City / 19 Hwy
    MPG
    1
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    -
    Payload Capacity
    -
    Towing Capacity
    Compare
  • 1999
    4.2
    Chevrolet S-10
    Starts at
    $13,018
    19 City / 26 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    Gas L4
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    1,384 lbs
    Payload Capacity
    N/A
    Towing Capacity
    Compare
  • 2004
    3.3
    GMC Savana 1500
    Starts at
    $22,800
    -
    MPG
    1
    Seat capacity
    Gas V8
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    -
    Payload Capacity
    -
    Towing Capacity
    Compare
  • 2003
    4.0
    GMC Sonoma
    Starts at
    $14,770
    19 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    3
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    -
    Payload Capacity
    -
    Towing Capacity
    Compare
  • Compare more options
    Use our comparison tool to add any vehicle of your choice and see a full list of specifications and features side-by-side.
    Try it now

Consumer reviews

4.9 / 5
Based on 8 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.3
Interior 3.8
Performance 4.7
Value 4.7
Exterior 4.3
Reliability 5.0

Most recent

Good ride, reliable, and a great value.

i have a 1997 extended cab 4x4 Its a great midsize pickup-truck it rides amazing especially in the snow. Its very reliable and seems to last forever. I easily do most maintenance and repairs myself. An amazing value when compared to the price of used Chevy Colorado which cost $30,000.00 and up.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
4 people out of 5 found this review helpful. Did you?
Yes No

First car I’ve ever owned and I love it

It’s a great truck, mine is RWD with v6 vortec engine and runs great. I wrecked it a bit ago and it still runs fine after the repair, the jack and tire iron are in an easily accessible place in the extended cab version.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 4.0
Reliability 5.0
12 people out of 12 found this review helpful. Did you?
Yes No

Latest news from cars.com

See all news

Chevrolet dealers near you

FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 1997 Chevrolet S-10?

The 1997 Chevrolet S-10 is available in 2 trim levels:

  • (4 styles)
  • LS (13 styles)

What is the MPG of the 1997 Chevrolet S-10?

The 1997 Chevrolet S-10 offers up to 20 MPG in city driving and 27 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 1997 Chevrolet S-10?

The 1997 Chevrolet S-10 compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 1997 Chevrolet S-10 reliable?

The 1997 Chevrolet S-10 has an average reliability rating of 5.0 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 1997 Chevrolet S-10 owners.

Is the 1997 Chevrolet S-10 a good Truck?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 1997 Chevrolet S-10. 100.0% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.9 / 5
Based on 8 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.3
  • Interior: 3.8
  • Performance: 4.7
  • Value: 4.7
  • Exterior: 4.3
  • Reliability: 5.0
Your list was successfully saved.
Your comparisons
 
 
 
 
Save list Compare