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GMC (automobile)

GMC is a manufacturer of trucks, vans, and SUVs marketed in North America by General Motors Company. In January 2007, GMC was GM's 2nd largest-selling vehicle division after Chevrolet, ahead of Pontiac. GMC vehicles are also marketed in the Middle East.

Contents

History

GMC Truck, from a 1919 advertisement

In 1901, Max Grabowsky established a company called the "Rapid Motor Vehicle Company", which developed some of the earliest commercial trucks ever designed. The trucks utilized one-cylinder engines. In 1909, the company was purchased by General Motors to form the basis for the General Motors Truck Company, from which GMC Truck was derived.

Another independent manufacturer purchased by GM that same year was Reliance Motor Car Company. Rapid & Reliance were merged in 1911, and in 1912 the marque "GMC Truck" was first shown at the New York International Auto Show. Some 22,000 trucks were produced that year, though GMC's contribution to that total was a mere 372 units.

In 1916, a GMC Truck crossed the country from Seattle to New York City in thirty days, and in 1926, a 2-ton GMC truck was driven from New York to San Francisco in 5 days and 30 minutes. During the Second World War, GMC Truck produced 600,000 trucks for use by the U.S. military.

In 1925, GM purchased the controlling interest in Yellow Coach, a bus manufacturer based in Chicago, Illinois which was founded by John D. Hertz. After purchasing the remaining portion in 1943, GM renamed it GM Truck and Coach Division, and it manufactured transit and inter-urban buses in Canada and the United States until the 1980s. GM faced increased competition in the late 1970s and 1980s and stopped producing buses soon after. In 1987, GMC later sold their bus models to Transportation Manufacturing Corporation (also under Motor Coach Industries in Canada) and later NovaBus.

In 2002, GMC released a book entitled, GMC: The First 100 Years, that explained the company's complete history.

GMC currently manufactures SUVs, pickup trucks, vans, light-duty trucks, and medium-duty trucks. In the past, GMC also produced fire trucks, ambulances, heavy-duty trucks, military vehicles, motorhomes, and transit buses.

Similarities to Chevrolet Trucks

Although GMC and Chevrolet trucks are mostly identical, their differences have varied throughout the years. While Chevrolet is sold solely at Chevrolet dealers, GMC's are made available to franchisees of Buick, Pontiac, Cadillac. GMC's have slight trims differences from Chevrolets (i.e. grille, emblems, and other minor aesthetics). Between 1962 and 1972, most GMC vehicles were equipped with quad-headlights, while their Chevrolet counterparts were equipped with dual-headlights. Starting in 1973, with GM’s introduction of the new "rounded line" series trucks, GMC and Chevrolet trucks became even more similar, ending production of GMC’s quad-headlight models, and setting the standard for the Chevrolet/GMC line of trucks for over thirty years. During this period, the sister models of the two companies (Silverado/Sierra, Blazer/Jimmy, Tahoe/Yukon, etc) shared everything except trims and price. GM has recently begun a divergence in design between the two lines with the 2007 model Silverados and Sierras, which have some differences in sheetmetal and style.

Today, for the most part, GMC offers the same trucks available under the Chevrolet brand. A Sprint, for example, was a rebadged Chevrolet El Camino, the Sierra is a rebadged Chevrolet Silverado, etc. Alongside sister brand Cadillac, all three share the Suburban/Tahoe SUV platform due to Cadillac's upscale Escalade and Escalade ESV brands, with GMC's Yukon Denali being more close to the Escalades.

In the United States GMC is usually sold by dealers in combination with Buick or Pontiac, typically at lower volumes than the equivalent Chevrolet trucks. GMC's trucks, vans, and SUVs offer more options and standard features than Chevrolet, while Chevrolet is often offered as an entry-level car.[citation needed] In Canada, GMC is sold by Pontiac-Buick-GMC dealerships, usually at volumes equivalent or greater than the comparable Chevrolet trucks.

In 2007, GMC introduced the Acadia, a crossover SUV, which is the company's first unibody vehicle.

In 2009, GMC introduced the Terrain, a mid-size crossover SUV based on GM's Theta platform which slots below the Acadia as GMC's smallest crossover. Its predecessor, the GMT-360 based Envoy, was discontinued with the closure of GM's Moraine, Ohio plant on December 23, 2008

GMC models

A GMC "old look" bus built in 1948. A GMC New Look bus built in 1971 A 1948 GMC PD 3751 bus built for Greyhound

