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The Dodge Custom Royal is an automobile which was produced by Dodge in the United States for the 1955 through 1959 model years. [1] In each of these years the Custom Royal was the top trim level of the Dodge line, above the mid level Dodge Royal and the base level Dodge Coronet .
Dodge used the Lancer name from 1955 until 1959 to designate the two- and four-door hardtop (no B-pillar) models in the full-sized Coronet, Royal, and Custom Royal lines. The Custom Royal Lancer was a hardtop only and top-of-the-line model for Dodge in 1959. There were 6,278 two-door and 5,019 four-door hardtops made in 1959.
1955 Dodge Royal Lancer V-8 The 1956 Dodge Royal only saw detail changes. The introduction of the Dodge Custom Royal for the 1955 model year saw the Royal moved down to the intermediate trim level, above the now base-model Coronet. [1] The Royal Lancer name was applied to the 2-door hardtop model and Royal Sierra to the new station wagon models ...
Cadillac Series 75 (1959-1960) Cadillac Sixty Special (1959-1960) Checker Model A9/A10 (1959-1963) Chevrolet Brookwood (1959-1960) Chevrolet Corvair (1959–1964) Chevrolet El Camino (1959–1960) Chevrolet Kingswood (1959–1960) Chevrolet Parkwood (1959–1960) Chrysler 300E (1959) Chrysler Town & Country (1959-1964) Chrysler Windsor (1959 ...
Dodge, an American brand of Stellantis, has produced numerous vehicles carying the brand name including pickup trucks, SUVs, and vans. Current production models [ edit ]
1978–1979: 6DR5 2.5 L 6G73 - Used in the Chrysler Sebring, Dodge Avenger, Chrysler Cirrus, and Dodge Stratus; 3.0 L 6G72 - Used in the Plymouth Acclaim/Dodge Spirit and 1987–2000 Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager, also Dodge Dynasty, Chrysler LeBaron, Chrysler TC, Chrysler New Yorker, Dodge Daytona, Dodge Stealth, Chrysler Sebring (Coupe), Dodge Stratus (Coupe), Dodge Shadow ES, and Plymouth ...
The A engine was released in 1956, and was used exclusively in Plymouths until 1958 and in Chryslers and Dodges from 1959 on. The DeSoto and Dodge 270/315/325 poly used similar head architecture but was not related to the Plymouth A Engine, using its own heads and the same bottom end as the Dodge and Desoto Red Ram Hemi. The A engine cylinder ...
The 1959 Firesweep, released in July 1959, was also assembled from CKD components, [7] and was equipped with a 361-cubic-inch V8 engine and a push-button automatic transmission. [7] The Firesweep was replaced on the Australian market in 1960 by the locally produced Dodge Phoenix .