Meet the White Whale of the Mopar world. Rarer than a Hemi 'Cuda, this 1-of-1 executive ghost was never meant for the showroom.
The Mopar 440 powered late '60s Dodge and Plymouth cars, with both standard and iconic high-performance versions putting their stamp on the muscle car era.
One iconic sports car that had two different names, and offered by four different brands. The interesting lore of the ...
The Charger Sixpack makes up to 550 hp, but without a V-8 or manual, does it still qualify as a true muscle car? We put it to the test.
Probably the greatest 1971 Dodge Charger survivor out there, this Plum Crazy Mopar is also a rare 426 Hemi-powered R/T muscle ...
Although it lacks many of the race-spec components found in the Max Wedge, the Street Wedge V8 engine is a proper performance ...
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The last great Mopar muscle car before the malaise era killed everything is now a big block bargain
Discover why this car represents the last great year of Mopar muscle cars before the malaise era.
For decades, enthusiasts have argued over which vehicle truly deserves the title of America’s first muscle car. Was it the ...
The 1961 Chrysler New Yorker, slathered in improbable Dubonnet Iridescent—a shocking OE color that presaged the wild high-impact colors that would arrive on muscle Mopars just a few years later—is the ...
Drivers of certain Chrysler and Dodge muscle cars have filed a proposed class-action lawsuit in federal court in Texas ...
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