See also

References

This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (June 2008)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: GMC vehicles
Companies portal
vdGMC, a division of General Motors, light truck timeline, United States market, 1980s•present
Type 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
Mid-size crossover Terrain
Full-size crossover Acadia
Mid-size SUV S-15 Jimmy Jimmy
Typhoon Envoy Envoy
Full-size SUV K5 Jimmy Yukon Yukon Yukon
Suburban Suburban Yukon XL Yukon XL
Coupé utility Caballero
Compact pickup S-15 Sonoma Sonoma
Syclone
Mid-size pickup Canyon
Full-size pickup C/K Sierra Sierra Sierra
Van Safari Safari
G-Series Savana
vd • Automotive brands of General Motors Company, and those of its affiliates and former affiliates
BuickCadillacChevroletDaewooGMCHoldenOpelVauxhall
Affiliates GM-AvtoVAZGM Daewoo (70.1%) • Shanghai GM (49%) • Wuling (34%)
Former affiliates Fiat (2000•2005; up to 20%) • Isuzu (c.1971•2006; up to 49%) • Lotus (c.1986•1993; up to 100%) • Saab (c.1989•2010; up to 100%) • Subaru (c.1999•2006; 20%) • Suzuki (1985•2008; up to 15%)
Defunct brands Acadian (1962•1971) • Asüna (1992•1995) • Beaumont (1966•1969) • Bedford Vehicles (1930•1986) • Cartercar (1905•1915) • Elmore (1893•1912) • Geo (1989•1997) • Hummer (1992•2010) • LaSalle (1927•1940) • Marquette (1929•1930) • McLaughlin (1918•1942) • Oakland (1907•1931) • Oldsmobile (1897•2004) • Passport (1988•1991) • Pontiac (1926•2010) • Ranger (1968•1976) • Saturn (1985•2010) • Scripps-Booth (1913•1923) • Statesman (1971•1984) • Viking (1929•1931) • Yellow Coach (1925•1943)
vdGeneral Motors Company
GM lists

GM factoriesGM platformsGM enginesGM transmissionsGM vehicles by brand

Divisions / operating groups / joint ventures

CAMI Automotive Coskata, Inc. Ditech DMAX (engines) (50%) General Motors Europe GM Performance Division GM Powertrain Europe General Motors América do Sul General Motors Canada General Motors de Mexico General Motors do Brasil General Motors India General Motors Research Laboratories General Motors South Africa General Motors Ventures Global Hybrid Cooperation GM Goodwrench GM Service and Parts Operations GMAC (9.9%) GMAC Real Estate GMAC-RFC Holden Holden New Zealand Holden Special Vehicles Hughes Research Laboratories Hummer Isuzu Motors Polska Nuvell Financial Services OnStar Adam Opel GmbH Opel Performance Center GmbH Opel Special Vehicles GmbH Saturn Corporation

Former divisions and joint ventures

Allison Engine Company (1929•1995) Allison Transmission (1929•2007) Atlantic Aircraft Dayton-Wright Company (1919•1923) Delco Electronics Delphi Automotive Systems Detroit Diesel (1938•1988) DirecTV (1994•2003) Electro-Motive Diesel (1930•2004) Electronic Data Systems (1984•1996) Euclid Trucks (1953•1968) Fisher Body Fleetwood Metal Body Frigidaire (1919•1980) General Motors Diesel Division (1938•1987) General Motors Diesel (1949•1969) Ghandhara Industries (1953•1963) GM Defense (1950•2003) GM Truck & Bus Group (1943•1981) GMC Heavy Trucks Hughes Aircraft (1985•1997) Hughes Electronics (1985•1997) Hughes Network Systems (1987•2003) HughesNet (DirecWay/DirecPC) (1996•2003) Kettering University National City Lines New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc. (NUMMI; 1984•2009) New Venture Gear (36%, 1990•2002) North American Aviation (1933•1948) PanAmSat (1995•2003) Remy Electric (1918•1994) Rochester Products Division Terex Terminal Taxi Cab United Australian Automobile Industries (UAAI; 1989•1996) Winton Motor Carriage Company Yellow Coach (1925•1943)

vd • North American bus builders
Active Advanced Bus IndustriesBlue Bird CorporationChampion Bus Incorporated • Coach and Equipment • Collins Bus CorporationDesignLine CorporationDINA S.A.Dupont IndustriesEagle BusElDorado National • Federal Coach • Ford Motor CompanyGlaval BusGilligGirardin MinibusGoshen CoachIC BusMotor Coach IndustriesNorth American Bus IndustriesNew Flyer IndustriesNova BusOptima Bus CorporationOrion InternationalPrevost CarSetra • Stallion Bus Industries • Starcraft BusThomas Built BusesTrans Tech • Trident Bus Industries
Defunct AerocoachAM GeneralAmTranBeckCanadian Car and FoundryCarpenter Body CompanyCrown Coach CorporationFageolFifth Avenue Bus CompanyFlxibleGeneral Motors Corporation (buses)/General Motors Diesel DivisionKenworthLes Enterprises Michel CorbeilMack TrucksMillennium Transit ServicesNeoplan USASuperior Coach CompanyTransportation Manufacturing CorporationTwin CoachU.S. Bus CorporationWardWayne CorporationYellow Coach

Categories: GMC | Motor vehicle companies | General Motors marques | Bus manufacturers | Truck manufacturers | Companies established in 1901 | Companies based in Detroit, Michigan

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