Older pickups did not have center consoles but modern pickup usually do. some consoles are on the back of the center seat an example of this is Ford F250's
1998 S10 pickup truck come with a 18.5 gas tank.
The 1995 Pontiac Grand Am center console is held in place with for retaining bolts. Remove the shifter knob. Remove the center console retaining bolts. The center console will come off.
The first pickup truck was made in the depression. The idea was that with the truck, one could "pick up" and go anywhere. Just throw your belongings in the back and drive. Even today, this holds true with people camping on weekends with their truck.
The Mercedes-Benz ML 320 center console is held in place with six retaining bolts. Remove the retaining bolts and the center console will come loose.
Yes, If your truck did not come with the console from the factory then the harness that is in the headliner will not have the additional wires needed to run the console or the factory auto/dim mirror. Your best bet would be to get the harness out of a similar truck that came with the console or check eBay (alot of the consoles sold on eBay come with the harness)
The 1984 Chevrolet pickup truck with the 454 engine produced around 230-240 horsepower.
Open the console door and start looking for bolts that need to come out that hold it to the floor, also the top plate of the console will have to come off and then you will see all the bolts that need to come out to take it out.
Gain access to the back of the console and screw the retainer back on to the receptacle.
Yes, the center console locks
The Salvation Army is one national reputable charity that has a donation center in NY. They will come pick up the truck from you, or you can drive the truck to their donation center.
I'm not sure if you're asking specifically which year they began doing that, or if either model year had that feature. I current own a 93 Silverado, which does have the center console.
Yes, you could purchase a 1995 S10 truck with air for parts and swap everything over to your truck.