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Similar to its chief rival, the Ford F-150, the 2022 Chevy Silverado is not a ground-up redesign. Rather, it's a substantial refresh that tackles some of the full-size truck's weak points, and expands the line-up a bit. And among the things improved are powertrain capability, interior design and the addition of an even more impressive off-road model.
Of course, the most noteworthy addition is the new 2022 Chevrolet Silverado ZR2. Like its little Colorado sibling, it features Multimatic DSSV spool-valve shocks and matched springs. The truck has 2 inches of lift compared to a standard Silverado, just like the Trail Boss, but Chevy says the ZR2 has more suspension travel. And based on our experience with the Colorado, the Silverado ZR2 will likely be more comfortable on- and off-road than the Trail Boss.
Other off-road-ready equipment includes front and rear locking differentials, skid plates and 33-inch tires, slightly larger than the Trail Boss' 32s, that help give the ZR2 the best ground clearance of the Silverado range of 11.2 inches. The front bumper has been redesigned, too, for better approach angles, and the exhaust tips have been moved forward to prevent damage off-road. The ZR2 comes in only one configuration for now: crew cab with the short bed and the 6.2-liter V8 with a 10-speed automatic. That engine makes 420 horsepower and 460 pound-feet of torque. Finally, people will know the ZR2 by its Flow Tie badge, additional grille lighting, black hood insert and unique wheels.
The most important update for the 2022 Silverado, though, is the completely revamped interior. The whole lumpen dashboard from before is gone starting with the LT trim. There's a crisp, tight-fitting dash with huge, well-integrated screens and stylish ***** and buttons. In fact, the 13.4-inch infotainment screen and 12.3-inch instrument display come standard in trims with this interior. A console-mounted electronic shifter is also introduced for trucks with five-passenger seating; six-passenger models maintain the column shifter. The High Country gets additional flair in the form of real open-pore wood trim, perforated leather and contrast stitching and embroidery.
What about trims below the LT? The Work Truck, Custom and Custom Trail Boss stick with the old lumpen dashboard and smaller infotainment system.
GM also didn't provide info or pictures of those lower trim levels, so I do not know if they too get the styling update applied to the LT and above trims. Those have new grilles that move the badge up and change the bars. I'm not so sure it works with the headlight design that's been relatively unchanged. The only tweak in that area is reworked running lights that have an illumination animation on start-up. Fog lights now have angular slotted covers over them.
There are also big capability improvements. The turbocharged 2.7-liter four-cylinder gets a stiffer crankshaft and reinforced engine block that have enabled Chevy to get more torque out of it. It now makes 420 pound-feet, which means it makes even more torque than the 5.3-liter V8. It's actually only 40 pound-feet away from the 3.0-liter diesel and the 6.2-liter V8. The eight-speed automatic it's paired to has also been tweaked for quicker downshifts and smoother shifting in general.
The diesel-powered Silverado is also updated. While the engine itself is unchanged, chassis changes allowed for the fitment of the Max Tow package. That allows a diesel Silverado to handle 13,300 pounds, a massive improvement over the 9,500 of the previous version. That also puts it tied with the 6.2-liter V8 for best-towing Silverado 1500 model.
There have been a few additional tech updates to the Silverado, too. All 2022 Silverados now come standard with automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, lane-keep assist and automatic high-beams. The High Country is available with Super Cruise, and is the only trim on which it's offered. It also operates with a trailer, and it can execute lane changes. You can read about our experience with the system in our prototype review. And of course, previous Silverado options such as its various trailering assist systems and multifunction tailgate will still be available.
The 2022 Silverado goes on sale next spring. Pricing and fuel economy numbers haven't been revealed, yet. We expect that information to become available closer to the spring.
I love it. Feels very Hummer inspired and not from 2010 for once. ZR2 isn't quite Raptor, but plenty of GM loyalists will like it I imagine. As a big Raptor aficionado and long time owner, I encourage more desert-focused offerings.
Originally Posted by SW17LS
Only issue with the article is the F150 is a ground up redesign really not a refresh lol.
But the new interior is much improved,
Not quite SW, it is a heavy redesign on the same architecture called T3
No thanks to the pandemic, it arrived later than planned. I recall it was supposed launch in the summer of 2020, but fell 6 months behind.
It seems no matter how much we do try, nearly every F-150 redesign arrives in the form of a launch date ultimatum. As in MUST be before Christmas/end of the year, despite often shooting for earlier dates before winter.
