Vanadaborane, [(CpV)(2)(B(2)H(6))(2)] (Cp = eta(5)-C(5)H(5)), 1 reacts with elemental sulfur to afford the hexasulfide cluster [(CpV)(2)S(4)(mu-eta(1)-S(2))], 2 in high yield. Compound 2 is a notable example of an organovanadium sulfide cluster in which the [V(2)S(4)] atoms define a bicapped tetrahedron framework, with one mu-eta(1)-S(2) ligand bridged the two (CpV) moieties. The sulfur atom in [V(2)S(4)] core in 2 is a four-skeletal-electron donor isoelectronic with the BH(3) unit; therefore, the replacement of boron hydride in 1 by four sulfur atoms necessitates the formation of a bicapped tetrahedron [V(2)S(4)] framework. Furthermore, this is the only reported example of a bimetallic hexasulfide cluster containing vanadium. Pyrolysis of 1 with bis-chalcogenide ligands such as Ph(2)S(2) and Bz(2)Se(2) (Bz = PhCH(2)), results in the formation of substituted vanadahexaboranes [(CpV)(2)B(4)H(12-x)L(x)], 3-5 (3: L = SPh: x = 3; 4: L = SPh, x = 2; 5: L = SeBz: x = 1) in modest yield. All these new compounds have been characterized by mass, (1)H, (11)B, (13)C NMR spectroscopy, and elemental analysis, and the structural types were unequivocally established by crystallographic analysis of compounds 2-5.