Beautiful old car. I love the instant start of the 225 and the torqueflite first gear whirr. Over here in NZ we had A body Chrysler Valiant's with the slant sixes up until '71 and then Chrysler Australia went over to their own version of an E body with the VH, and a Hemi 6 they developed from a shelved US design which proved to be very economical and could develop good power. Not as silky smooth or long lasting as the slant but still a very good unit. My father owned three Valiants over the course of 25 years, two Hemi 6's and a 318 hardtop coupe, and I had a last model Charger version CL model with the Hemi and a four speed. All great memories and nice, smooth, torquey old machines. Thanks for the uploads, most enjoyable.
Growing up as a kid in the 70's these cars were everywhere . Still saw them into the 80's . My dad bought my mom a new 71 Chrysler . We had it from 71 to 79 . The salesman told my dad when you come for service we will provide you with similar model if needed. All we ever got as a loaner was the 71-76 Dusters .
I have so many happy memories with my grandpa in his 76 Swinger. I can still hear the noise of that Slant 6. He tried to leave it to me but I was a few years too young to drive it, and my stepdad trashed it and sold it. Someday I'll get one and fix it up like I originally wanted to. Beautiful car! I'm glad you're taking care of it.
I owned a ‘75 Dart Swinger many years ago. 51,000 original mile one owner and always garaged. Was not perfect, but very nice. 318 V-8. First year for the catalytic converter and unleaded fuel. Enjoyed your video. You got a good one! Slant 6 ‘76 👍
My first car was a 1975 Plymouth Valiant Custom that I got when I was in high school in the early 80's. Had 100,000 miles on it and I put on 25,000 more before I sold it. Car never let me down. Just hearing this car drive brings back so many memories.
My Valiant sedan is from '76, toward the end of production. It's the "Custom" trim level, but has a sway bar, .892 & .893 torsion bars, map light, passenger exterior mirror, and other odd ball bits. Its always interesting to see the different/strange options these cars have.
My parents had a 76 Valiant in green with green vinyl interior with a manual wind factory sunroof. Loved that car. I recall it rusted out in only a few years being in Illinois.
My paternal Grandfather had a '73 Dart Swinger that he bought new.....It was a slate gray color with black vinyl roof. 225 slant/6 auto.... I believe that 1973 was the last year that the taillights were in the rear bumper. After that, the taillights were moved to above the bumper.
What a beautiful car. I had a Duster with the 225 /6 the same color scheme. It was a $400.00 driveway find back in '86. It had 246,000 when I let it go. Wish I still had it. Pound for pound the best, most reliable car I've ever owned. Thanks for the memories.
Holy crap, another car that my dad had, lol. He actually had the 4 dr, but was mostly the same except for the hubcaps and front brakes. Thank you so much for sharing
My first A body was a 71, gold with similar interior and a black vinyl top. Slant/904. I converted to a magnum 360 with a Hughes 224/230@.050 cam, A-833 4spd and 8.75” axle with 3.23 gears. Ran a best of 12.81@115 at LVMS but was mostly my driver for six years. Traded it for a 71 340/4spd Duster.
I had a 1976 Scamp Special that I bought new. The quality control on the 76 cars was pretty bad. Many of the cars were shipped with no oil and in some cases no coolant. I think in 1976 the Valliant's and Darts were all built in the same factory. Mine had the 225 engine with the smog pump and no catalyst. I think the smog pump option was for Canada and may have been listed as a N91 Smog Pump, I am drawing on memory so I may be wrong. It was a sad way to send a model run of a car line into oblivion. Your Dodge Dart Special brings back a lot of memories. I drove mine to Phoenix and to Florida several times with no issues, maybe just a bad EGR valve.
My dad had one exactly like this. Gold on gold Swinger Special. When he bought it from the dealer, it was the cheapest non Colt on the lot. The only options were power steering, am radio, whitewall tires, and a tinted windshield. He was intending to buy an Aspen, but saw how much cheaper the Dart was and went for that.
The whir of that torque flite brings back memories of my 75 Swinger, mine had a different steering wheel, that one looks like an Aspen one, do you know if it's 76 only for the Dart? Love your content.
Wow, Dodge really went down market on the Dart Swinger. My grandparents had a 1971 Dodge Dart Swinger. It had a 318 V-8, Factory Air, power steering, brakes, and Tuff steering wheel. It even had a vinyl top. I always assumed the Swinger was the sporty Dart. I noticed that Dodge really cheaped out on the headliner and door panels in the later years. I realize that this car could have had those options as well, but this one was a budget saver. The price of cars back in the 1970's were spiraling out of control due to double digit inflation. These cars were also compared to Pinto and Vega, which kind of made sense because the price was only a few hundred dollars higher and Dodge and Plymouth claimed a much larger, safer car with room for six and a standard 225 slant six engine. Typically, the competition would have been a Maverick or Nova.
