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For our younger members, can you explain a bit about your interst in the muscle car era?

SteveSS

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Interest. Sorry I still don't know how to edit my titles. For me it's easy. By the time I was hitting driving age the awesome used muscle cars were becoming affordable for students. Most of my fascination then came from my youth. For my kids, they had no choice. Growing up in my family muscle cars were a part of life.

My question is for Gen Xers, Millenials, and ages basically surrounding those generations, how did your fascination with muscle cars, and or Mopars develop? I guess I'm hoping we have some younger members.
 
Grandpa worked a Chrysler dealership, Dad grew up with the Max Wedges, Hemi’s, 6 paks and I was conceived in the back of my Dads 63’ Fury. Damn near born in the passenger front seat. Mom got a busted knee as my was hitting 2nd leaving the cops behind trying to mom to the hospital. I was trying to get out as he pulled up to the ER and just as the cops pulled in they saw my mom getting put on the stretcher and left. This is all according to my parents. This happens in Marietta Georgia in 1972 as my dad was going to some school for the Navy. So I guess you could say, Mopar’s are in my DNA.
 
Mine was, idk my first real daily was a 74 adventurer (d200) then when i was 18 i bought a 72 dart with a slant in it from a local wrecking yard. Doomed to be scrapped maybe idk. Anywho. Just enjoyed driving it and working on it. Still have it and still reliable. Could daily again if i had to. My old lady had to drive it though the winter here prob 7 years ago as her car broke down and couldn't afford to get a new one. Dependable. Always enjoyed dukes of hazzard wanted a general. I would watch it with my older brother...now i have a 68 and will never under any circumstances paint it orange or put an o1
 
Define younger?

I did not get my license till around 1999.

Seen a 30 model A coupe cruising the streets in my town which had me hooked at a young age. Also my father had built a garden tractor in highschool. It has a V6 from a 65ish mustang mated to two Mopar a833 (one reversed to get super low gears). I putted around on that with open headers while dragging the harrows around the farm yard.

Found a half ton 42 dodge truck for sale but could not get the cash together. Still sad about that.
Got an early 354 hemi around 2002 and was on the hunt for another old dodge truck.
Was collecting parts to build a 40s truck with the hemi.

Stumbled on to my 67 dart so I built it with some of my father's old parts from his youth with major upgrades :-D

Sold the hemi and regret it.

Found a model A coupe which I am building now but with a nailhead.
But also found my old 96 Dakota from 2000 but it's getting upgraded to v8 power and 4 speed.
Dart going BB power.
 
Classic rock and old car flicks pretty much ingrained it in my head that the cool guy always has a bad *** muscle car. Started off on old Harleys and got my mechanical confidence up and at the same time got a decent job in construction to where I could start putting money towards a project. And once you get involved building cars you get a reputation around town as being that muscle car dude and it snowballed from there. Got my cousins hooked too now our driveway is full of mopars and random people stop by almost everyday to tell us how cool it is. And chicks love it.
 
Hey kids, load up some pictures of your rides,projects,whatever you got going on to go with your story.
Hell if us old guys can I know y’all can to.
 
