Building something a little sportier on an economy car platform was a tried-and-true strategy in 1960s Detroit, with the most famous example being the transformation of the modest Ford Falcon’s bones ...
Darkness. Silence. A forgotten field swallowing steel dreams. For forty years, a 1972 Plymouth Duster sat in the dirt, shackled by time, smothered by weeds, and guarded by ghosts of bullet holes.
Chrysler Corporation gave Plymouth a simple assignment: build cost-effective people movers. But that was rarely good enough for Plymouth. Fueled by its sibling rivalry with Dodge, the automobile ...
You can't buy a new Plymouth anymore--let alone a Trail Duster. The Chrysler brand has been gone for almost 19 years. And even when you could buy a new Plymouth, you probably weren't buying a truck or ...
Following the deprivation and hardship experienced during World War II, Americans basked in the excesses of the 1950s and the auto industry certainly reflected this. As the decade progressed, cars got ...
Chad has been a muscle car and classic truck lover since he could walk. The classic vehicles from the '60s and '70s are the best in his eyes, but he is more than willing to give the new technology a ...
When it comes to sheer numbers over a long production run, the 383 was the most common big-block produced by Chrysler. Back in the famed era of production muscle cars, the 383 served duty in ...