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The Chevy GEO Tracker will make you forget the Suzuki Samurai. Tracker has the road-holding stability, performance and quiet that Samurai lacks. One major problem, however: You won`t be able to ...
Geo was a short-lived, forgettable budget sub-brand of Chevrolet that existed from the late 1980s to the late 1990s. One of the brand’s most popular vehicles was the Suzuki Sidekick-based Tracker.
Today’s Chevy Tracker – a.k.a. Trax – bears little resemblance to the Chevy/Geo Tracker of yesteryear, which many Americans are likely at least passingly familiar with.
It seemed fitting that on Quake Day, proclaimed earlier this month, we test a pair of survival vehicles. We drove the Chevy GEO Tracker and the Jeep Wrangler. Since scientists had voiced some doubt… ...
This showy 1991 Geo Dirt Tracker concept has V6 power, giant all-terrain tires, and Corbeau seats, making it more aggressive and capable than the stock Tracker.
This 1994 Geo Tracker is engine-swapped and rocks 33s and a rooftop tent.
Baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and GEO. No rhyme, but there`s reason for Chevrolet to start offering the GEO lineup of cars and utility vehicles in the 1989 model year. Among the major Japanese carm… ...
First introduced for the 1989 model year across the Americas, as a rebadged version of the little Suzuki Escudo/Vitara crossover SUV, the Chevrolet/Geo Tracker has had a rather convoluted history ...
The Chevrolet Tracker was a small sport utility vehicle made from 1989-2004, and was known was the Geo Tracker until 1998, before General Motors discontinued the Geo brand. GM made the SUV in ...
The second-generation Tracker/Vitara, with a new engine and suspension, came out in 1999. Total production from the plant in 2001 was slightly more than 60,000 vehicles for both the Tracker and ...