1967 Dodge Dart Mopar Plymouth Hemi on 2040-cars
Allen Park, Michigan, United States
Body Type:Sedan
Engine:416
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Interior Color: Black
Make: Dodge
Number of Cylinders: 8
Model: Dart
Trim: Sedan
Drive Type: RWD
Mileage: 100
Exterior Color: Blue
Number of Doors: 2
Spring is around the corner I have a turn key street n strip Dart. Body is from Texas 99 % rust free, totaly stripped all dents bumped out, minor amounts of body filler Painted with Dupont Base, clear cut and polished . All glass in good condition, rechromed bumpers all brackets cleaned and painted Grill stripped of black ,very nice headlight bezels Tail light bezels NOS real nice lenses. backup lights very nice condition. Mounted a functional 67style hood scoop, sanded and painted chasis black New rubber seals on doors and trunk Suspension fully replaced with big bolt pattern Manual disc Compition Engineering drag shocks New torsion bars and V8 kframe Stearing box is a 20 to 1 ratio from Mancini racing , split rear factory wheel tubs and narrowed 8 3/4 *rear end frame is tied along with a drive shaft loop. . Mancini racing springs,competition racing shocks and adjustable snubber, stock fuel tank with 3/8 sending unit Carter electric pump. Floor also paint Blue in single stage . Interior new carpet,bucket seats frames blasted new buns snd skins. four speed hump welded in , B/M shifter Dash board repainted nice original 67 pad door panels dyed black original headliner 6point Roll bar and five point harness All Autometer gauges dash bezels repainted Engine 340 bored and stroked Stroker kit from Mancini Race balanced blue print 11.9 compression on pump gas Edelbrock heads ported and milled at Best Machine Warren Michigan ARP bolts Milidon pan windage tray and pick up . 570 VooDoo solid cam with aluminum roller rockers Super Victor intake and 750 Proform carb Exhaust is all TTI 3'' with Dynomax mufflers Trans is a race built A904 with a 3500 stall Turbo action convertor Cheeta forward pattern vale body Car runs 11.06 in quarter mile with 4.30 gears and M/T 275 60 15 drag radials I'm sure I forgot something I have had this car for 7years and only put 100miles on it I have had it down the quarter mile 15 times its a blast I don't use it Its time for it too go Any questions please ask I will asist in shipping I can trailer with in 250miles if reserve is met thanks for looking
Dodge Dart for Sale
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Auto blog
How fracking is causing Chrysler minivans to sit on Detroit's riverfront
Fri, 25 Apr 2014It's fascinating the way that one change to a complex system can have all sorts of unintended consequences. For instance, there are hundreds of new Chrysler Town and County and Dodge Grand Caravan minivans built in Windsor, Ontario, sitting in lots on the Detroit waterfront because of the energy boom in the Bakken oil field in the northern US and parts of Canada.
The huge amount of crude oil coming from these sites mostly use freight trains for transport, and that supply boom has resulted in a shortage of railcars to carry other goods. According to The Windsor Star, North American crude oil transport by train has gone from 9,500 carloads in 2008 to 434,032 carloads in 2013. Making matters worse, some North American rail infrastructure is still damaged because of this year's harsh winter, and that's slowing things down even further.
Chrysler admits to The Star that it has had some delivery delays due to the freight train shortage. In the meantime, it's using more trucks to deliver its vehicles. Trucking is a far less economical solution, partially because a train can carry so many more units at one time, but alternatives are slim. The Windsor plant alone has a deal for 33 trucks to distribute the minivans around Canada and the Midwestern US.
Diesel Power finds the ultimate modified oil-burner
Sat, 24 Aug 2013For nine years, Diesel Power magazine has run the Diesel Power Challenge, this year's grindfest being "a week-long torture test that features seven events, nine trucks, 8,000 horsepower, and nearly 15,000 pound-feet of torque." The road to being crowned "the most powerful truck" starts with a dyno run, and then continues through the completion of a CDL-style obstacle course, an eighth-of-a-mile drag race while towing a 10,000-pound trailer, a quarter-mile drag race without a trailer, a fuel economy test in the mountains and finally a sled-pulling test through a 300-foot-long packed-mud pit.
What kind of trucks get into such a fight? Last year's winner, for instance - who upgraded his truck this year to prove he didn't "luck into the win" - drives a 2008 Ford F-250 Super Duty with a 6.4-liter Power Stroke V8 upgraded with a custom intake, Elite Diesel triple turbos and a two-stage nitrous system. Another competitor has a 2005 Dodge Ram 2500 powered by a 5.9-liter Cummins inline-six, upgraded with Garrett turbos, dual-stage nitrous, a seven-inch exhaust stack and twin fans built into the bed to cool the Sun Coast Omega transmission. The numbers on that truck: 1,255 horsepower, and 2,063 pound-feet of torque at the wheels. Naturally, as the image above might suggest, things don't always end well.
You'll find all five videos covering this years challenge below. A scene in the dyno video sums it all up perfectly: a competitor leaves his nitrous on too long and the crew is treated to some ominous poppings, he leans out the window, throws both hands up and shouts, "Amer'ca!"
8 things you learn while driving a cop car [w/videos]
Tue, Jan 27 2015Let me start off with the obvious: it is absolutely illegal to impersonate a police officer. And now that that's out of the way, I'd just like to say that driving a cop car is really, really cool. Here's the background to this story: Dodge unveiled its redesigned 2015 Charger Pursuit police cruiser, and kindly allowed Autoblog to test it. That meant fellow senior editor Seyth Miersma and I would spend a week with the cop car, and the goal here was to see just how different the behind-the-wheel experience is, from a civilian's point of view. After all, it's not technically a police car – it isn't affiliated with any city, it doesn't say "police" anywhere on it, and it's been fitted with buzzkill-worthy "NOT IN SERVICE" magnets (easily removed for photos, of course). But that meant nothing. As Seyth and I found out after our week of testing, most people can't tell the difference, and the Charger Pursuit commands all the same reactions as any normal cop car would on the road. Here are a few things we noticed during our time as wannabe cops. 1. You Drive In A Bubble On The Highway Forget for a moment that our cruiser was liveried with Dodge markings instead of those of the highway patrol. Ignore the large "NOT IN SERVICE" signs adhered around the car. Something in the lizard brain of just about every licensed driver tells them to hold back when they see any hint of a cop car, or just the silhouette of a light bar on a marked sedan. Hence, when driving on the highway, and especially when one already has some distance from cars forward and aft, a sort of bubble of fear starts to open up around you. Cars just ahead seem very reluctant to pass one another or change lanes much, while those behind wait to move up on you until there's a full herd movement to do so. The effect isn't perfect – which is probably ascribable to the aforementioned giveaways that I'm not really a cop – but it did occur on several occasions during commutes from the office. 2. You Drive In A Pack In The City My commute home from the Autoblog office normally takes anywhere from 25 to 30 minutes, and it's a straight shot down Woodward Avenue from Detroit's north suburbs into the city, where I live. Traffic usually moves at a steady pace, the Michigan-spec "five-over" speed.