I'm getting older now, but as a young guy I worked for a speed shop in MA. The owner had a huge MOPAR collection. We worked on everything, but MOPAR was king! Watching your show reminds me of those days. We worked all week and spent the weekends going to the track. We couldn't get enough of it. Your show captures that feeling! Thank you and keep it up!
Unlike most shows/youtube channels this guy clearly works on the cars and isn't some "personality" and secondly I love how the attention to detail includes the "errors" like the over spray.
A good rule of thumb is to just finger tighten the suspension fasteners and then tighten them after wards put on a suspension or alignment rack at correct ride height with full weight of vehicle on the suspension or four wheels. The bushings won't be twisted up and will last longer and ride might be less harsh
I like your attention to detail. I know if your shop did the restoration, its just like walking into the dealer in1970 and buying a new car. Paint work is top notch.
Mark Worman is "the MOPAR GURU". He knows just about anything you'd ever want to know about the mid-60's to early 70's mopar classics. Just watch his episodes. He's a stickler for detail...a true Mopar perfectionist.
I got to 15:35 before I had to quit watching because of the annoying background music. When you're wanting to listen to what people are saying it's very annoying to have that music playing in the background.
Mark, thanks for sharing your knowledge and expertise. I would like to think that there are Chevrolet/Ford/Olds/Pontiac/AMC equivalents of you out there, but i'm pretty sure they are few and far between. Love the show!!!!
The last episode that was aired; I noticed that you added A Family Tradition under the logo, nice touch!! I really enjoy watching the show, thank everyone!!!
Wow just outstanding, put me back in my days. Outstanding job guys. The 69 road runner was my favorite black with tan interior wish I still had it,Appreciate you sharing I’ll be watching more
Don’t think Color Me Gone was in my race viewing era, but the other two are definitely memorable. But haven’t thought about for years…thanks for the memories!
I worked at a dodge dealership as a mechanic in the 80’s. We had a red a100 as our shop truck. Got to build the 318 and the 904 tranny for it. It was super cool to drive but you felt like you were always going to hit something with no front end!
My 2018 F150 Platinum was expensive...but a seven figure car? Holy crap! I've owned a lot of MOPAR cars, my first was a 1969 Roadrunner in 1986, then a 1968 Dodge Charger 383 4 speed, 1969 Plymouth GTX 440, 1969 Charger R/T SE 440 4 speed Super Track Pack, 1970 Dodge Superbee 383, 1970 Challenger R/T 44 Six Pack...all were awesome cars! I met and talked to Ray Barton about a HEMI for the Charger R/T as it did not have its original engine but in the end stuck with the correct year HP2 440 replacement.
There’s a laser that could help you with the tight squeeze putting the motor in and there’s 3 options of laser lights. 1st one is vertical solid line 2nd is solid horizontal line and 3rd is spot laser point which you could get two spots one above the laser and the other spot from laser straight out the front. They can be magnets so you can hang it from the exactly same spot and if you have it sitting on the floor you would put either a line on the solid laser beams or the spots you have on the 3rd position of your laser. They made it so easier if you had to put steel frame in buildings or walls in a house. Instead of the old plumb bob weigh hanging from the spot above to have a correct vertical walls if you had nothing to measure from on the floor.
years a go i loved watching the T V show that air on some channel this was a great show that i loved it an was sad wan i could not watch it any more wan i was younger i use to have a 1969 coronet R T with a 440 4barl auto tras on the floor i wish i had kept but being a kid in the ARMY at the time an needing the money i sold it it would be great. if you could find one an build one just so an old man could relive some of hes past a do somrthing that i never got the opportunity to do love you.r show keep up the youtube live feeds
I'm Australian, former mechanic/welder, and always had one ballast resistor, sometimes two. You never knew when you'd come across someone in a Dodge/Plymouth/Chrysler or the Australian Valiant with a blown resistor. That was just driving around town or the nearby countryside in my "pose car" a 1969 Dodge Monaco 4 door pillarless with the 383 cube motor 23/4 mpg highway 11/12 mpg around town. Like I said a pose car, do a lap or two of the main street of an evening and then park alongside others with really good cars and watch the world go by. The Monaco was only one of two left in Australia at the time.
@@GetsumJ I used to love the Yank Tanks, mostly Dodge and Plymouth, V8's of course. Must admit my first Dodge was a 6 cylinder. A 1956 Dodge Kingsway 6 cyl flathead, side valve. Only Holden I've had was an LC Torana 2 door with a 2250 cc 6 cylinder motor. Some friends had V8 Monaro's but only one had a 350 GTS and boy could it go..
@@RobertSmith-bc9uk The old slant 225 6 "G" wasn't a bad powerplant. But in the 6 cyl world, the Ford 300 six is king due to its stroke and indestructability. People still consider it one of the all time best up with the 2Jz, the LS, and of course the Coyote.
