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The rarest Mopars you’ve probably overlooked
When people talk Mopar, the spotlight usually falls on the Charger Daytona, the ’Cuda, or the Road Runner. But Chrysler built plenty of cars that never got the same recognition—machines that carried ...
It's Mopar week here at HotCars, and we're celebrating the absolute icon of a brand. Over the years, Chrysler, Plymouth, and Dodge have produced some of the greatest muscle cars of all time. They ...
Back in 1968, Dodge partnered up with Hurst and created a HEMI-powered compact that's still mind-blowingly wild even nearly six decades later. Follow us: During the 1960s, the Chrysler Corporation ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
Apart from the 426 HEMI and 440 Six Pack-powered Chargers, Road Runners, and Barracudas that became muscle car superstars, the Chrysler Corporation also developed several less-glamorous ...
A lot of weird terms are pretty synonymous with American car culture, and if you ever make it to a Cars and Coffee meet, you'll probably hear people shouting about lemons, grease monkeys, and Mopar.
We’ve been to all the big Mopar shows—Carlisle, Columbus, Vegas, Bowling Green—but the one we’re most fond of is close to home in Southern California. The Chrysler Performance West Mopar club (CPW) ...
The 1961 Chrysler New Yorker, slathered in improbable Dubonnet Iridescent—a shocking OE color that presaged the wild high-impact colors that would arrive on muscle Mopars just a few years later—is the ...
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