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Totally Tubular 'Tie

Mark Delezenne's 1990 Chevy
By Jon Thompson
Photography by Jon Thompson
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Passenger Side View
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Chassis View
A Corporate 14-bolt axle puts the power to the ground at the rear of Mark’s Chevy.
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Cockpit View
Mark selected a set of bucket seats from an ’87 Blazer and had them covered with gray tweed with purple insets. Gauges are from Auto Meter, while a white leather Grant wheel sits atop the steering column.
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Chassis View
That’s a Corporate 12-bolt rebuilt by Moser Engineering that you see there serving as a front axle. The pumpkin contains a 4.56 gearset helped along by a Detroit Locker.
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Chassis View
Mark says he’s completely happy with his Nightstalker Stage II nitrogen-pressurized suspension units, which he says provide 14 inches of travel.
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Chassis View
Note that the tubing that constitutes this Chevy’s frame has a body lift built right into it.
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Front Driver Side View
Mark isn’t at all bashful about getting his very special Chevy pickup dirty, though after a play day, it takes him some time to get it all cleaned up again.
1990 Chevrolet Silverado Specification
The specs.

When the noise and movement finally stop Mark examines himself. He’s mostly OK. He crawls out from the smoking ruin that he’s just been driving to find out that it’s mostly not OK. In fact, it’s totaled. Everything’s been turned into a pile of badly scuffed junk. Everything, that is, except the frame and the engine.

But Mark is not a guy who is easily discouraged. He recalls, “I considered my options, talked with my wife and father, and decided to bring the truck back from the dead.” Good thing, too, because Mark’s ’90 Silverado is better than ever, using the old frame and engine, but with everything else new.

That frame, in fact, is one reason Mark decided on the rebuild. At the time of his wreck it had been under the truck for just 18 months. It’s a race-car-style tubular chrome-moly frame custom-built for him by a fabricator named Terry Jones, who works in Altamonte Springs, Florida. Why, you ask? “Because,” Mark smiles, “I just wanted to be different.”

This tubular frame is plenty different, for sure, in part because Mark chose to powdercoat it a most eye-popping shade of, well, purple. But if all this is starting to sound just slightly nutty, just wait. This ground-up approach to truck building allowed Mark to optimize all his suspensions and axles. Since he was starting with a clean sheet of paper with this frame, he incorporated the pickup points for front-and-rear four-link systems. Those tubular custom links are completely adjustable, allowing Mark to dial his suspension for any set of conditions. At the other end of those links are a pair of heavy-duty axles—a Corporate 12-bolt up front, and a Corporate 14-bolt in the rear. Both contain 4.56 gearsets and Detroit Lockers. Taking a page from the Big Book of Monster Trucks, Mark uses a set of Nightstalker Stage II nitrogen-charged shocks with 14 inches of travel to handle all suspension chores. Then he added a custom drop pitman arm and crossover steering system. Downstream of all this, out where the meats meet the mud, Mark has chosen a set of 44x16.5 Boggers mounted on 16.5x14 Weld Typhoon polished aluminum wheels.

This project sprang from a total write-off, remember, so in order to do the rebuild correctly, Mark bought a second truck that he used as a parts vehicle. From this he took the body and bed. To the body he added a front clip from a ’95 GMC and a steel cowl-induction hood. His friend Davis Coleman at a shop called Sign Wizard shot the sheetmetal with a coat of pewter, and then applied the tasteful purple and yellow graphics. Mark started from scratch with the interior, using a set of seats from an ’87 Blazer, which he recovered in purple and silver tweed. He added gray carpet, a white leather steering wheel from Grant, a set of Auto Meter Phantom II gauges, and to top all this off, a JVC audio head unit, two MTX amplifiers, two 10-inch woofers, two 6.5-inch midrange speakers, and two tweeters.

With this level of detail work done, you’d be tempted to think that Mark’s rebuilt Chevy would be a trailer queen, a rig that never leaves the sterile confines of the grassy infields of the show world, but nothing could be further from the truth. The pictures you see here should prove that.

Interestingly, though his tubular Bow Tie is a pretty elaborate ride, Mark remains unsatisfied with what he has. He’s ordered an ’02 Silverado 2500, for which he’s already got extensive plans. Let’s just hope those plans don’t include having to build it twice.


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