I've had more Mopars than I can count and have NEVER had a ballast resistor failure. And I don't know of any of my Mopar friends ever having one either.
At mark 5:36 the gas tank straps have no gasket between the straps and the tank. Original or not, strap gaskets are needed to avoid rust-through and a tank leak.
Except the historical vehicle registry 1970 dodge challenger triple black hemi four speed with every option you could get from the dealer only one and original mint condition.
@@ruralridez6165 There are 70 of them and they arent of significant importance. They will come up for sale in due time. Hey, you can probably own 2 of them.
@@aspiceronni4462 good luck finding one in Gold Rush yet alone one that is a 6 speed manual. who would of thought back in 1970 that a $4k car would be worth 6 figure 50 year later. Mine will stay in its car capsule for many many years to be only a trailer queen.
Amazing how tight those under hood clearances are. Which amazes me, considering how absolutely deplorable their external body panel fitment was straight off the assembly line back in the day when they were new.
I grew up with a Direct Connection founding father as my actual Dad... Mark's knowledge is encyclopedic. If every episode was shot and edited like this (no filler) I would never miss an episode.
Show me , Christine , love that movie , I wish my vehicle could fix itself like that , great Intro but badass ride thanks 4 the info and showing us this , so when did rumble bee start and come from
One of two produced or existing? In the bronze? I heard that the 66 Coronet 4 door Hemi cars were the rarest. Heard 4 were produced 2 to Canada 2 to the US. Any input?
I see that the battery tray was not installed before you put the engine in. I assume you left that out for better clearance while installing the engine. Galen Glovier has told me that my Charger Hemi 4 speed is 1 of 58 made in 1967, 1 of 3 that has the Gold ZZ-1 paint and 1of 1 with Gold Interior.
I agree I've been watching for years on and off and it's great to see Alyssa getting her hands dirty and doing some real wrenching! Plus she is talking like she knows what she's talking about finally.
I stopped watching after all the wrong facts about the Little Red Wagon. The first engine was a dual quad 426 Hemi. It was built to race in the A/FX category-it was built to race, not do wheelstanding exhibitions. The Hilborn fuel injection was soon added when Bill Golden was assigned driving chores. Roger Lindamood drove it originally but the tendency to lift the front wheels spooked him. Bill worked on the truck until he was finally able to carry the front wheels the entire quarter-mile and Dodge decided to run the LRW as an exhibition vehicle instead of an A/FXer. A supercharger was not added until many years later. By the way, the Hurst Hemi Under Glass was also originally built as an A/FX car, not a wheelstander.
Actually the first guy to drive the Little Red Wagon was Jay Howell in 1964, then Roger Lindamood, and Jim Thornton of the Ramchargers, Jay and Dick did not build a truck two R&D guys from Chrysler strip the truck down and named it little wagon and then it went to Dick's shop with the two four barrels on it when the truck first stood up the fuel bowls emptied out and if you look at old photos you'll see the front of the rolled pan underneath the grill is mashed plus the truck had plexiglass all the way around for Windows the windows fell out of the windshield luckily they were plexiglass after that the wagon never ran any glass ever again a lot of people think there was a hole in the floor from Maverick to look through not true I crewed on East Coast tracks near my Maryland home for Bill Maverick Golden from 1988 to 2002 his retirement, This truck was brought back in service after truck after number three was destroyed in an end over end and roll over crash in Quebec City Canada 1975 ripping the truck apart and breaking Mavericks neck and all his knuckles and hurting his back very bad, the number four truck is the last surviving exhibition vehicle the sold for a half million twice the Don Garlits Museum truck sold for $300,000 it was just a clone of number four with over $50,000 with a chrome plating I actually donated the grill and the headlight covers which are made from 1956 Plymouth wheel cover centers.
@@haroldhoffmanjr4608 you have more info than I was able to find. I have one photo I downloaded that shows an early LRW (steel wheels, on a trailer with one other stock Dodge 4 door car). The cab has rear quarter windows. Any info on that?
@@threynolds2 That was a truck that Chrysler built to take the dealerships and show off, Bill told me he never had a deluxe cab Dodge A100 with the corner cab windows, also there's a promo picture of The Little Old Lady from Pasadena sitting in a Dodge a100 but you can see the mirror mounts on the truck which the Little Red Wagon would have never had mirror mounts, I've seen three photos of that truck one with a little kids are pulling a wagon in the museum it looks like another one it's on the back of a flatbed truck with a 66 Coronet by 1966 a Little Red Wagon was Candy Apple Red and it would have had the Mickey Thompson mags on it, the last picture of that truck was in front of a looks like a bar there is a group called Bill Maverick golden and his little red wagon on Facebook a friend of mine runs it out of California but I post most of the pictures on it because I actually crewed for Maverick from 1988/2002 and I basically ask a lot of questions because I was I'm a model builder and I always wanted to build a truck right most people think that Center Post in the windshield on the model kit is steel it's not it's a strip of rubber between the two flag glasses it's a gasket with the model company tells you in the original instruction sheet from IMC they come in the first brought it out 66 to 1970 to cut that out and also remove the Vent windows, of course I got the whole story wrong the truck ran two four barrels and then it went to the fuel injection system after they did put a blower on it with the blower was too much for it so they went back to the Hilborn Injector system and that's what he ran all the way up until 1967, then the truck was supercharged until 2002, You Should go on Facebook and look up that Group it's called NHRA Bill Maverick Goldens Little Red Wagon.
