Nice car
I'll give him a 2007 Shelby GT 500 Signed by Carroll Shelby with only 203 miles on the odometer
I'll give him a 2007 Shelby GT 500 Signed by Carroll Shelby with only 203 miles on the odometer
I originally saw it online on Craigslist in Oct of 16 for 35K, have the ad still. It was near Miami. Called the guy, he said some guy from NY picked it up already, don't know if that was the flipper you talked to. I really wanted that car too.4mayhemi:
Yes sir, that is the car......
Wish it were mine
Yeah, it was THAT guy I spoke withI originally saw it online on Craigslist in Oct of 16 for 35K, have the ad still. It was near Miami. Called the guy, he said some guy from NY picked it up already, don't know if that was the flipper you talked to. I really wanted that car too.
Been waiting for it to resurface.
68 RR only option was that glorious solid lifter hemi...base was the 383, no 440s except the 6-barrel in 69-1/2....interesting on the 70 I though they had a 440-4 option as well...I thought WRONG! Happens all the time just ask her...I can NOT figure out why Plymouth did NOT "STUFF" the 440 4BBL into a Roadrunner in 1970!
Was it available in 1968 OR 1969
Clovis, in the central valley...(next to fresno)...I was gonna say "the hot part!" then I saw where you're at..we're lightweights in comparison!Ha Ha
Me too "beanhead"
PS: What part of whackyfornia are you from?
I'm at Edwards AFB
Okay, SO:
June 2006 Hemming's Muscle Machines states:
Engine options for the 1970 Superbee were:
1. 383 Magnum
2. 440/375
3. 440- Six Pack
4. Hemi
So: I'm going to say YES: the 70 Bee was available with the 440 Magnum engine
Did they offer any proof of the 440-4 in a Bee or are you simply taking them at their word?
But in 70 a 4bbl would still be a 440HP motor, so costs of the rods, crank, dampers etc. could play. Also, how much weight does a 383 have under a 440, 50-100lbs or so?It just supports the "mainstream idea" that they truly were low budget, affordable cars.
Confused 69coronetrt.
I'm just confused.....
I always thought the Superbee came with a 440 4V
Same with the roadrunner
It just would have made so much sense...
It just supports the "mainstream idea" that they truly were low budget, affordable cars.
Putting a 440-4 in a lower cost Bee would offer no distinction between it and an R/T. You'd be cutting into your own line up. The R/T was an upgrade in engine and trim. That's why the Bee got the lower cost 383-4 standard with optional Hemi in 68-69 or the optional 6-bbl in 70. (71 is a little different so we'll set that, and the 69 A12 package, aside for now).
The 440-4 was offered in a 70 Road Runner but only with the Superbird package.
Bottom line.....Hemings printed an error.
But in 70 a 4bbl would still be a HP motor, so costs of the rods, crank, dampers etc. could play. Also, how much weight does a 383 have under a 440, 50-100lbs or so?
Not the RB383, I was talking about the 440HP's extra cost/weight negating using it as the standard 70 Bee beyond the marketing angle.I ve done both engines, recently built the 440 for the 67 GTX
YES: The 383HP is a "stout/robust" block
If I were to guess I'd say 35 Lb heavier....