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Mopar restoration

Challenging The Odds

Like old hot rods, muscle cars are getting hard to find, so as our hobby grows, different alternatives and varied approaches keep it fresh. We’ve witnessed a change in style of many of the cars being built today. No matter what the future holds, you can bet that a Mopar enthusiast will insist on having a Hemi—or another fine Mopar powerplant under the hood—whether it’s the original-style Hemi or the new, modern Hemi that’s become popular.

RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEM

Considered a “gentleman’s muscle car,” the upscale Plymouth GTX two-door hardtop was restyled in 1970, offering cleaner side body panels along with revised front and rear fascias. The grille had a unique telephone-receiver look to it, the taillight treatment was changed, and the car was no longer available as a convertible.

FAST FISH

Xtreme Velocity Motorsports is a muscle car builder whose name is not a put-on. While there are a huge number of shops around the country with a ton of talent for fabrication, much of this fabrication is performed for cars that will hardly see a world beyond the show schedules and their trailers. So XV takes its name seriously, and it builds its cars to drive hard—on the street or on the track. In fact, the company’s reason for being is to make old Mopars drive like new sports cars, but to pull off a trick like that, you need a lot more than dead reckoning.

WINGED WARRIOR

The first time Dodge General Manager Bob McCurry saw drawings of the proposed mid-1969 Dodge Charger Daytona, he thought it looked awful. Legend has it that he then asked the engineers: “Will it win races?” After they said it would, the Dodge boss replied: “Well, dammit, go ahead and build it!”

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