Hey kids, load up some pictures of your rides,projects,whatever you got going on to go with your story.
Hell if us old guys can I know y’all can to.
This help?
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When I was 16, I bought my first car, a 1939 Buick coupe with a Straight Eight. I was an ardent reader of all the popular hot rod magazines of the time, and when the original in-liner shortly expired, I thought the logical replacement should be a newer Buick 322 Nailhead. I am not sure what failed first; my talent in the motor swap, or my interest in the project. However my hot rod dreams were abandoned when a friend expressed interest in selling his current ride for something newer.
This lead to me buying his 1959 Pontiac Catalina wide-track 2-door sedan. Up here in Ontario, this was a very unusual vehicle, in that our Canadian Pontiacs were basically Catalina bodies plopped down on narrow-track Chevrolet chassis. What made this car even more unusual was the Tripower 345 hp 389 hooked to a column-shifted 3-speed stick. This was in 1965, just as the first wave of factory muscle cars was approaching. This big old girl was powerful in its day, and was a force to be reckoned with, locally. Unfortunately, as parts wore out or were simply abused under my care, substitutes were increasing hard to find and expensive for this unique American car, and my interest in it began to wane. It was sold to an acquaintance, but in hindsight, I should have hung on to it, because of its now rarity. In 1965, people were only collecting Model A's and Packards, not clapped out old passenger cars.
My interest was now caught by a used 1962 Dodge Dart 2-door sedan, my first of a string of B-bodies. This car was an ex-police cruiser and sported 15" rims and H. D. suspension and 11" brakes. The tired 313 and 3-speed manual were soon replaced by a 383, 4-Bbl. hooked to a 4-speed. This power train came out of an almost new wreck. I terrorized my area with this home made muscle car before selling it to a friend to purchase a new 1969 SuperBee.
The 'Bee had just been backed off the transporter when I spotted it at our local Dodge store. I immediately turned my '62 Dart around to go in and drool on this car. After about 3 hours of negotiations, I owned it. This was on a late Friday afternoon, and since the 'Bee had not yet been PDI'd, I could not take delivery of it until Monday night after work. I never even took it for a test drive. It was a Sunfire Yellow coupe with black bench seat interior and Bumblebee stripe. It was powered by the standard 383 Magnum and column-shifted TorqueFlight. The rear end held 3.91 gears on a Suregrip diff. It was also equipped with power disc brakes and Hemi suspension. The car had the RamAir hood and the decorative rear quarter scoops. I would later score a fibreglass Six Pack hood for it. Increasing insurance costs and getting married soon sent this car to a new owner. Another one I should have kept!
My first "family" car I bought after marriage was a used 1970 Buick Wildcat hardtop with a 370 hp. 455. This was a powerful, comfortable car and was one of the best cars I ever owned. That big engine kept the car from feeling clumsy. I don't know what the top end on that thing was, as it was still accelerating after the 120 mph. speedo needle was buried! I could blow off a buddy's new 350 Corvette both in acceleration and top end with it. We kept it for 8 years, pretty well the span of my previous 3 cars.
I took a break from fast cars for a few years after buying a house and raising two children. My B-body fever returned with the purchase of a 1964 Polara hardtop, a 1964 Polara 500 convertible, a 1967 Coronet wagon, and finally, my 1967 Coronet R/T. Of course, they all ended up with RB's in them. I even had a modern muscle car, a 2005 Hemi Magnum R/T wagon.
I consider myself lucky to have grown up in the classic muscle car era, with a valid driver's license. It was a time of unbelievable cars and colours from all manufacturers. I always felt that the Mopar engineers had a little more gasoline in their veins than those of the other companies. I suspect I must have always had some gasoline in my veins as well.
 
My question is for Gen Xers, Millenials, and ages basically surrounding those generations, how did your fascination with muscle cars, and or Mopars develop?

For GenX me it developed as a child in the early 1970's. My father changed cars "more than he changed underwear" my mother used to say. His love of cars was impressionable for sure. I also have two older brothers. One is 10yrs older and the other is 14yrs older. My oldest brother had a "rooster dink pink" 1970 Duster 340 when I was around 4-5yrs old. His friends all had muscle cars. His one friend's father owned the Dodge dealership. So lots of 60's/70's muscle pulling up in our driveway regularly. Got to go for a ride or two. They did all the cruise nights, it was huge back then.

Fast forward to my teen years and I was buying the auto trader every week, dreaming of getting my own muscle car. My friends drove Mopars in high school. Dusters, Super Bee's etc. I was always a Mopar guy. I finally was able to afford a 1971 Demon 340 by the time I was 18. Then our generation was doing the cruise nights. I was meeting some of my brother's friend's brothers and swapping stories. The cars were unreal. So much Mopar. However I eventually sold the Demon around 1994 due to life. The guy who bought it, I heard he recently passed away, and from what I understand it is still parked in his garage. He was going to finish the work I started, but apparently it has not seen the light of day since '94.

Now for Xmas 2021, I decided to buy myself another classic Mopar. Sadly the Hemi's aren't as cheap as they were in 1983 when I started buying those auto traders. But I still managed a nice B Body, and I'm quite content with that.
 
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My youngest is Gen 'why' and grew up with the old stuff but bought an El Camino. Never had any GM stuff when she was growing up so go figure. She did try to buy a Rampage years earlier but the guy was an ahole and didn't want to talk to her and kept looking at me and I kept pointing to her lol. Was trying to teach her how to deal with someone but that someone didn't want to talk to her at all and she got frustrated so we left. I kinda knew the guy and just shook my head at him before turning away.
 
When I was little. My dad had a car. But it wasn't just any car. It was a Mopar. It wasn't just any Mopar. It was a 71 Polara. Not a Fury. Not a Chrysler. The odd C body.

