Advertisement

Fox Shocks Will Sell This Skunkworks Silverado With 700 HP and Wild Suspension

Fox Shocks Will Sell This Skunkworks Silverado With 700 HP and Wild Suspension photo
Fox Shocks Will Sell This Skunkworks Silverado With 700 HP and Wild Suspension photo

It's looking like Chevy will never build a super truck to rival the Ford F-150 Raptor. The Bowtie brand has had over a decade to put something together, and it's my hunch that they would have done it already if they were ever going to. Still, there are lots of people who want to see that, including Fox—y'know, the suspension supplier for the F-150 Raptor and Raptor R. To fill the void in the turnkey desert runner space, and maybe twist Chevy's arm a little, Fox is building 700-horsepower Silverados that feature way more than some stickers and a lift kit.

The 2024 Chevrolet Silverado Fox Factory Edition is serious. That's evidenced not only by its Whipple supercharged 6.2-liter V8, which also churns out a claimed 640 lb-ft of torque, but also by the semi-active Live Valve shocks and Brenthel brothers suspension. That's undoubtedly the most special part about the truck, which Fox plans on selling to the public with a three-year/36,000-mile warranty. Only 500 will be made altogether.

Just like in the F-150 Raptor, the Fox Live Valve shocks in this Silverado pick up on acceleration, braking, and steering cues while analyzing the terrain every few thousandths of a second. Because the suspension communicates with the truck's ECU and chassis systems, it's able to optimize compression and rebound base valves for that exact moment, resulting in an unbeatably smooth and stable experience. Rob Stanford, Fox's director of electronics and software, said it took multiple teams of drivers and engineers three years to make this all work seamlessly in the background with the Silverado's computers.

ADVERTISEMENT

Additionally, Fox built in three terrain-specific drive modes that are easily selectable on the Silverado's dash. More customizable drive modes are coming soon, and Fox promises to keep improving the experience for owners with over-the-air updates. Whoever buys one of these can even monitor suspension telemetry through the Fox mobile app. There's so much more going on here than with typical aftermarket upgrades; it's a holistic leveling up that surely transforms the Silverado in Baja situations.

Now that Fox has done the work, you'd think it would be mighty tempting for Chevy to bring them on as a factory partner. Maybe, maybe not. But it has to be enticing.

<em>Fox</em>
Fox

The software is obviously impressive, but so is the hardware. Fox threw its 3.2-inch internal bypass shocks at the Silverado, which may seem strange to some people. Aren't external bypass units better for this kind of driving? Not always, as these position-sensitive shocks feature multiple zones of damping control. They're able to better manage hard bottom-outs while also providing "an initial catch" for landings, as Fox puts it. Once the shock goes past the ride zone in rebound or compression, it blocks off the bleed holes and forces fluid through the main piston. It's multi-faced in its function, then, providing better performance in essentially every condition.