Muscle Car Fan

Latest Posts Under: Images

This 1974 Plymouth Duster 360 packs a de-tuned but still capable 360-cubic-inch V8 into a car built the same year Plymouth sold its Dusters primarily as fuel-conscious economy compacts. Plymouth built only 3,969 examples of this specific 360-equipped model, making it a genuine outlier in the Duster’s best-ever sales year. Here’s how Mopar squeezed real performance out of a car engineered for an oil crisis.

This 1923 Ford T-bucket pairs a 350ci small-block V8 with a body style that traces back to a 1950s Hollywood custom car and a TV show that introduced hot rodding to millions of viewers. Find out how a stripped-down Model T became one of the most copied shapes in American car culture, and why 1923 turned out to be the perfect year to build one from.

The 1967 Chevrolet Impala SS pictured here pairs a 350-cubic-inch V8 with a two-speed Powerglide automatic, wrapped in Chevy’s freshly redesigned Coke-bottle bodywork. It also carries newly mandated safety features like an energy-absorbing steering column and front shoulder straps, arriving the same year Detroit was forced to start engineering for survival, not just speed. Here’s what made this particular model year such a turning point for the Impala nameplate.

The 1974 AMC Hornet Sportabout pictured here traded big-block horsepower for a fuel-sipping 258 CID inline six, arriving right as the oil crisis reshaped what American buyers wanted from a car. Built by the smallest of Detroit’s automakers, this wagon paired practicality with just enough flair to avoid feeling like a compromise. Preserved by Gateway Classic Cars, it survives today as a rare, honest example of AMC’s underdog engineering.

The 440 badge on this 1964 Dodge has nothing to do with the famous 440-cubic-inch V8, that engine did not exist yet. It was simply the name of a mid-tier full-size trim, sitting between the base 330 and the upscale Polara, standard with a four-barrel 361-cubic-inch V8 and dual exhaust. Paired here with Chrysler’s dependable 727 TorqueFlite automatic. Here’s how Dodge’s confusing 1964 naming actually worked.

Plymouth expected to sell about 20,000 Road Runners in 1968. It sold roughly 45,000, enough to land in third place behind only the GTO and Chevelle SS 396 for muscle car sales that year. The formula was simple: a standard 383-cubic-inch V8 rated at 335 horsepower, a stripped interior, and an optional 426 Hemi for those willing to pay more. It turned out buyers didn’t need luxury trim to want serious performance, they just needed the price to make sense.

By 1955, the Hudson badge on this Wasp was covering for a car that was mostly Nash underneath, a product of the 1954 merger that created American Motors. It rode on Nash’s full-size platform and borrowed its 202-cubic-inch six from the smaller Hudson Jet, making up to 120 horsepower with the optional dual-carb Twin H-Power setup. Sales fell to just 7,191 units that year. Here’s the story behind one of Hudson’s last independent-looking cars.

The 1952 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery was built for police departments and delivery routes, not car shows, a plain-Jane hauler with an inline six and a manual gearbox. Decades later, its simple shape made it a favorite blank canvas for hot rodders. Here is how a fleet vehicle became a build worth showing off.

The 1968 Camaro looks like a carryover at first glance, but small changes, new marker lights, vent-less door glass, a 396 big block for SS buyers, reveal how fast Chevrolet was reacting to the pony car wars. With 235,147 built that year, it was not just surviving its second season, it was gaining ground.

This 1986 Zimmer Quicksilver started life as an ordinary Pontiac Fiero GT before the factory cut it apart and stretched it into a neoclassic luxury coupe. Buyers paid nearly four times the Fiero’s price for the transformation, and only 170 were ever built. See what a former GM designer did with 29 inches of added sheet metal and a 140-horsepower V6.

Ford expected the new Mustang to sell 100,000 units in its first year — buyers blew past that mark in under three months. This gallery traces the first-generation Mustang from its record-breaking 1964 debut through the Boss 302 era, with a surprising twist: the launch year wasn’t even the Mustang’s best-selling one. See which model year actually topped the charts.

This 1969 Dodge Coronet R/T convertible carries the standard 375-horsepower 440 Magnum, but the same order sheet hid a far rarer option that almost nobody chose. Only 97 hardtops and 10 convertibles left the factory with the fearsome 426 Hemi that year. Find out why the Coronet R/T’s popularity was already fading fast by the time this car was built.

In 1970, Ford briefly revived the Falcon name as the base trim of its mid-size Torino line, and buried inside its options list was a 429 Cobra Jet that could be built to Super Cobra Jet spec. Only about 90 Falcons were ordered with that Drag Pack option, backed by a Detroit Locker rear and rated at 375 horsepower, and just 38 of those came with an automatic transmission. Produced for less than six months, the combination makes this one of the rarest big-block Fords most muscle car fans have never heard of.

The 1987 Corvette’s 5.7-liter L98 looks like a minor running change on paper, but it hid a valvetrain upgrade – roller hydraulic lifters – that did more for performance than the fuel injection system it’s usually credited for. Here’s how Chevrolet finally moved past its awkward Cross-Fire Injection years, and what quietly changed inside the engine that year.

This 1967 Buick Riviera arrived the year Buick retired its long-serving “Nailhead” V8 in favor of an all-new 430 cubic-inch engine making 360 horsepower and 475 lb-ft of torque. That swap dropped the Riviera’s 0-60 time to roughly 7.8 seconds, genuinely quick for a two-ton personal luxury coupe. Presented here through Gateway Classic Cars, it’s a well-documented example of the Riviera’s first year with its most memorable engine.


Scroll To Top