I should have kept mine.I had a 74. I was only getting about 17 miles per gallon on the highway. So I put a lawn mower carburetor on my slant 6. Started to get 27 on the highway With a little loss of power, pretty cool.❤
My family bought a new 1975 Dart 4 door sedan with the boat anchor (gutless) 225 slant six - the car was the absolute worst car we ever owned. Ripples in the driver side front fender - jagged metal and welds in the front subframe and the car leaned to that side. Nice looking car that had the most uncomfortably leaning front seat. Mom hated that car and kept it for two years with 7500 miles on the odometer and traded it in for a used 1973 Ford Torino station wagon that had 75,000 miles on it and was a former electrical contractor car. Car looked and drove new and lasted for over 10 years with over 150,000 more miles put on it. The only reason she sold it was the gas mileage. Absolute bullet proof car.
Sweet Dart Swinger even with the slant 6 although they are more sought after with the V8. I had a 71 Swinger with the 318 in it and it was a lot of fun but unfortunately I sold it. I wish I had it now
@@user-pgchargerse71 No, dog dish hub cap cars had body color paint, I worked at Chrysler Lynch Road Assembly from 1976 To 1979, base 2 door Fury coupe in B3 Blue had B3 Blue paint rims on cars with dog dish hubcaps. The Dart in this video with black rims had full wheel covers from the factory, dog dish hub caps were added. All rims that came in were already painted black by Budd and Kelsey Hayes. The cars with standard dog dish caps while very few went through the paint shop for body colored paint.
My great aunt had a 1970 Plymouth Valient she bought brand new. Total stripper model. No radio. Vinyl interior. The only option was the automatic transmission. When she passed in 1985 it had something like 49k miles. Basic as they come but she had it in for service every 6 months like clockwork. White exterior with military green all vinyl interior. We sold it for $800 after she passed.
That model should been built in mid 75 for 76 model year. January 1 1976 Federal government has mandated that all Dusters Valiant and Darts to have Disc brakes.
That 225 has to go put in a 440 crate motor with a Edelbrock AVS 2 750CFM 727 transmission 9.25 rear with 3:91 gears SGPD axle 2½" dual exhaust FM70 without catalytic converters fuckin haul some major ass and the car is light weight too it'll move ...
From what I have noticed, every slant 6 looks the same since the early 60s. But man, how I hate what they did to the front ends of the cars in the mid-late 70s, too pointy, too long and large looking and different shapes kind of looking fronts
I had a 71 Swinger that I bought in 1986 and sold it in 1993 with 98,000 miles for the same price that I bought it for. I wish that I could have that same car today. boo hoo, boo hoo.
Only a virtual collector should have that car.I don't believe that you are a collector as you stated that you have put about 20,000 miles on the car since you got it and that isn't collector mileage. I have owned a 1972 Dodge Dart Custom 4 door sedan with a 318 V8, Torqueflite Automatic Transmission, Factory Air Conditioning, Power Steering, Power Brakes and Factory Vinyl Roof. Ihave owned it since 2015 and have put less than 1,000 miles on it. It stays on a 'Battery Tender' . I start and run the car periodically and am in the process of converting the distributor to electronic ignition with a new coil, ignition wires and a new sett of factory spark plugs which for this car are Champions. I was able to get the car at that time (precovid) for $2800 and find the yellow-gold paint with dark green interior and the matching dark green vinyl roof. I recall these cars when they were brand new as I am 71 now. It is an enjoyable time capsule that takes me back to 1972 when I was just 19.
@@glennfields8121 Why own a car to just let sit there and go to waste? I buy cars to enjoy them. I collect them and drive them because otherwise you might as well just own some Matchbox cars to look at. Cars are meant to be driven. I get FAR more enjoyment out of driving these cars on trips and having fun than being able to say I kept the mileage low while it sits there. The definition of collector doesn’t state you never touch them and let them gather dust. You just own things… that’s what collecting is.
At least it has power steering. The 1970 I had for a couple years in college didn’t, and it was a real pita, very heavy and over 4 turns lock-to-lock. Poorly built and noisy on the road. Brake master failed at 49,000 miles and dash and door and rear side panels had a myriad of squeaks and buzzes. Hated that car…… had a 77 Nova next with the small V8, power steering and brakes, a MUCH better car…..
This car is a gem. No bloat.
That little Dart is sweet!!
