The fit and finish on those were even worse than the other Plymouth/Dodge's of the era. That nose cap was wobbly and proud to the metal by a quarter of an inch in places.
Everyone in high school that bought a Cuda or Charger would do a tuck and roll on the door panels to hold down the rattles and keep you from seeing the cracks, because they all cracked over time.
Or you could just buy a Ford or GM and have nice interior and even A/C if you desired.
I don't know if you were ever in a Buick GSX 455 stage1 before but it had it all, class and dash...
(505 ft/lbs of torque!)
There was a little fly by night car lot in the town I lived in mid '70's that had two Boss 429 Mustangs for sale. Seems like they were priced in the mid to upper 3k range. Oh to have a time machine!
Does anybody believe they'll be having these conversations in 50 years about the current models?
"I remember back in '19 there was a guy on Craigslist that had a '17 GT500 and he only wanted 50k for it, oh to have a time machine!"
I think not. I think the current prices have so stretched the envelope that other than a couple of rare instances people won't have any interest in internal combustion any more.
Olds 442 W-30 was near the same deal. Brute torque. Lots of balls. Interiors wee nice and held up. Body panels fit up pretty well.
I owned a few MoPars. Mainly early/mid 60's and some late 60's. We turned them out of the auctions around the state but the 2 I personally owned for a length of time were a 1964 Dodge Polara and a 70 Duster. The Polara got the Hemi up-grade early on. What a chore that was. 3 peddle car so it hauled tail but my buddy's LS6 454 we stuffed into his Nova could put a car on me every time. We even swapped cars and yup, that BB Chevy would eat that 426 every time. But I really loved that Polara.
The Duster was a rattle trap with a 340 in it. Spent stupid money on upgrades and yes it would get with it but still basically a turd.
I liked the look but was sorely disappointed in the car.
One of my friends had a '72 W-30 convertible, powder blue with white stripes, white top and white interior. I loved that thing. In fact I have had a '72 Cutlass convertible in the garage since 1982 screaming to be made into one.
It is currently a 350 but a 455 engine actually weighs less. It is a Florida car and the undercarriage looks new...
Does anybody believe they'll be having these conversations in 50 years about the current models?
Nope, hot rods happened because you could work on the old cars. The current computers on wheels will go away because you won't be able to find or fix any of the crap that's in them and they won't run without it.
Just bought the wife a Ford Fusion Hybrid, getting 48-50 mpg with the darn thing.
Almost makes me want to put the Offenhauser dual 4 barrel intake back on the Olds.
The world needs balance...