Does a 1967 Hemi Charger have the same plates welded into the frame at the rear? Was a speedometer retainer used on a 67 Charger? Great show, enjoy the detail. THank you.
The Little Red wagon aA100, in my mind, is easily a 1 million-dollar vehicle. I've always loved that truck, I've always loved A100's, and it chopped, rear engine, A100, is one of my bucket list vehicles, for sure!
I worked at the Lynch Road Assembly Plant in Detroit in the early 70's when these cars were built. I worked in the Hardware Dept. on the assembly line where the Body Drop was. The engine, trans, drive shaft front, and rear suspension (chassis) was already assembled, moving on a line about 4 ft. high. The body was suspended in the air, moving on a line and dropped down to meet the engine, etc. (chassis). It really was a tight squeeze. I remember once when line got out of sync and the front end of the engine compartment was resting on the engine fan blade. The car was moving down the assembly line with the whole body tilted. The foreman jumped up on the moving line and with an impact wrench removed the fan blade only to jump out of the way as the body came crashing down! All in a day's work at Lynch Road Assembly!
Thanks, so interesting, and nice MOPAR overviews with history … More so as my first new car Purchase was 70 Coronet 500/383 Turquoise/ auto/2 DR/ DeLUXE INT/ ps/ PB , Ralley Red/ Black vinyl with May 1970 Build (?, memory)… Anyways, I turned down a couple classic Mopars as we had my wife’s School to, finish & lots of driving ( remember GAS WAS 26-32 c GAL EVEN premium ).. My thought was to build it up using SUPer Bee/ RT **stuff : not really **much fits.. Anyhow, spent a lot of years working in that 1970 Coronet: it lasted some 15 plus years , of **much use & Warsaw Indiana area , road **salt before I gave up on it……** ( ps!: I never got the Window sticker on my $3100 ( FULL Price) 70 Coronet……. Interestingly, the Dealer also sold AMC,ETC.)….
I remember the Little Red Wagon running at Fremont Drag Strip back in mid or late 60's. A wheelie for a whole 1/4 mile, tail gate would throw sparks at night. The Secret Weapon was another one that ran there that was cool, Army Jeep with a HEMI. Those were some cool times, reversed chrome rims, Moon Caps and Rat Fink.
A retired former Manchester CT cop has a dark brown 1970 426 Hemi Demon that he bought new from Grand Spaulding Dodge in Chicago that they built in-house. One of only two that were ever built.
Oddly hilarious. With all Rob's skill, he chops the hell of out of his sentences and loves abrupt endings. It's an interesting style for a video. We're all here for the content and put up with it happily.
I worked as a mechanic in Dodge dealers in the late 70s. I could never understand why the welds on Mopars always looked so terrible. It wasn't the equipment- I learned MIG in 1974. I couldn't get away with welds that crappy looking when I was in welding school. The instructor wouldn't allow it. No excuse for that junk.
Just found your channel. Ever seen an old guy cry? Missing all my old Mopars lost to divorce leeches/lawyers... Shoulda just chose the cars n stayed single. But then I wouldn't have my daughter who I taught to count having her start spark plugs n lugnuts. Then she demanded to use the impact and tighten them (lugs only lol). On second thought that's what I miss the most, worth more than the cars could ever be!
MISS MEG RYAN is amazing !(please don't crisis me for her name ), Alissa is one special girl. Intelligent,smart and really fortunate to have her healthy body .A credit to her parents who love her and taught her not to be scared of anything.👍👍
Does anybody know whether that red accent around the rim of the headlight grill/bezel (at 38:05) is a factory option? If so was it noted on the fender tag? Its cool but I've only seen it on a couple cars (1970 Coronet & Charger). Was it a Hemi accent, only? Was it pained on at the factory or molded in the plastic. Like the red on the wheel hub its a suntle but cool accent.
I worked on at least one one off in my day but nothing So Glamorous that is a beauty and you guys really do a great job of entertaining and editing can't wait to see the Cornet running ciao for now
Is this the same car that was featured in Popular Hot Rodding magazine back in the late 80s, perhaps? I recall reading about this car before, if it is the same one. The magazine article said this car was found in a salvage yard, minus the engine and had been rear-ended pretty badly. It looks very familiar and same color. A 1970 Coronet R/T Hemi convertible. But not a Super Bee. Is this the same car?
