Home » Posts filed under plymouth
Diposkan oleh
classiccarslovers on Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Like Dodge, smaller big cars with offbeat styling cost Plymouth dearly in '62. Cars with handsome new looks and new big-block power -- like the 1963 Plymouth Sport Fury -- started turning things around for '63.
The 1963 Plymouth Sport Fury is relatively rare today.
Plymouth made the same mistake as sister division Dodge by gambling on much smaller 1962 "standard" cars with offbeat Virgil Exner styling. But where Dodge remained ninth in industry production, Plymouth plunged from fourth to eighth.
Fortunately, Chrysler had a new styling chief in Elwood Engel, just recruited from Ford, and his hurry-up efforts produced nicely facelifted '63 standards that helped Plymouth reclaim fourth.
Again topping the line was the Sport Fury, which returned from '62 as a convertible and hardtop coupe with standard all-vinyl bucket-seat interior and storming performance potential. Unlike regular Furys, Sports had a standard V-8, a mild 230-horsepower 318. Options ranged from a 265-bhp 361 through three 383s and on to a quartet of newly enlarged 426 big-blocks packing up to 425 bhp with "ram induction."
Plymouth built only 1516 Sport Fury ragtops for '62, so the 3836 delivered for '63 looked like quite a jump. But that's not very many by Detroit standards, one reason you so seldom see one now.
More about → 1963 Plymouth Sport Fury
Diposkan oleh
classiccarslovers on Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Plymouth's new 1969 Plymouth Road Runner was as quick as the cartoon bird and far cheaper than other muscle cars. Convertibles were the only thing fans might have wanted. Plymouth obliged for 1969.
The 1969 Plymouth Road Runner was an affordable option for muscle car lovers.
Plymouth's new 1968 Road Runner was the first "budget" muscle car and an instant hit. A "Beep-Beep" horn and Warner Bros. cartoon-bird insignia identified it. So did a refreshing absence of costly, speed-robbing frills. Instead you got a 335-horsepower 383 V-8, four-on-the-floor, big boots, and firm suspension. A testosterone-packed 426 Hemi was optional. Taxi-plain interior? Who cared? The starting price was just $2896.
The 1969 Plymouth Road Runner featured a 335-horsepower 383 V-8. |
But success tends to breed excess in Detroit, and some plushing up occurred for 1969. Among the additions was a $3313 convertible that attracted only 2126 leadfoots versus some 82,000 coupes and hardtops. Today, the '69 ragtop Runner is an even rarer bird, and collectors pursue it like Wile E. Coyote.
More about → 1969 Plymouth Road Runner