Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1969 Dodge Dart Custom Hardtop 2-door 4.5l on 2040-cars

Year:1969 Mileage:27000
Location:

Medford, Oregon, United States

Medford, Oregon, United States
Advertising:

 Selling one of my projects.. Was a 6cly car.. Installed a 1969 273 automatic.. good project that runs. needs to go through body shop. Has almost no rust. one spot in trunk and one spot in front quarter panel. Some one backed into something.. Has different trunk lid and some damage to left quarter panel. see pics.. needs headliner dash pad is cracked ..speedo is stuck on 80mph...any questions just email.


On Apr-02-14 at 16:18:42 PDT, seller added the following information:

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Auto blog

The Walter P. Chrysler Museum is shutting down permanently this December

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Thu, Oct 31 2019

There are open and shut cases, and there's this one, the purchase and crush case. This is so wild it's hard to believe it's real. Apparently a man named Daniel Gagliardi bought a rusted-out 1970 Dodge Charger project car with the intent to flip it. Contacted by The Drive, Gagliardi said he bought the car for $4,200 and listed it for $8,500. "It was a complete car," he said, "not missing a single thing inside, out, underneath, under the hood, wasn't missing a damn thing. Had fender tag, VIN tag, clean title." Instead of negotiating with serious buyers, Gagliardi told the outlet a stream of jokers jerked him around for six months. The time-wasting took a toll, and after 180 days of "no-showers, thousands of no-showers, and a whole bunch of flakers" who didn't have the decency to bring a decent offer and cash, he decided to teach them all a lesson. So he destroyed the car, filmed the destruction, and cheered it on. The humorous and ironic part of the video is when Gagliardi tells another man off-camera, "But we got it first! We already robbed it, you can only rob it once!" After that levity, there's only chagrin for anyone sad to see a Charger meet its end so spitefully. Admittedly, however, and in spite of all the vitriol aimed at him, Gagliardi is free to destroy his own property. He's not the first person to crush a car capriciously. Any divorce attorney could tell you a book of tales about precious goods meeting ugly ends for vindictive reasons. Or there's the guy who, commenting on Gagliardi's video on another site, relates how he crushed the Yamaha quad he wanted $800 for after he "got tired of people offering me $200." Ah well. This won't be the last time. Warning for language, and exceptionally shaky video. If you're hungry for more Charger carnage after this, check out the cinematic obliterations in "7 Ways to Destroy a Charger."