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Ultra-Rare Factory 1997 Chevy S-10 EV Pops Up for Sale on Facebook

Chevrolet S-10 Electric
Chevrolet S-10 Electric

It'll be a while yet before the United States sees an electric pickup the average American can afford. Even the cheapest Ford F-150 Lightning still runs you more than $50,000, and you can forget playthings like the Rivian R1T and Tesla Cybertruck. What we need is a truck like the 1997 Chevrolet S-10 Electric that's for sale on Facebook Marketplace, for a price that makes it look like a steal by comparison.

The Chevy S-10 Electric was one of several early EVs that automakers rolled out in the 1990s. It got its drivetrain from GM's EV1 program, meaning it was front-wheel drive rather than rear-drive, and detuned to 114 horsepower to account for its extra weight. That meant zero to 50 mph (yes, fifty) took 13.5 seconds, and that it topped out at only 71 mph.

1997 Chevrolet S-10 Electric
1997 Chevrolet S-10 Electric
1997 Chevrolet S-10 Electric
1997 Chevrolet S-10 Electric

Like modern EVs, it stowed its batteries in the floor, specifically in the rails of the truck's ladder chassis. The standard battery was a 15 kilowatt-hour array of lead-acid batteries, but a 29-kWh nickel-metal-hydride pack was also available. They gave about 60 and 130 miles of range respectively, and charged using an inductive "Magne Charge" paddle that attached behind the license plate. (This charger was also shared with the original Toyota RAV4 EV.)