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1966 Plymouth Barracuda. For the 1966 model year the Barracuda received new taillamps, new front sheet metal, and a new instrument panel. The latter had room for oil pressure and tachometer gauges on models so equipped. The 1966 front sheet metal which, except for the grille, was shared with the Valiant, gave a more rectilinear contour to the ...
Full-size car. Special De Luxe was an upper trim model Suburban: 1949 1961 2 Station wagon Cambridge: 1951 1953 1 Full-size car, middle range model Concord: 1951 1952 1 Full-size car, least expensive model Cranbrook: 1951 1953 1 Full-size car, top-range model Belvedere: 1954 1970 Chrysler B platform: 7
Oldsmobile Cutlass W-31 (1969-1970) Plymouth Duster (1969-1970) Plymouth Fury (1969-1973) Plymouth Roadrunner Convertible (1969-1970) Plymouth Superbird (1969) Pontiac Firebird Trans Am (1969) Yenko Stinger Corvair (1969) Yenko Super Car Camaro (1969) Yenko Super Car Chevelle (1969) Yenko Super Car Nova (1969)
A limited edition 1/18 scale diecast model of the 1966 car is currently available from Highway 61. [1] Riggle returned to exhibition racing in 1992 with a 1966 injected version of the car and a 1968 supercharged version of the car. [2] The original 1965 car was stripped for its power train and parts in 1967 for the new Barracuda chassis/body ...
These cars are sometimes referred to as A-body cars. Cars using the A platform in various markets around the world include: 1960–1976 Plymouth Valiant; 1960–1981 Chrysler Valiant; 1961–1962 Dodge Lancer; 1961–1963 DeSoto Rebel; 1963–1976 Dodge Dart; 1964–1969 Plymouth Barracuda; 1971–1976 Plymouth Scamp; 1970–1976 Plymouth Duster
At the time of Daimler's takeover of Chrysler, Plymouth had no models besides the Prowler not also offered in a similar version by Dodge. [citation needed] From a peak production of 973,000 for the 1973 model year, Plymouth rarely exceeded 200,000 cars per year after 1990. Even the Voyager sales were usually less than 50% of that of the Dodge ...
Model Products Corporation, usually known by its acronym, MPC, is an American brand and former manufacturing company of plastic scale model kits and pre-assembled promotional models of cars that were popular in the 1960s and 1970s. MPC's main competition was model kits made by AMT, Jo-Han, Revell, and Monogram.
A special model only available for the 1970 model year was the Challenger T/A (Trans Am) racing homologation car. [7] To race in the Sports Car Club of America's Trans American Sedan Championship Trans Am, Dodge built a street version of its race car (just like Plymouth with its Plymouth 'Cuda AAR) which it called the Dodge Challenger T/A ...