What Are the Interior Specs for a 1990 Chevy Van?
- Chevy's G-series vans, also named Chevy Van, are full-sized vans that can haul a lot of passengers. Chevy began building vans in 1968 and started producing what was known as the Chevy Van in 1971. The Chevy Van underwent a lot of changes, both mechanically and cosmetically, throughout its production life. It was removed from production after the 1996 model year, replaced by the Express vans.
- All of the Chevy Vans, regardless of the trim line, had the same front interior dimensions. They had 40.8 inches of front headroom, 39.5 inches of front legroom, 68.8 inches of front shoulder room and 69.7 inches of front hip room.
- The Chevy Van models all had identical rear interior dimensions. They had 40.9 inches of rear headroom, 37.2 inches of rear legroom, 63.5 inches of rear shoulder room and 51.5 inches of rear hip room.
- Both the G10 and G10 extended models were designed to seat up to five passengers. The G20 models could seat five passengers standard and up to eight with available options. The G30 standard model could seat five passengers. The G30 HD model was designed to seat five passengers standard and 12 passengers with optional packages. The G30 HD Extended diesel seated 12 passengers standard and up to 15 passengers with available options. The G30 HD diesel seated five passengers standard and up to 12 passengers with available options.
- The 1990 Chevy Van came standard with an AM radio and vinyl-covered bucket seats. There were three optional radios for this van: premium audio system, AM/FM/cassette and AM/FM stereo. It had optional air conditioning (A/C), with an additional option of rear A/C and heat. Lastly, it had optional cloth seating, power windows and power door locks.
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