I fell in love. It was so damn cool. It was loud and smelly. It was big and mean. It left a permanent impression in my mind. From the FAS graphic equalizer jumping around with the music in the center vent opening in the dash, to the cool silver medallions on the door panels. This is what a car is supposed to be.
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Turned 30 years old today. That was well over 20 years ago thinking back. I wouldn't have it any other way.

It started with the Polara. Then Hot wheels. Then models. That evolved into high detail models. Then a 71 Demon project. Then Cordoba. Then another. Then a New Yorker...and so on and so on. Now I've come full circle back to my main Mopar love. 70-71 Polara and even own an almost twin to my fathers old car. (His was a DE23, mine is a DL23) I am working on making it an accurate replica of the car that started it all.
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The fellas my age that dont get it are truly missing out. Mopar or No Car!
 
I've always wondered about this as well. I liked the musclecars from my youth, I couldn't buy a new 1969 Road Runner but I still love them to this day. I appreciate the old Hot Rods but don't want a flathead.
Yet my son who is 28 is building a 68 Charger, wants original seats in it and a B-motor. No new gen Hemis for him although big brakes and FI will be there. He has built a vew 69-88 Dodge trucks too. He never had a chance I guess from the time I took him for a ride when he was about 5 powershifting my original Hemi Cuda.
Other young people though I'm not sure. Maybe because the 80's, 90's early 2000 cars weren't that memorable. So they gravitate to the more unique 60's and 70's cars.
 
I'm a millennial. My interest oddly enough started with antique tractors and engines. I was fixing them up when I was 10. So I always had an appreciation for old things. My first car was a 62 Pontiac Catalina with a 389 I got at an antique tractor auction for like $800. I drove that car for a couple years in high school. Enjoyed working on it and tinkering with it. It was reasonably stock but it would smoke just about all my classmates when we raced down the interstate. I still have that car. Stopped driving it when I heard a lifter start ticking.

So anyway I needed a new ride. I was looking for a different car but I wouldn't settle for much less than that 389. I wasn't brand loyal yet. But I actually was leaning toward GTO's. I didn't like chevelles, novas, or camaros because there were several kids with them at my high school. They weren't unique. Mustangs were way too underpowered for what I wanted. So I actually kinda started looking at Dusters. I loved the chargers too but couldn't find any. Finally was able to find my 69 charger, at another auction. Then my buddy's dad bought a 71 charger that he decided was too much work and off handedly offered it to me. So for $400 I bought it and drove it home. This was all before I was 18. While in college I picked up a 68 body and a bunch of 1970 parts. Enough to Frankenstein a car together. Then I picked up a 73 with a 3 on the tree as well. All combined purchase prices in 2002-2008 dollars I have about $7k in all of them. Unfortunately I feel those days are gone. I'm hopeful prices will mellow over the next decade so people of the younger generation don't get screwed into honda preludes as the only thing they can afford.
 
70 Polara You've GOT to put the air shocks on man. Too cool! Reminds of that car in Thunderbolt and Lightfoot.


 
Not sure if I am in the "younger" group... but I am not old enough to have bought a B Body new. My Dad's work pal bought a Charger in 1969 when I was 6. I still recall riding in the back seat thinking I was the coolest kid on the planet. That started it. The movie Dirty Mary Crazy Larry probably sealed the deal.

Nobody in my family or our group of friends and neighbors were "car people", so I had no influencers. I started subscribing to Hot Rod around age 13 (still subscribe) and would read it cover to cover multiple times. That's how I learned a lot of stuff. I ended up buying a derelict 69 Charger at 15 with saved paper route money.... and the rest is history.
 
( It started with the Polara. Then Hot wheels. Then models. That evolved into high detail models. Then a 71 Demon project. Then Cordoba. Then another. Then a New Yorker...and so on and so on. Now I've come full circle back to my main Mopar love. 70-71 Polara and even own an almost twin to my fathers old car. (His was a DE23, mine is a DL23) I am working on making it an accurate replica of the car that started it all. View attachment 1273723 )


( The fellas my age that dont get it are truly missing out. Mopar or No Car![/QUOTE] )

I have to say that is one of the best looking Polara's I have ever seen !!!
Cool story as well :thumbsup:
 
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Since getting out of Vietnam, Step-Dad always had at least one Charger R/T and still does. Learned to drive with one that was a manual with a Dana.

Late Sixty's cars were at their peak with influence from NASCAR racing, before Insurance and high gas prices ruined autos.

 
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