And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
This is a1970 Dodge Coronet Super Bee, and really should be put in my garage asap!
Think it went past the $120k reserve in 2017 - here is what the action site had to say about this car:
Sold new at Mr. Norm's Grand Spaulding Dodge One of 1,072 4-speed Six Pack Super Bees produced in 1970 440 Six Pack engine 4-speed transmission One of one as optioned with TX9 paint and Red Bumblebee stripe per Chrysler Registry Extensive restoration with eight years and over $120,000 invested Window sticker Dealer shipping order
This big Dodge is sort of like frontier highwayman “Black Bart” of movie fame. When that bad man came riding into town, earning immediate respect from the men and ladies, he planned to clean up on the money one way or another. The 1970 Dodge Super Bee, specifically redesigned and then produced for just one model year, has become nearly iconic itself in more recent times. A 383 Magnum was still standard in Dodge’s budget supercar, and ones like this car, optioned with the V-code 440 Six Pack engine and backed by a 4-speed transmission, totaled only 1,072 units during this final season of the 2-door Coronet. This particular car is currently believed to be just one-of-one constructed in TX9 Black coupled with the red side stripes with associated Super Bee graphics. The resultant appearance of this combination is spectacular. Indeed, the total refreshing on this car took eight years and cost more than $120,000. After all, beyond its rarity and present condition, this car was sold new on the southwest side of Chicago, at the corner of Grand and Spaulding—the legendary Mr. Norm’s Dodge franchise—and the sale will include copies of both the window sticker and dealer shipping order. So what is here? The 390 HP 440 Six Pack with functional Ramcharger fresh-air hood; the factory Pistol Grip shifter that snakes from the floor; a Dana 60 differential with Sure Grip; and black vinyl bench seating that faces a wood grain-applique dash with round-pod gauges including the factory 150 MPH speedometer and Tic-Toc-Tach. This Super Bee rides on Rallye wheels and Goodyear Polyglas tires, and of course features the chrome stinger logos at grille center and rear trim panel. Still looking like a gunslinger, this exclusive car will certainly highlight the collection of any discerning Mopar aficionado and represents an excellent opportunity for new ownership.
Almost looks like the original Adam West Batmobile.
ReplyDeleteA REAL "MUSSCLE" car...he,he,eatcha spinichca
ReplyDeleteI would give your left nut to have this....
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, manly and not prissy like over rated european cars.
ReplyDeletecross ram
ReplyDeletehttps://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/81/413crossram.jpg/1200px-413crossram.jpg
This is a1970 Dodge Coronet Super Bee, and really should be put in my garage asap!
ReplyDeleteThink it went past the $120k reserve in 2017 - here is what the action site had to say about this car:
Sold new at Mr. Norm's Grand Spaulding Dodge
One of 1,072 4-speed Six Pack Super Bees produced in 1970
440 Six Pack engine
4-speed transmission
One of one as optioned with TX9 paint and Red Bumblebee stripe per Chrysler Registry
Extensive restoration with eight years and over $120,000 invested
Window sticker
Dealer shipping order
This big Dodge is sort of like frontier highwayman “Black Bart” of movie fame. When that bad man came riding into town, earning immediate respect from the men and ladies, he planned to clean up on the money one way or another. The 1970 Dodge Super Bee, specifically redesigned and then produced for just one model year, has become nearly iconic itself in more recent times. A 383 Magnum was still standard in Dodge’s budget supercar, and ones like this car, optioned with the V-code 440 Six Pack engine and backed by a 4-speed transmission, totaled only 1,072 units during this final season of the 2-door Coronet. This particular car is currently believed to be just one-of-one constructed in TX9 Black coupled with the red side stripes with associated Super Bee graphics. The resultant appearance of this combination is spectacular. Indeed, the total refreshing on this car took eight years and cost more than $120,000. After all, beyond its rarity and present condition, this car was sold new on the southwest side of Chicago, at the corner of Grand and Spaulding—the legendary Mr. Norm’s Dodge franchise—and the sale will include copies of both the window sticker and dealer shipping order. So what is here? The 390 HP 440 Six Pack with functional Ramcharger fresh-air hood; the factory Pistol Grip shifter that snakes from the floor; a Dana 60 differential with Sure Grip; and black vinyl bench seating that faces a wood grain-applique dash with round-pod gauges including the factory 150 MPH speedometer and Tic-Toc-Tach. This Super Bee rides on Rallye wheels and Goodyear Polyglas tires, and of course features the chrome stinger logos at grille center and rear trim panel. Still looking like a gunslinger, this exclusive car will certainly highlight the collection of any discerning Mopar aficionado and represents an excellent opportunity for new ownership.
So often see quotes of hosspower. Almost never curb weight in pounhs per hosspower, which is what really matters.
ReplyDelete