Dear mr Werman More importsnt then the markings on the fuel lines is the material. All rubber fuel lines need an upgraded material that can resist new fuels which have ethanol. If not the ethanot will erode the rubber an zcrew up the entire fuel system. Your engine can even get leaned out the carbs and filters blocked.
When I hit the lottery, I will send you my 71 Sublime 340 Duster. Till then, she’s riding with factory paint, surface rust, rusty quarters, a mismatched sassy grass green fender and door (repainted in the early 80’s 🤦🏼♂️), a ripped not factory bench seat, and a droopy headliner. Oh yeah and a 360 under the hood because I can’t find a good enough 340 kit for my 70 Cuda 340 with 68 heads. Small 5 lug and drum brakes. She’s truly walking dead.
This is addressed to mark. Who said and I quote "Dodge is more masculine than Plymouth". You are incorrect sir. Wasn't Plymouth the performance side of Dodge. Hands down I would take a Plymouth Cuda over a challenge! I would also take a road runner or A GTX over the Dodge counterpart what was that a coronet. So you see mark and by the way I love your show big fan however I completely disagree with you on the statement. It was borderline offensive. Keep up the great work love you show.
I'm getting older now, but as a young guy I worked for a speed shop in MA. The owner had a huge MOPAR collection. We worked on everything, but MOPAR was king! Watching your show reminds me of those days. We worked all week and spent the weekends going to the track. We couldn't get enough of it. Your show captures that feeling! Thank you and keep it up!
Unlike most shows/youtube channels this guy clearly works on the cars and isn't some "personality" and secondly I love how the attention to detail includes the "errors" like the over spray.
A good rule of thumb is to just finger tighten the suspension fasteners and then tighten them after wards put on a suspension or alignment rack at correct ride height with full weight of vehicle on the suspension or four wheels. The bushings won't be twisted up and will last longer and ride might be less harsh
I like your attention to detail. I know if your shop did the restoration, its just like walking into the dealer in1970 and buying a new car.
Paint work is top notch.
You raised your daughter right. A young lady who loves cars and works on them. Congrats dad.👍👍
Real talk
ehhh. there are issues
Yea because to raise your daughter right she’s gotta work on cars? Ok Clown
@@davemartino5997 Just because your daughter thinks she's a dude, there no need to take it out on other people's comments. 🤦🏽
@@guardrail2897 nice try at projection
I love this show . You learn a lot and they do amazing work and they are not cocky. And they are funny with no drama .
Mark Worman is "the MOPAR GURU". He knows just about anything you'd ever want to know about the mid-60's to early 70's mopar classics. Just watch his episodes. He's a stickler for detail...a true Mopar perfectionist.
20:07 pretty sure suspension is supposed to be tighten when at ride hight.
if there is that much difference then the bushes are fucked, this is all new and exactly how it was done on the assembly line.
Less talky.... more worky...
Nice chrome socket for the lug nuts!
I got to 15:35 before I had to quit watching because of the annoying background music. When you're wanting to listen to what people are saying it's very annoying to have that music playing in the background.
Your attention to detail is just incredible Mr Mark
Great job! I was a teen during these Hemi years and knew these were special and worth having. Never had one but always wanted a 426 HEMI
Ya gotta remember for those whose hearing isn't perfect, background music is often just noise, and reduces intelligibility.
*pause* "ohh so thats where that shit is coming from"
I hate it.
Yup absolutely, sometimes so distracting it's pointless watching.
Yes, I am one of those. Some registers make it really hard to separate out and understand words when played together.
@@TwoAcresandaMule - I think youtube requires some music in videos... but we'd rather hear the engines...
@@BuzzLOLOL Some music is ok. I mean when they play end to end background music while everything else is going on
Absolutely stunning gold vert RT I love it!
Mark, thanks for sharing your knowledge and expertise. I would like to think that there are Chevrolet/Ford/Olds/Pontiac/AMC equivalents of you out there, but i'm pretty sure they are few and far between. Love the show!!!!
They are their for Chevy and Pontiac. The other brands are the rare ones
You made me laugh at a memory. "If you can piss you can paint". Smallville 2003-4 God bless ya Lou.
You are one of a kind Mark thank you for Sharing your knowledge
I hope there are more of these shows. just awesome !
Thank you Mark and Graveyard Cars! I learn so much from your show!
The last episode that was aired; I noticed that you added A Family Tradition under the logo, nice touch!! I really enjoy watching the show, thank everyone!!!
Wow just outstanding, put me back in my days. Outstanding job guys. The 69 road runner was my favorite black with tan interior wish I still had it,Appreciate you sharing I’ll be watching more
I count myself lucky to have seen both the Little Red Wagon and Color Me Gone at a small local drag strip, as well as Hemi Under Glass!
