Saying the RR was an unexpected hit and Dodge followed with the Bee is a bit of a stretch, seeing that both came out at the same time for the '68 model year.
Disagree. RR was a September 67 release, bee didn't debut till the middle of 68 model year.Saying the RR was an unexpected hit and Dodge followed with the Bee is a bit of a stretch, seeing that both came out at the same time for the '68 model year.
Sorry, not the case... 33 IMP is correctSaying the RR was an unexpected hit and Dodge followed with the Bee is a bit of a stretch, seeing that both came out at the same time for the '68 model year.
I think you are right.Also- first half of RR production- all 21 post coupes.
I believe all 68 Bee's are also post coupes, even thought it's the tail end of the production year.
Not a stretch at all. It's pretty much well known what the developments were on these models. I remember seeing quite a few RR's back in the day before any SB rolled the streets.Saying the RR was an unexpected hit and Dodge followed with the Bee is a bit of a stretch, seeing that both came out at the same time for the '68 model year.
You're correct !! in my post I subconsciously wrote engine.... should have been "body", thanks for spotting my error.I also believe Super "Bee" was a play on the B body platform, not the engine family.
Incorrect on both counts - according to those actually responsible for development of the car, sales expectationsSaying the RR was an unexpected hit and Dodge followed with the Bee is a bit of a stretch, seeing that both came out at the same time for the '68 model year.
Correct on all counts.Disagree. RR was a September 67 release, bee didn't debut till the middle of 68 model year.
Edit: nearly 45,000 roadrunners in 68, less than 8,000 68 superbees.
Also correct. All '68 Bees are post coupes (WM21).Also- first half of RR production- all 21 post coupes.
I believe all 68 Bee's are also post coupes, even thought it's the tail end of the production year.
Again, correct - and the product designer in charge of the graphics came up with the Super Bee logo virtuallyI also believe Super "Bee" was a play on the B body platform, not the engine family.
First RR’s didn’t have carpeting either, rubber.Not a stretch at all. It's pretty much well known what the developments were on these models. I remember seeing quite a few RR's back in the day before any SB rolled the streets.
"Taxi... get me where I'm going... FAST ! "First RR’s didn’t have carpeting either, rubber.
Welllll, I knew the guy that bought one of the first in the Akron area and it looked like rubber. Not like carpet we ever saw.
That could be. You could order many stripped models without carpet.Welllll, I knew the guy that bought one of the first in the Akron area and it looked like rubber. Not like carpet we ever saw.
Not really, the Coro440 was bottom line, NOT “500” level. “Mother Mopar “ did many strange things!Interesting that om a "high" price WH Coronet 440, you couldn't get bucket seats.
...but on a "medium" price WM Super Bee, you could.
With or without a console.