The 2004 F-150 was 9 months late and arrived in September 2003 instead of Christmas 2002 ('03 MY). They were 99% done designing it by Xmas 1999!
The 2009 called P415 was December 2008 arrival in dealers and a heavy redo of the 2004 model (P221/P225), with its updated basis first underpinning the 2007 Expedition/Navi. The updated frame was formally named T1 for half-ton body-on-frame applications.
The 2015 F-150 (P552) launched the current aluminum body architecture mated to a steel frame in December 2014, which is T3 and my field. T3 replaced T1 ultimately at Ford. T3 underpins the F-150 since 2014, Super Duty (P558) adopted it in September 2016, and Expedition/Navigator (U553/U554) in November 2017, as it's a state of the art architecture.
The latest F-150 called P702, which has been on sale since last December (2020), uses second generation T3 and is not ground up new.
We are working as some of you know, on its next generation (2026) and I think I have hinted at that in a few places for 2 years. TE1 will underpin the next Lightning and Expedition/Navi, which debut it (2025).
Originally Posted by mmarshall
More than that, if you include the new electric Lightning.
Not really, Alan Mulally and Mark Fields always intended to offer a hybrid and EV since the early 2010s, but knew they wouldn't be ready before end of the last decade, so they made the existing architecture, capable for them on the "mega facelift" for 2021.
A redesigned F-150 had to be purposely evolutionary and not revolutionary, as that's just how things are done at Ford. You evolve the design carefully over a decade long period and reuse a platform after 5-6 years. Remember the 1992 Taurus vs the first generation sold from end of 1985 to 1991? The 2009 F-150 vs the 2004-08 model? Kind of like that. The Lightning shares the same basis with the 2015 F-150, as does the 2023 Super Duty.
Redesign as all-new (MY 2015), run it 5-6 years with minor cosmetic change in between called Mid Life Action (2018 MY). Heavy tophat update treated as a Full Model Change or redesign (2021 MY), then MCA again at midlife (for MY 2024), and then redesign after that. 2016 F-150 Limited (P552) 2018 F-150 Limited (P552 MCA) 2021 F-150 Limited (P702)
GM was trying to do similar, but it didn't succeed very due to subpar execution with the 2019 half-tons. I vastly prefer the previous generation Sierra, while the Silverado was hit or miss and only looked passable in Trail Boss grade. Looks much better now inside out and having seen the 2024 F-150 proposals, it will be just fine.
I
Not quite SW, it is a heavy redesign on the same architecture called T3
The article implies that this refresh of the Silverado is similar to the F150 redesign and that's just not true. The current gen F150 is on the same archetecture but only 8% of the vehicle remains from the previous truck, largely in the frame and the structure of the bed. It is, for all intents and purposes an all new truck while this Silverado is a mid cycle refresh.
Big improvement inside and out. But I think that was pretty easy to achieve. Both areas were heavily lacking.
At this point, the front headlight/DRL area could use one more update, then everything will be more or less on par with the competition.
The article implies that this refresh of the Silverado is similar to the F150 redesign and that's just not true. The current gen F150 is on the same archetecture but only 8% of the vehicle remains from the previous truck, largely in the frame and the structure of the bed. It is, for all intents and purposes an all new truck while this Silverado is a mid cycle refresh.
Indeed SW, I didn't intend to discount what you said, but expand on it. The same changes applied generations ago for the 2009 F-150. The article comparing them as they did was applies to oranges and I hate when the automotive media does that. Misrepresent a product or a narrative surrounding it, meaning their readers unassumingly trust them.
A lot of faceless detractors and amateur reporters called the 2021 F-150, just a refresh to derisively denote it is obvious that it isn't 100% new, which wasn't the case for 2015. It seems that the term "refresh" has gotten so lost in translation and misinterpreted horribly (irks me), as to me I have always understand "refresh" to mean mid cycle update. Either aesthetic changes or equipment/packaging changes. Not a full model change like the F-150. This 2022 Silverado is exactly that, yet they keep making these comparisons anyway.
I did not work on the 2021 F-150, but did on the related 2022 Expedition and Navigator, as well as 2023 Super Duty. The replacements for T3 are underway for mid-decade as I mentioned earlier, so these are all facelifts and & redesigns are a nice little stopgap in a sense.
Last edited by Carmaker1; Sep 12, 2021 at 04:56 AM.