Don’t think Color Me Gone was in my race viewing era, but the other two are definitely memorable. But haven’t thought about for years…thanks for the memories!
I worked at a dodge dealership as a mechanic in the 80’s. We had a red a100 as our shop truck. Got to build the 318 and the 904 tranny for it. It was super cool to drive but you felt like you were always going to hit something with no front end!
Addicted to your show Mark. Absolutely brilliant.
My 2018 F150 Platinum was expensive...but a seven figure car? Holy crap! I've owned a lot of MOPAR cars, my first was a 1969 Roadrunner in 1986, then a 1968 Dodge Charger 383 4 speed, 1969 Plymouth GTX 440, 1969 Charger R/T SE 440 4 speed Super Track Pack, 1970 Dodge Superbee 383, 1970 Challenger R/T 44 Six Pack...all were awesome cars! I met and talked to Ray Barton about a HEMI for the Charger R/T as it did not have its original engine but in the end stuck with the correct year HP2 440 replacement.
i have restored over 30 torans in australia but you are on another leavel you are a true master craftsmans
I cannot get over the fact that they NEVER. TORQUE. ANYTHING!!
Yeah, I noticed that too. Maybe they came back and did it later. I torque everything on my 69 Charger to factory specs though.
There’s a laser that could help you with the tight squeeze putting the motor in and there’s 3 options of laser lights. 1st one is vertical solid line 2nd is solid horizontal line and 3rd is spot laser point which you could get two spots one above the laser and the other spot from laser straight out the front. They can be magnets so you can hang it from the exactly same spot and if you have it sitting on the floor you would put either a line on the solid laser beams or the spots you have on the 3rd position of your laser. They made it so easier if you had to put steel frame in buildings or walls in a house. Instead of the old plumb bob weigh hanging from the spot above to have a correct vertical walls if you had nothing to measure from on the floor.
Love your show. Reminds me of all my mopars . High speed runs from South Houston to Galveston on I-45 In my 70 Superbird.
I had a 1970 Coronet R/T with a 440 and a 1970 Coronet Super Bee with a 383. Both were the "GoMano" color. Wrecked both. I was young and dumb.
"GoMano" ? Surely you mean Go Mango.
Nice video all around. I enjoy the show and I enjoy the people. Thank you.
Amazing knowledge from the host. To bad those days are gone.
years a go i loved watching the T V show that air on some channel this was a great show that i loved it an was sad wan i could not watch it any more wan i was younger i use to have a 1969 coronet R T with a 440 4barl auto tras on the floor i wish i had kept but being a kid in the ARMY at the time an needing the money i sold it it would be great. if you could find one an build one just so an old man could relive some of hes past a do somrthing that i never got the opportunity to do love you.r show keep up the youtube live feeds
4:21 - Ballast Resister - One of the biggest failures on all my Mopars from that day. Always carried a spare
I'm Australian, former mechanic/welder, and always had one ballast resistor, sometimes two. You never knew when you'd come across someone in a Dodge/Plymouth/Chrysler or the Australian Valiant with a blown resistor. That was just driving around town or the nearby countryside in my "pose car" a 1969 Dodge Monaco 4 door pillarless with the 383 cube motor 23/4 mpg highway 11/12 mpg around town. Like I said a pose car, do a lap or two of the main street of an evening and then park alongside others with really good cars and watch the world go by. The Monaco was only one of two left in Australia at the time.
@@RobertSmith-bc9uk - Lucky you being Aussie. I have always admired cars like the 1970s Holden Monaro 350 GTS. Never owned, always wanted
@@GetsumJ I used to love the Yank Tanks, mostly Dodge and Plymouth, V8's of course. Must admit my first Dodge was a 6 cylinder. A 1956 Dodge Kingsway 6 cyl flathead, side valve. Only Holden I've had was an LC Torana 2 door with a 2250 cc 6 cylinder motor. Some friends had V8 Monaro's but only one had a 350 GTS and boy could it go..
@@RobertSmith-bc9uk The old slant 225 6 "G" wasn't a bad powerplant. But in the 6 cyl world, the Ford 300 six is king due to its stroke and indestructability. People still consider it one of the all time best up with the 2Jz, the LS, and of course the Coyote.
I've had more Mopars than I can count and have NEVER had a ballast resistor failure. And I don't know of any of my Mopar friends ever having one either.
At mark 5:36 the gas tank straps have no gasket between the straps and the tank. Original or not, strap gaskets are needed to avoid rust-through and a tank leak.
Except the historical vehicle registry 1970 dodge challenger triple black hemi four speed with every option you could get from the dealer only one and original mint condition.
