8. GMC Syclone
Back in the 1980s, GM experimented with turbocharged engines, which was in sync with the industry trends at the time. The most famous of them all was the Buick Grand National or Buick GNX. It featured a 3.8-liter turbocharged V6 engine with under five-second 0 to 60 mph times. With that kind of firepower, those black Buicks were terrorizing the drag strips and stop lights. By the early 1990’s, the Buicks were gone and GM engineers were looking where to install that turbo hardware.
They decided to make a sports truck out of a plebian Chevrolet S10 – a compact pickup with diminutive four-cylinder power. This is how the GMC Syclone was born. GM took an ordinary S10 body shell and installed a 4.3-liter V6 with a turbocharger for 280 HP. They included a special four-speed automatic they sourced from a Corvette and performance-based all-wheel drive.
The power figures don’t sound like much these days, but the Syclone was able to sprint to 60 mph in just 5.3 seconds, making it faster than contemporary Ferraris. The key was light weights, small dimensions and lots of torque from that turbocharged engine. But the price was significantly higher than the regular model. They built less than 3,000 – almost all of them in their signature black color.
Today, the GMC Syclone is a collector vehicle and a highly-desirable model. It is still quite fast and can hold its own against much younger, more powerful cars, too.