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The Superbird's styling proved to be extreme for 1970s tastes (many customers preferred the regular Road Runner), and as a consequence, many of the 1,920 examples built [16] sat unsold on the back lots of dealerships as late as 1972. Some were converted into 1970 Road Runners to move them off the sales lot. [17]
A Volare-based Plymouth Road Runner. In 1976 the Road Runner name was switched to the 2-door model of the replacement for the compact A-body Valiant/Duster series. The new F platform was marketed as the Plymouth Volaré, and the new Road Runner became a trim and graphics package primarily. The standard engine was the 318 V8 with the 360 CID V8 ...
Plymouth Rapid Transit System 'Cuda (440) 1970: Convertible: Plymouth Rapid Transit System Road Runner: Coupé: Three-colored tail lights: red for "braking", yellow for "coasting" and green for "on the gas". Plymouth Rapid Transit System Duster 340: 5.6L c.300 hp V8 [4] Plymouth Concept Voyager II: 1986: Minivan: Plymouth Slingshot: 1988: 2 ...
The 1970 Superbird was a Road Runner with an extended nose cone and front fenders borrowed from the Dodge Coronet, a revised rear window, and a high-mounted rear wing. The Superbird's unique styling was a result of homologation requirements for using the same aerodynamic nose and rear wing when racing the car in the NASCAR series of the time ...
Plymouth Road Runner (1968–1975) Plymouth Sapporo (1978–1983, rebadged Mitsubishi Galant Lambda) Plymouth Satellite (1966–1974) Plymouth Savoy (1951–1964) Plymouth Scamp (1983) Plymouth Six (1934) Plymouth Special Six (1934) Plymouth Standard (1933, 1935) Plymouth Sundance (1987–1994) Plymouth Suburban (1949–1961) Plymouth Superbird ...
Richard Petty's Superbird at the Petty Museum. Aero Warriors, also called aero-cars, is a nickname for four muscle cars developed specifically to race on the NASCAR circuit by Dodge, Plymouth, Ford and Mercury for the 1969 and 1970 racing seasons. [1] The cars were based on production stock cars but had additional aerodynamic features.
Oldsmobile Toronado (1970-1978) Plymouth Barracuda (1970-1974) Plymouth Hemi Cuda Convertible (1970-1971) Plymouth Hemi Cuda Super Track Pack (1970) Plymouth Satellite (1970-1974) Plymouth Superbird (1970) Pontiac Firebird (1970-1981) Pontiac Firebird Formula 400 (1970-1971) Pontiac Firebird Trans Am (1970) Yenko Nova (1970)
He won the USAC Sprint Car title in 1963 and 1966, the USAC Stock Car title in 1969 and 1970. The Champ Car title in 1973. His first USAC Stock Car start resulted in a runner-up finish in Phoenix, Arizona in January 1968, when he drove as a substitute driver for Norm Nelson. Plymouth Superbird driven by McCluskey in 1970