That is a nice little car. It's perfect for a single Person, Old or young.😍
Beautiful old car. I love the instant start of the 225 and the torqueflite first gear whirr. Over here in NZ we had A body Chrysler Valiant's with the slant sixes up until '71 and then Chrysler Australia went over to their own version of an E body with the VH, and a Hemi 6 they developed from a shelved US design which proved to be very economical and could develop good power. Not as silky smooth or long lasting as the slant but still a very good unit. My father owned three Valiants over the course of 25 years, two Hemi 6's and a 318 hardtop coupe, and I had a last model Charger version CL model with the Hemi and a four speed. All great memories and nice, smooth, torquey old machines. Thanks for the uploads, most enjoyable.
I have a 59 Chrysler Ute that someone stuffed a Hemi 6 into. It’ll be featured in a video in the future. Glad you enjoy the videos.
Growing up as a kid in the 70's these cars were everywhere . Still saw them into the 80's . My dad bought my mom a new 71 Chrysler . We had it from 71 to 79 . The salesman told my dad when you come for service we will provide you with similar model if needed. All we ever got as a loaner was the 71-76 Dusters .
I have so many happy memories with my grandpa in his 76 Swinger. I can still hear the noise of that Slant 6. He tried to leave it to me but I was a few years too young to drive it, and my stepdad trashed it and sold it. Someday I'll get one and fix it up like I originally wanted to. Beautiful car! I'm glad you're taking care of it.
Sorry your stepdad didn't have the presence of mind to realize that it was left to you, and preserve it.
I had its Valiant cousin! I dearly miss 2 this day😢
I owned a ‘75 Dart Swinger many years ago. 51,000 original mile one owner and always garaged. Was not perfect, but very nice. 318 V-8. First year for the catalytic converter and unleaded fuel. Enjoyed your video. You got a good one! Slant 6 ‘76 👍
Thanks. I love the nice originals.
I had that car in college. Slant six with only 5 cylinders working. Drove it for 4 yrs. Never even changed the oil. Never died. Crazy
My friends Grandma Doris had a 4 door just like that. She was so short and round they had to put blocks on the pedals for her to reach them ! lol
I’ve seen blocks in pedals before! 😂
There out there. Found a 68 Chevy C-10. 327 3 speed on the Floor. Wife Loves it. Lol. Cattle Ranch country.
My first car was a 1975 Plymouth Valiant Custom that I got when I was in high school in the early 80's. Had 100,000 miles on it and I put on 25,000 more before I sold it. Car never let me down. Just hearing this car drive brings back so many memories.
I’ve had a few A Body MoPars over the years. Great cars!
My Valiant sedan is from '76, toward the end of production. It's the "Custom" trim level, but has a sway bar, .892 & .893 torsion bars, map light, passenger exterior mirror, and other odd ball bits.
Its always interesting to see the different/strange options these cars have.
All I can say is Wow!!!
Really sweet little dart!!
I literally had one just like it in the early 2000s. Same year, same color, same engine. I did have manual disc brakes though.
My parents had a 76 Valiant in green with green vinyl interior with a manual wind factory sunroof. Loved that car. I recall it rusted out in only a few years being in Illinois.
Not many cars can survive up there! You don’t see the sun roof too often.
My paternal Grandfather had a '73 Dart Swinger that he bought new.....It was a slate gray color with black vinyl roof.
225 slant/6 auto....
I believe that 1973 was the last year that the taillights were in the rear bumper.
After that, the taillights were moved to above the bumper.
I love to drive the old cars and trucks
Very cool car 😎
What a beautiful car. I had a Duster with the 225 /6 the same color scheme. It was a $400.00 driveway find back in '86. It had 246,000 when I let it go. Wish I still had it. Pound for pound the best, most reliable car I've ever owned. Thanks for the memories.
@@milemonster9098 These A-Bodies have always been super reliable cars!
@@ObsoleteAutomotiveabsolutely the best. I just found a Duster color correct in decent shape one state over. You're getting me in trouble 😂
@@milemonster9098 a little Duster never hurt nobody!
Holy crap, another car that my dad had, lol. He actually had the 4 dr, but was mostly the same except for the hubcaps and front brakes. Thank you so much for sharing
Oh wow, she's perfect!
Simply and absolutely amazing survivor classic.
Lovin on this one alot !! ❤❤
My first A body was a 71, gold with similar interior and a black vinyl top. Slant/904. I converted to a magnum 360 with a Hughes 224/230@.050 cam, A-833 4spd and 8.75” axle with 3.23 gears. Ran a best of 12.81@115 at LVMS but was mostly my driver for six years. Traded it for a 71 340/4spd Duster.