I have a pretty rare 2020 Challenger 50th Scat Pack Widebody in Gold Rush #55 of 70 and its 1 of only 6 manuals made in that color combo.
If only that was close to this car in importance.
@@aspiceronni4462 maybe someday. See if you can find one for sale auto or manual anywhere in the world.
@@ruralridez6165 There are 70 of them and they arent of significant importance. They will come up for sale in due time. Hey, you can probably own 2 of them.
@@aspiceronni4462 good luck finding one in Gold Rush yet alone one that is a 6 speed manual. who would of thought back in 1970 that a $4k car would be worth 6 figure 50 year later. Mine will stay in its car capsule for many many years to be only a trailer queen.
@@ruralridez6165 I'm not dissing your ride bro. I'm just saying they dont make them like they used to.
Good channel, surprised I haven't found this til just now.
I appreciate the knowledge and expertise!!! That car is beautiful 😍
Hair brush ??
Amazing how tight those under hood clearances are. Which amazes me, considering how absolutely deplorable their external body panel fitment was straight off the assembly line back in the day when they were new.
I grew up with a Direct Connection founding father as my actual Dad... Mark's knowledge is encyclopedic. If every episode was shot and edited like this (no filler) I would never miss an episode.
what happened to pre loading suspension before tightening it.
I just love this show great job guys I can’t stop watching it 👍🏼
Show me , Christine , love that movie , I wish my vehicle could fix itself like that , great Intro but badass ride thanks 4 the info and showing us this , so when did rumble bee start and come from
One of two produced or existing? In the bronze? I heard that the 66 Coronet 4 door Hemi cars were the rarest. Heard 4 were produced 2 to Canada 2 to the US. Any input?
Not enough girls like Alyssa in this world, gj for that amazing Dodge Hemi beauty!
I see that the battery tray was not installed before you put the engine in. I assume you left that out for better clearance while installing the engine. Galen Glovier has told me that my Charger Hemi 4 speed is 1 of 58 made in 1967, 1 of 3 that has the Gold ZZ-1 paint and 1of 1 with Gold Interior.
Love Graveyard Carz Thank Matt Nelosn Sweeney Port St Lucie FL
An absolutely magnificent built and fantastic attention to detail.
Hi Mark! I like that I know more about Mopar when I watch your videos.
I agree I've been watching for years on and off and it's great to see Alyssa getting her hands dirty and doing some real wrenching! Plus she is talking like she knows what she's talking about finally.
And according to her dad she's putting on pounds. Lol
I stopped watching after all the wrong facts about the Little Red Wagon. The first engine was a dual quad 426 Hemi. It was built to race in the A/FX category-it was built to race, not do wheelstanding exhibitions. The Hilborn fuel injection was soon added when Bill Golden was assigned driving chores. Roger Lindamood drove it originally but the tendency to lift the front wheels spooked him. Bill worked on the truck until he was finally able to carry the front wheels the entire quarter-mile and Dodge decided to run the LRW as an exhibition vehicle instead of an A/FXer. A supercharger was not added until many years later.
By the way, the Hurst Hemi Under Glass was also originally built as an A/FX car, not a wheelstander.
Actually the first guy to drive the Little Red Wagon was Jay Howell in 1964, then Roger Lindamood, and Jim Thornton of the Ramchargers, Jay and Dick did not build a truck two R&D guys from Chrysler strip the truck down and named it little wagon and then it went to Dick's shop with the two four barrels on it when the truck first stood up the fuel bowls emptied out and if you look at old photos you'll see the front of the rolled pan underneath the grill is mashed plus the truck had plexiglass all the way around for Windows the windows fell out of the windshield luckily they were plexiglass after that the wagon never ran any glass ever again a lot of people think there was a hole in the floor from Maverick to look through not true I crewed on East Coast tracks near my Maryland home for Bill Maverick Golden from 1988 to 2002 his retirement, This truck was brought back in service after truck after number three was destroyed in an end over end and roll over crash in Quebec City Canada 1975 ripping the truck apart and breaking Mavericks neck and all his knuckles and hurting his back very bad, the number four truck is the last surviving exhibition vehicle the sold for a half million twice the Don Garlits Museum truck sold for $300,000 it was just a clone of number four with over $50,000 with a chrome plating I actually donated the grill and the headlight covers which are made from 1956 Plymouth wheel cover centers.
@@haroldhoffmanjr4608 you have more info than I was able to find. I have one photo I downloaded that shows an early LRW (steel wheels, on a trailer with one other stock Dodge 4 door car). The cab has rear quarter windows. Any info on that?
