This real V-Code 1970 Plymouth Barracuda convertible rocks a 440-cubic-inch V8 and Hi Impact Lemon Yellow paint. The model will be auctioned off in January ...
Chrysler launched the Plymouth division in 1928 and kept it in the family until 2001 before redundancy and failure to bring in revenue doomed the brand. Plymouth produced more than its share of muscle ...
June 2014, Mecum Auctions, Seattle. The bidding had already crossed seven figures, and the room had gone quiet. The kind of quiet where seasoned collectors stop pretending they’ve seen it all. When ...
One of the biggest styling trends over the past few years has been to use vinyl wraps on high-profile project vehicles. Vinyl can mimic real paint with surprising accuracy, but moreover, it can offer ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
Outside of avid classic muscle enthusiasts, not many people know that the 1964.5 Ford Mustang didn't invent the pony car segment that came to define the American enthusiast car market in the late ...
Plymouth’s fish and its fangs were born the same year. The Barracuda debuted on April 1, 1964—sixteen days before Mustang—while Chrysler’s race-bred 426 Hemi roared onto NASCAR grids that same season.
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