It is an ugly dichotomy, this hobby which we so passionately pursue. In one corner, we have hideous steel monstrosities that run like hell at the track. In the other, divinely sculpted works of visual ...
The American Performance Generation of the mid-and-late-sixties and the (very) early seventies spawned a great many high-speed machines. Virtually all makers with a shadow of self-respect had at least ...
The 426 Hemi is probably one of the greatest five motors ever produced in Detroit. We mostly associate it with the Dodge Charger and Coronet or Plymouth Road Runner and GTX. The order is not random; ...
During the late 1960s and early ’70s, AMC, Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors were trading blows by offering powerful and stylish coupes and convertibles that ranged from understated to downright ...
The year was 1968. Janis Joplin and Cheap Thrills supplemented the Beatles and Simon and Garfunkel on the album charts, Hawaii Five-0 and The Mod Squad were on the tube, and Hubert Humphrey was ...
The Coronet-based Dodge Super Bee 440 sits in a sweet spot of muscle car history, combining big-block power with working-class roots and a relatively short production window. I want to pin down ...
Any mundane ride can be transformed into a hot rod by simply throwing on some sick mags, adding a spoiler, and maybe some racing stripes, but that generally only works on two-doors. The solution to ...
Dodge used the Coronet nameplate on two completely different car models over a span of four decades and multiple generations of each. The first Dodge Coronet rolled off the assembly line for the 1949 ...