@@threynolds2 That was a truck that Chrysler built to take the dealerships and show off, Bill told me he never had a deluxe cab Dodge A100 with the corner cab windows, also there's a promo picture of The Little Old Lady from Pasadena sitting in a Dodge a100 but you can see the mirror mounts on the truck which the Little Red Wagon would have never had mirror mounts, I've seen three photos of that truck one with a little kids are pulling a wagon in the museum it looks like another one it's on the back of a flatbed truck with a 66 Coronet by 1966 a Little Red Wagon was Candy Apple Red and it would have had the Mickey Thompson mags on it, the last picture of that truck was in front of a looks like a bar there is a group called Bill Maverick golden and his little red wagon on Facebook a friend of mine runs it out of California but I post most of the pictures on it because I actually crewed for Maverick from 1988/2002 and I basically ask a lot of questions because I was I'm a model builder and I always wanted to build a truck right most people think that Center Post in the windshield on the model kit is steel it's not it's a strip of rubber between the two flag glasses it's a gasket with the model company tells you in the original instruction sheet from IMC they come in the first brought it out 66 to 1970 to cut that out and also remove the Vent windows, of course I got the whole story wrong the truck ran two four barrels and then it went to the fuel injection system after they did put a blower on it with the blower was too much for it so they went back to the Hilborn Injector system and that's what he ran all the way up until 1967, then the truck was supercharged until 2002, You Should go on Facebook and look up that Group it's called NHRA Bill Maverick Goldens Little Red Wagon.
Does a 1967 Hemi Charger have the same plates welded into the frame at the rear? Was a speedometer retainer used on a 67 Charger? Great show, enjoy the detail. THank you.
I had one of these when I was 21. Paid $975. Not the convertible but the same model. I wonder where is is today.
Probably part of a 25th generation Toyota at this point. 😉😁
The Little Red wagon aA100, in my mind, is easily a 1 million-dollar vehicle. I've always loved that truck, I've always loved A100's, and it chopped, rear engine, A100, is one of my bucket list vehicles, for sure!
What is the difference between A body and B body etc.
Did the factory install engine and front suspension as you did or was k frame already in and dropped motor from top?
I've heard him say the factory installed the Hemi engines from the bottom.
I worked at the Lynch Road Assembly Plant in Detroit in the early 70's when these cars were built. I worked in the Hardware Dept. on the assembly line where the Body Drop was. The engine, trans, drive shaft front, and rear suspension (chassis) was already assembled, moving on a line about 4 ft. high. The body was suspended in the air, moving on a line and dropped down to meet the engine, etc. (chassis). It really was a tight squeeze. I remember once when line got out of sync and the front end of the engine compartment was resting on the engine fan blade. The car was moving down the assembly line with the whole body tilted. The foreman jumped up on the moving line and with an impact wrench removed the fan blade only to jump out of the way as the body came crashing down! All in a day's work at Lynch Road Assembly!
I met him in 76?? @New England Dragway, Epping,NH. He was quite the character, for sure. Semper Fi Boys & Girls!
Suddenly I'm in love with goose!
I teased my daughter relentlessly as she was growing up. I did it to toughen her up and she is a wonderful young lady.
Thanks, so interesting, and nice MOPAR overviews with history … More so as my first new car Purchase was 70 Coronet 500/383 Turquoise/ auto/2 DR/ DeLUXE INT/ ps/ PB , Ralley Red/ Black vinyl with May 1970 Build (?, memory)… Anyways, I turned down a couple classic Mopars as we had my wife’s School to, finish & lots of driving ( remember GAS WAS 26-32 c GAL EVEN premium ).. My thought was to build it up using SUPer Bee/ RT **stuff : not really **much fits.. Anyhow, spent a lot of years working in that 1970 Coronet: it lasted some 15 plus years , of **much use & Warsaw Indiana area , road **salt before I gave up on it……** ( ps!: I never got the Window sticker on my $3100 ( FULL Price) 70 Coronet……. Interestingly, the Dealer also sold AMC,ETC.)….
Absolute Art Work at It's Best!😳😍
........The Car Also! 😂😁👍
I wonder if they bend all their lines or do they order them that way.
I remember the Little Red Wagon running at Fremont Drag Strip back in mid or late 60's. A wheelie for a whole 1/4 mile, tail gate would throw sparks at night. The Secret Weapon was another one that ran there that was cool, Army Jeep with a HEMI. Those were some cool times, reversed chrome rims, Moon Caps and Rat Fink.
Wow! A lot of guys from the Bay Area are here. Lloyd V also.
A retired former Manchester CT cop has a dark brown 1970 426 Hemi Demon that he bought new from Grand Spaulding Dodge in Chicago that they built in-house. One of only two that were ever built.
Where have you guys been?
Anyone know the numbers on a 70' R/T conv. A/T PW A/C with the Power buldge hood ??
The E74 with the N96 is quite impressive engineering in the days before CAD.
Is this ‘70 R/T hemi convertible that was in the Otis Chandler collection’s American Muscle book from the early ‘90s?
