What sets the '67-72 C10 trucks above other generations is their distinguished long, low, and straight bodylines. Mark and his dad spent endless hours using a hammer and dolly, then filling, skimming, and block sanding to get the cab, fenders, hood, bedsides and tailgate perfectly straight and smooth. Grant Customs in Oroville, California, laid back the leading edge of the stock hood 2-inches and removed the center section of the hood. A center section from a '98 Chevy hood was then grafted in. The side marker lights, door locks, mirrors, tailgate handle, and bed stake pockets were all shaved and filled. The original driprail was removed and replaced with 1/4-inch rod. Chad's Auto Glass in Porterville installed new glass all the way around, including the one-piece side windows. The rear fenderwells were widened 3 inches and the entire bed floor was raised 6 inches. Painter Lee Millinich from Hanford, California, used DuPont Hot Hues Red Hot Meltdown paint as a basecoat, followed by color-sanding the surface silky smooth. The entire truck's skin was then buried in mutiple clearcoats. After it was given several weeks to cure in the hot summer San Joaquin Valley sun, it was then cut, buffed, and polished to an endless, mirror finish. The grille shell was given a couple coats of graphite color to match the Boyd Coddington five-spoke graphite wheel centers.
Opening the doors exposes us to a cramped cab red interior. The wider than wide dash was smoothed including the glovebox. The glovebox door was removed, then transformed into a raised gauge panel housing the TPI gauges.
It was then transplanted into the dash, in front of the chrome-plated ididit tilt steering column, and capped with a red leatherette-covered Billet Specialties three-spoke steering wheel. The smoothed dash, door panels, headliner,and factory cut down bench seat were covered with matching red leatherette by the crew at Big Daddy's Upholstery in Porterville. The cab floor was covered with Mercedes-Benz red wool carpet. The billet aluminum door handles and window cranks highlight the red leatherette door panels.
If you are waiting to hear about Marks awesome audio sound system and entertainment center with GPS, you will see or hear nothing. The only sound is the rumblin' thunder of the potent 350ci V-8 under the hood.
This time around was a long journey. Mark said he couldn't have done it without the help and advice from his dad, his brother-in-law Loren Johnson who laid the bed's wood floor, and the patience and support of his wonderful and understanding wife Michele. Mark's close friend, Mike Fusco of Fusco's Detail Shop, makes sure the little red GMC is always lookin' slick. Every time I see Mark, he's cruisin' low with a smile from ear to ear.
Cruisin' down the boulevard, with the wind blowing in his hair, and the tunes blasting in his ears has always been a vision forMike Fusco from Porterville. Mike, who is a physical education teacher in Visalia, California, owns a very successful auto detailing business, Fusco's Detail Shop. He has always liked the straight and clean bodylines of the '67-'72 Chevy/GMC trucks.
Mike's buddy Mark McDonald, who's also from Porterville, has a hammered '69 GMC pickup. Never one to replicate others, Mike decided to build a Chevy two-door Blazer, which he named FATT '70. After meeting with custom builder Bob Grant from Grant Customs in Oroville, they discussed Mike's vision to transform his Blazer into a radically modified custom roadster.