1969 Dodge Dart Custom Hardtop 2-door 3.7l on 2040-cars
Lynnwood, Washington, United States
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I have the original window sticker for the Dart, $ 3,566.00 when it rolled off the lot in 1969, the original Operators Manual, Original Purchase Order, Original Dodge Dart Owner’s Manual, basically all Original options that came with the car the day it rolled off the showroom floor. No Rust, garaged its lifetime, all matched numbers with original window sticker from 1969, lots of extra's, extra rear tail lights, chrome, Five Total 1969 Rally Rim's, yes the spare is matched. Matched number block ready for rebuild it is not installed, has a running block in it, so you will have two engines when you complete the rebuild. Also when the head was rebuilt it has hardened valve seats installed so it run’s on un-leaded regular fuel. Torqueflite Transmission, 225 CID engine, power steering, Air Conditioning unit complete not installed, lots more factory extra's. New leaf springs from Benz springs of Seattle, front and rear anti-sway bars, Also converted to HFI electronic distributor, no more points. Also part of the rebuild I did was to install power front disk brakes from a 1970 Duster as to maintain the 4 1/2 inch bolt pattern for the Rally rims, but have the drum front brake assembly if that is the way you want to go. The right front chrome has two screw holes in it from the moron who had the car before me. JVC CD Player with removable faceplate installed, BUT the original roll dial radio included. Will not take too much effort to completely rebuild this Dart, and it’s a head turner. I’m always being stopped and talked to about it. Interior needs seats redone, head liner redone and carpet re-done, NO CRACKS on dash. Every receipt that has ever been involved with car included. SERIOUS OFFERS ONLY PLEASE or you’re just wasting both our time. Thank you for looking. |
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Demon's NHRA competition ban: Good talking point, bad feature
Wed, Apr 12 2017One of the biggest headlines for the Dodge Challenger Demon is that, in stock form, it's so fast that the NHRA won't allow it to compete in the organization's events. It's the ultimate humble brag, "I can't drag race my car because it's so fast it was banned by the sanctioning body." Certainly Tim Kuniskis, head of FCA brands in North America, was excited. He told the press that he hugged the guy that brought him the letter banning the Demon from competition. Unfortunately, the reality is that not being NHRA-legal is kind of silly, and frustrating for owners who would want to actually race. Before we go too much farther, we should explain exactly why the Demon is illegal for NHRA competition. The car is capable of a sub-10-second quarter-mile time both on racing fuel and 91-octane pump gas. Cars that fast are required by the NHRA to have a full, certified roll cage, and the Demon doesn't. Now there are certainly ways to get around this. The most obvious would be for a Demon owner to have a company install a roll cage. Using less grippy tires than the barely street-legal Nitto cheater slicks would probably help bring that time down, too. There's also the option of putting the car into Eco mode, and, yes, the Demon has one. In Eco mode, the Demon makes just 500 horsepower, and trips the lights at the quarter-mile in 11.59 seconds, which will avoid the roll-cage requirement. However, none of these options are ideal. For one thing, if you bought an 840-horsepower car, you're not going to want to limit it when you get to a closed course such as a drag strip. Similarly, you're not going to want to ditch your super-sticky tires at the strip, especially when they're standard equipment. Finally, having to go aftermarket for a roll cage is an inconvenience at minimum, and it seems like a strange oversight considering the rest of the car. This is a car from the factory that comes with drag radials, no passenger seats, a racing fuel tune, air conditioned intercooler, and even skinny front wheels for drag racing. Its purpose is clear, but for some reason, Dodge stopped short of giving it a roll cage that would allow it to compete. Perhaps adding a roll cage would've made it difficult to pass safety regulations, and we would be more disappointed if the car wasn't allowed on the street. Even so, it seems like an odd stopping point.
Fiat Chrysler CEO says final merger talks with Peugeot going well
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Towing with the 2016 Ram lineup [w/video]
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