A used-car dealer in Arkansas spent two years restoring a beat-up 1985 Chevy truck to its original condition. He never intended to let it go. Then a young woman walked up to him at a Tractor Supply and told him it was her grandfather’s truck and she wanted to buy it back as a birthday present for her father. Aaron Sluyter, owner of the family-run Performance Cars & Trucks NWA (@performanceofnwa) in Bentonville, Arkansas, posted the five-minute video on April 13. The story has drawn more than 92,000 views and hundreds of comments from viewers with their own accounts of vehicles that found their way home. Man Buys A Beat-Up Chevy Sluyter says a young man walked into his dealership about five years ago trying to sell the truck, his grandfather’s old pickup, that was no longer running well enough to drive daily. "It was rough," he says. "The paint was all peeling, AC didn’t work. I mean, it would barely run." Sluyter started looking it over and found the original bill of sale in the glove box, the purchase worksheet still tucked behind it, every piece of paperwork from the day the truck was bought new. Something about that got to him. "I was like, I’m gonna buy this, and I’m gonna preserve it, you know, redo everything, but leave it all original," he says. Over the next two years, he rebuilt the truck piece by piece, working on it most weekends, hiring out the jobs he couldn’t handle himself. "Redid the AC. The only thing I had to put on it was the carburetor," he says. "Went through the engine, tons of work. I mean, transmission work, all the brakes were terrible. Basically, every weekend, I was working on this truck, and the stuff I couldn’t do, I hired out." A Stranger Recognizes The Chevy One Sunday, Sluyter and his wife took the finished truck out for an afternoon drive and stopped at a Tractor Supply. Then a young woman approached him. Tell us what you think! View Comments "She goes, ‘I think that’s my grandpa’s old truck that he bought new,’" Sluyter says. He asked for her grandfather’s name and checked it against the bill of sale when he got home. "Sure enough, it was her grandpa’s truck," he recalls. She told him her father had a birthday coming up and had always wanted that truck. "The vehicle that he never quite got, you know, that he grew up driving in," Sluyter says. "I Was Kind of Hoping She Would Say No" Sluyter made her an offer: parts cost only, no charge for the two years of weekends he had spent under the hood. "Part of me kind of, like, my heart sank, because I really didn’t want to sell the truck at all," he says. The granddaughter and her sister agreed to the price. "Of course, I was kind of hoping she would say no," he admits. She told him she would video the moment she gave her father the truck and send him the footage. When the father came to pick up the title, he stopped at something Sluyter had left untouched inside the cab, a small rose wedged above the dashboard. Sluyter says the son explained that the rose was from the day the grandfather was saved at church. "When he got saved, the church gave out those little roses, and he put that up there and kept it," Sluyter says. His instinct to keep everything original had preserved not just the truck but a token of the family’s faith. Why Are Square Body Chevys Beloved? The 1985 Chevy truck Sluyter describes belongs to the "square body" generation of Chevrolet C/K pickups, produced from 1973 to 1987. These trucks have become increasingly collectible, valued for their mechanical simplicity, their durability, and the fact that a competent weekend mechanic can still keep one running indefinitely. Keith Register summed up the appeal in the comments. "My 1985 I bought brand new. Paid $8,800. Still own it," he wrote. CALAPLAN observed: "We won’t hear stories like that over a Chevy built today 30 years from now." Viewers Want More The most common complaint was that Sluyter told the whole story without ever showing the truck. "ALL THAT AND NO PHOTO OF THE TRUCK?!" wrote UNCLE POTATO in the top comment. Simply jam added, "I’m upset for investing all this time and didn’t get to see this truck. I feel bamboozled." When one viewer asked him to post the family’s reaction video, Sluyter declined. "I do have that video, but that was something the family shared with me privately. Out of respect for them, I’m gonna keep that one off social," he replied. Several commenters shared their own stories of trucks that circled back to the people who loved them first. Stpetemike wrote, "In 1995 I bought a 79 F-100 step side … some dude was waiting by the truck. Long story short it was the grandson. He made me an offer and I sold it back to the family." Bhawk6.5 said he gave his 1988 Toyota pickup to a man at church, who used it until the man passed away. "In 2023, at his funeral, his wife said to me, ‘You know he still has that old truck you gave him?’ … She gave me that truck back, my first truck, and it still runs." Plumber perhaps put it best, writing, "Every time I get an older vehicle I tell people I am not the owner. I am just the caretaker." Motor1 reached out to Sluyter via the contact form on his dealership website for additional comment. We’ll be sure to update this if he responds. We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Motor1.com? Take our 3 minute survey. - The Motor1.com Team