I had a 1976 Scamp Special that I bought new. The quality control on the 76 cars was pretty bad. Many of the cars were shipped with no oil and in some cases no coolant. I think in 1976 the Valliant's and Darts were all built in the same factory. Mine had the 225 engine with the smog pump and no catalyst. I think the smog pump option was for Canada and may have been listed as a N91 Smog Pump, I am drawing on memory so I may be wrong. It was a sad way to send a model run of a car line into oblivion. Your Dodge Dart Special brings back a lot of memories. I drove mine to Phoenix and to Florida several times with no issues, maybe just a bad EGR valve.
Quality control was definitely lacking! But this one has been a nice reliable car.
Amazing video. These are good reference videos.
Thanks. Glad you’re enjoying them.
My dad had one exactly like this. Gold on gold Swinger Special. When he bought it from the dealer, it was the cheapest non Colt on the lot. The only options were power steering, am radio, whitewall tires, and a tinted windshield. He was intending to buy an Aspen, but saw how much cheaper the Dart was and went for that.
Love these vids you’ve been doing
Glad you’re finding them enjoyable!
It’s so refreshing to see one of these Darts in original condition as many have been turned into pseudo-muscle cars.
Hard to find unmolested cars these days!
I absolutely love this, just subscribed...
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it!
another interesting video Austin - sure enjoy your work
The whir of that torque flite brings back memories of my 75 Swinger, mine had a different steering wheel, that one looks like an Aspen one, do you know if it's 76 only for the Dart? Love your content.
That steering wheel is the same as the ones on Aspens. It was only offered on the Dart for 1976. Glad you enjoy the content!
The design of the steering wheel was changed for 1976. Your Dart has the new style steering wheel.
Nice
Great looking car
Thanks!
Wow, Dodge really went down market on the Dart Swinger. My grandparents had a 1971 Dodge Dart Swinger. It had a 318 V-8, Factory Air, power steering, brakes, and Tuff steering wheel. It even had a vinyl top. I always assumed the Swinger was the sporty Dart. I noticed that Dodge really cheaped out on the headliner and door panels in the later years. I realize that this car could have had those options as well, but this one was a budget saver. The price of cars back in the 1970's were spiraling out of control due to double digit inflation. These cars were also compared to Pinto and Vega, which kind of made sense because the price was only a few hundred dollars higher and Dodge and Plymouth claimed a much larger, safer car with room for six and a standard 225 slant six engine. Typically, the competition would have been a Maverick or Nova.
Nice Dart!
Congrats, I have a 1974 swinger slant six. Yours is very nice.
My Aunt had a very nice 1975 4 door ..
Very nice. If it had AC, I would daily drive it.
One could easily add it if they desired but I drove it daily for a long time without A/C.
Nice A body! I picked up a 39K mile survivor 1975 Valiant about 2 weeks ago. Same color combo as yours. Love them!!!
@@thomash4447 sweet! These are great cars.
Very sweet ride !!!!!!
Its sooo smooth!
One of the most durable, reliable cars ever built.
My dad owned one of these, same color.
I should have kept mine.I had a 74. I was only getting about 17 miles per gallon on the highway. So I put a lawn mower carburetor on my slant 6. Started to get 27 on the highway With a little loss of power, pretty cool.❤
My family bought a new 1975 Dart 4 door sedan with the boat anchor (gutless) 225 slant six - the car was the absolute worst car we ever owned. Ripples in the driver side front fender - jagged metal and welds in the front subframe and the car leaned to that side. Nice looking car that had the most uncomfortably leaning front seat. Mom hated that car and kept it for two years with 7500 miles on the odometer and traded it in for a used 1973 Ford Torino station wagon that had 75,000 miles on it and was a former electrical contractor car. Car looked and drove new and lasted for over 10 years with over 150,000 more miles put on it. The only reason she sold it was the gas mileage. Absolute bullet proof car.
13:43 onwards - why are you filming the steering wheel?
Sweet Dart Swinger even with the slant 6 although they are more sought after with the V8. I had a 71 Swinger with the 318 in it and it was a lot of fun but unfortunately I sold it. I wish I had it now
Nice car, thanks for sharing. Steering wheel off center to the left?
Very nice
Is it for sale
It is. 9500 in N. Carolina
@@ObsoleteAutomotive Cool...and what about the 73 Newport
@@lesn9125 9800.
Looks like the rims were painted black, cars with dog dish caps had body color paint on the rims, black rims were used on cars with full wheel covers.
The car did originally have full wheel covers.
Beginning in 1971, all wheels were painted black, regardless of hubcap. It was extra cost to have body color wheels.
