Chris Hamilton
.
April 02, 2026
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Chevrolet
AS SEEN IN OUR STREET TRUCKS APRIL 2026 ISSUE – Buy Now!
SOME builds start with a plan. Others start with a hit, literally. Eddie Brown’s 2005 Chevy Silverado crew cab, known as No Mercy, is proof that sometimes the setback is what turns a nice truck into a full-on show machine.



Eddie, a tow truck driver out of Sandwich, Illinois, built this crew cab with one main goal: to make something the whole family could pile into and cruise to shows together. He and his wife, Erica, wanted a truck that could roll deep, sit low, and still be dependable enough to stack highway miles. With his club, Positive Force, behind him, the project turned into something much bigger than a simple daily.
Eddie says he wouldn’t shortcut a thingÑdo it right or do it twice. With No Mercy, he chose once and nailed it.




From the outside, No Mercy carries a clean, shaved look with just enough flash to let you know it didn’t come from the factory this way. Up front, a billet grille leads the way, while the stock bumpers were smoothed with the pockets and holes shaved out for a tighter profile. Out back, the bumper is gone, replaced with a roll pan, and the rear tubs were stretched and rebuilt so the truck can lay frame on big rollers. The bed floor was reworked and finished with a custom aluminum insert by Smokey Road Rod Shop to clear the larger wheel tubs and keep things show-ready. The door and tailgate handles, taillights, and the fuel door were all shaved, and the underhood area received custom panels for extra detail.



OWNER Eddie and Erica Brown
2005 Chevy Silverado Crew Cab
Sandwich, IL
Positive Force
F-100 WorldThen there’s the paint, which is the part people talk about first. Sprayed by Frank Aon at Phat Paint Customs, the deep custom blue and multi-color graphics were laid down using Tamco materials and finished slick enough to look plugged-in under the lights. Eddie originally came in for collision repair after a guardrail incident at speed, but the shop went all-in by reworking the body, realigning the front end, and turning the repaint into a full transformation. The result is bold, bright, and impossible to ignore.



Under the hood sits the original 5.3L LS, left mostly stock on purpose. Eddie built this truck to cruise, not chase dyno numbers. Airbags and a Level Ride air management system handle the stance, letting the crew cab drop low when parked and ride smoothly on the road. Massive 26-inch Intro Dangerous wheels fill the corners and seal the look.




Inside, the cab is fully redone in tan leather, including the seats and headliner, with a custom console housing a JL Audio sub, upgraded audio gear, and an Escalade cluster bringing the dash up a notch.



Eddie says he wouldn’t shortcut a thing—do it right or do it twice. With No Mercy, he chose once and nailed it.
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