Oddly hilarious. With all Rob's skill, he chops the hell of out of his sentences and loves abrupt endings. It's an interesting style for a video. We're all here for the content and put up with it happily.
I'm willing to bet marcs unique style is curtosy of cocaine
I like rumble of a Hemi Best sound in Town!
Saw that truck live at Niagara Dragstrip in the 70's . Great Show.......
14:36 is that crinkled paint under the hood?
I worked as a mechanic in Dodge dealers in the late 70s. I could never understand why the welds on Mopars always looked so terrible. It wasn't the equipment- I learned MIG in 1974. I couldn't get away with welds that crappy looking when I was in welding school. The instructor wouldn't allow it. No excuse for that junk.
Just found your channel. Ever seen an old guy cry? Missing all my old Mopars lost to divorce leeches/lawyers... Shoulda just chose the cars n stayed single. But then I wouldn't have my daughter who I taught to count having her start spark plugs n lugnuts. Then she demanded to use the impact and tighten them (lugs only lol). On second thought that's what I miss the most, worth more than the cars could ever be!
MISS MEG RYAN is amazing !(please don't crisis me for her name ), Alissa is one special girl. Intelligent,smart and really fortunate to have her healthy body .A credit to her parents who love her and taught her not to be scared of anything.👍👍
Bonk.
Down boy down..
Good boy.
Does anybody know whether that red accent around the rim of the headlight grill/bezel (at 38:05) is a factory option? If so was it noted on the fender tag? Its cool but I've only seen it on a couple cars (1970 Coronet & Charger). Was it a Hemi accent, only? Was it pained on at the factory or molded in the plastic. Like the red on the wheel hub its a suntle but cool accent.
Having a build video a car buyer can watch is pretty darn cool also.
Looking good, Mark! You can definitely see you've lost weight! I had to check the date on this because you look younger, too.
Alyssa definitely is the icing on the cake when it comes to seeing these Mopar come to life, but...
She's definitely bringin the cake too!
I don’t care how bad the welds are meant to be, I’d be like damn it, make my welds perfect, lol..
Was it made in Hamtramk or Los Angeles? Was the speedo in MPH or KPH?
Most modern engines use a Hemi design even small 4 cylinder engines. Now it is just a name to sell cars.
They are mostly pent roof which is very similar but allows for more valves
I worked on at least one one off in my day but nothing So Glamorous that is a beauty and you guys really do a great job of entertaining and editing can't wait to see the Cornet running ciao for now
So where is the other car?
The intro made me subscribe!
Awesome as always!
The only reason she's not married is Mark. She gets better looking every episode
Is this the same car that was featured in Popular Hot Rodding magazine back in the late 80s, perhaps?
I recall reading about this car before, if it is the same one.
The magazine article said this car was found in a salvage yard, minus the engine and had been rear-ended pretty badly.
It looks very familiar and same color. A 1970 Coronet R/T Hemi convertible. But not a Super Bee. Is this the same car?
Dear mr Werman
More importsnt then the markings on the fuel lines is the material.
All rubber fuel lines need an upgraded material that can resist new fuels which have ethanol.
If not the ethanot will erode the rubber an zcrew up the entire fuel system.
Your engine can even get leaned out the carbs and filters blocked.
If we wanted to listen to noisy irritating music, we'd be watching a music video
This ☝️
Just happened to see this as dude said “I hear you and 5 other people don’t like background music” and it has 5 likes 😂
EXACTLY.
@@Timmy2fingers You might want to edit that number again.
@@peskypeet
And again, and after frame 1 killing the music, proceeds to play irritating background music all the way through this vid. Smh
Very enjoyable video. New sub!
Wrong description...this isn't the rarest Hemi !
this is the rarest HEMI CAR !
And it's not even the rarest Hemi car.
can of red paint oddly sloppy?
So where you gonna buy fuel for it?
When I hit the lottery, I will send you my 71 Sublime 340 Duster. Till then, she’s riding with factory paint, surface rust, rusty quarters, a mismatched sassy grass green fender and door (repainted in the early 80’s 🤦🏼♂️), a ripped not factory bench seat, and a droopy headliner. Oh yeah and a 360 under the hood because I can’t find a good enough 340 kit for my 70 Cuda 340 with 68 heads. Small 5 lug and drum brakes. She’s truly walking dead.
Now matter what. You people at the shop do a Awesome job and I love your videos. Mark. You are a walking book. Lol. So cool
This is addressed to mark. Who said and I quote "Dodge is more masculine than Plymouth". You are incorrect sir. Wasn't Plymouth the performance side of Dodge. Hands down I would take a Plymouth Cuda over a challenge! I would also take a road runner or A GTX over the Dodge counterpart what was that a coronet. So you see mark and by the way I love your show big fan however I completely disagree with you on the statement. It was borderline offensive. Keep up the great work love you show.
WOW JUST WOW looks great so far ty for the video