@@user-pgchargerse71 No, dog dish hub cap cars had body color paint, I worked at Chrysler Lynch Road Assembly from 1976 To 1979, base 2 door Fury coupe in B3 Blue had B3 Blue paint rims on cars with dog dish hubcaps. The Dart in this video with black rims had full wheel covers from the factory, dog dish hub caps were added. All rims that came in were already painted black by Budd and Kelsey Hayes. The cars with standard dog dish caps while very few went through the paint shop for body colored paint.
Very nice. I have a '77 Aspen; it's not much different. Same engine and same fit and finish issues. I do have disc brakes in the front though.
Nice, you got water getting into the trunk😮
nice car, should be easy to sell that one. low mile survivor
Very nice car!
I had a similar '75 Dart, dark green and stick shift. It was a very good dependable basic car. traded it in '80 for a new Mazda with A/C.
My great aunt had a 1970 Plymouth Valient she bought brand new. Total stripper model. No radio. Vinyl interior. The only option was the automatic transmission. When she passed in 1985 it had something like 49k miles. Basic as they come but she had it in for service every 6 months like clockwork. White exterior with military green all vinyl interior. We sold it for $800 after she passed.
@@tomwebber9377 I love the strippo models!
Slant 6 👍 bulletproof
I like the Color 😊
That model should been built in mid 75 for 76 model year. January 1 1976 Federal government has mandated that all Dusters Valiant and Darts to have Disc brakes.
Slant 6 / Chrysler torque flight transmission ….. can’t be beat !!!!!!
UA-cam asks for my feedback. I gave you a excellent.❤
@@alanspring8462 Thanks!
oooh, I want that
*Immaculate SloPar...hahaha LOL Great Cars ultra dependable....run forever. But wouldn''t do 100 mph down an elevator shaft.*
Almost like new //////////////////////////
Just begging for a 416 😉
0:22
That 225 has to go put in a 440 crate motor with a Edelbrock AVS 2 750CFM 727 transmission 9.25 rear with 3:91 gears SGPD axle 2½" dual exhaust FM70 without catalytic converters fuckin haul some major ass and the car is light weight too it'll move ...
Bondo work
on that r/s
If you were driving a 1976 Aspen two door, you would think you were driving a 1976 Dart two door. Maybe???
Much better than the new dodge darts which are complete garbage
I was disappointed that the name got brought back for those things. You don’t even see them anymore.
That roofline was used by dodge for 9 years
From what I have noticed, every slant 6 looks the same since the early 60s.
But man, how I hate what they did to the front ends of the cars in the mid-late 70s, too pointy, too long and large looking and different shapes kind of looking fronts
I had a 71 Swinger that I bought in 1986 and sold it in 1993 with 98,000 miles for the same price that I bought it for. I wish that I could have that same car today. boo hoo, boo hoo.
Only a virtual collector should have that car.I don't believe that you are a collector as you stated that you have put about 20,000 miles on the car since you got it and that isn't collector mileage. I have owned a 1972 Dodge Dart Custom 4 door sedan with a 318 V8, Torqueflite Automatic Transmission, Factory Air Conditioning, Power Steering, Power Brakes and Factory Vinyl Roof. Ihave owned it since 2015 and have put less than 1,000 miles on it. It stays on a 'Battery Tender' . I start and run the car periodically and am in the process of converting the distributor to electronic ignition with a new coil, ignition wires and a new sett of factory spark plugs which for this car are Champions. I was able to get the car at that time (precovid) for $2800 and find the yellow-gold paint with dark green interior and the matching dark green vinyl roof. I recall these cars when they were brand new as I am 71 now. It is an enjoyable time capsule that takes me back to 1972 when I was just 19.
@@glennfields8121 Why own a car to just let sit there and go to waste? I buy cars to enjoy them. I collect them and drive them because otherwise you might as well just own some Matchbox cars to look at. Cars are meant to be driven. I get FAR more enjoyment out of driving these cars on trips and having fun than being able to say I kept the mileage low while it sits there.
The definition of collector doesn’t state you never touch them and let them gather dust. You just own things… that’s what collecting is.
Yep. 2 Swingers With a 6 cylinder WOW sell it SEAT is trashed with that low of miles. Don't say it,,, the rest of the seats seem fine.
At least it has power steering. The 1970 I had for a couple years in college didn’t, and it was a real pita, very heavy and over 4 turns lock-to-lock. Poorly built and noisy on the road. Brake master failed at 49,000 miles and dash and door and rear side panels had a myriad of squeaks and buzzes. Hated that car…… had a 77 Nova next with the small V8, power steering and brakes, a MUCH better car…..
Leaning Tower of No Power
I leke mopars
How much does he want for the cream puff ?