Back to the speedway after the AACA show . . .
Read MoreOnce I finished checking out the AACA show, I headed back inside the speedway to pick up where I left off with the car clubs. During the time I was gone, several cars had been parked around the Smith Heritage Invitational display, including the 1967 Ford Mustang seen in the photo above. I discovered that this is one of several cars from Paramount Classic Cars, a local dealership in nearby Hickory, North Carolina.
Several shades of pink paint were available for the first generation Mustang. In 1967, a Mustang could be ordered in "Dusk Rose," a darker shade that carried paint code "S". The other was "Playboy Pink," (sometimes called "Playmate Pink"). This was a lighter shade that carried no paint code on the door VIN plate, (that space was left blank). This 6-cylinder car is finished in Playboy Pink and shows 49k miles.1969 Dodge Coronet Super Bee A12.
Dodge began using the name Coronet in 1949 to indicate the top trim level. In 1955, the Coronet name was applied to Dodge's entry-level line. Beginning in 1965, the Coronet became an intermediate sized car that shared its "B" platform with the Charger and Plymouth Road Runner and GTX. The A12 option became available mid-year 1969 and included the mighty 440 CID V8 topped with three 2-bbl carburetors. This "Six-Pack" arrangement was good for a rated 390 hp.
The A12 Super Bee and Plymouth Road Runner are extremely rare. A total of 1,907 Super Bees and 1,412 "Six Barrel" Road Runners were produced that year.1972 Plymouth Road Runner.
Even though the mighty 426 Hemi was gone from the Road Runner's option sheet after 1971, a 440 CID V8 was still available. Horsepower, though down from previous years, remained relatively stout at 280.
This a beautiful and extremely rare car. Of the 7,628 Road Runners produced in 1972, this car is one of a mere 672 cars that left the factory with the 440 under the hood.This is the kind of car I like to see at a show. It's not a GTO, or Firebird, or anything especially significant. It doesn't have anything special under the hood. It's 350 CID V8 with a 2-bbl carburetor makes 160 hp. It's nothing more than an ordinary 4-door sedan that happens to be in beautiful condition. But in the sea of muscle cars and rare special editions that get all of the attention, something like this tends to get left behind.
This is from the time period when the Trans Am started to really take off in popularity. The Trans Am was introduced in 1969 as a special high performance version of the Firebird, but only found 697 buyers. Things improved for 1970 to 3,196 cars before dropping for two straight years. Production recovered to 4,802 cars for 1973.
After Pontiac stylists tweaked the car's nose for 1974, production more than doubled, reaching 10,255 cars. Sales nearly tripled for 1975 to 27,274 cars. The Trans Am had reached the point where it became the most popular Firebird model. This exponential increase in sales would continue through 1979 when Trans Am production topped 117k cars.2002 Pontiac Trans Am Collector Edition.
This was both the 35th anniversary year for and the final year for the Firebird/Trans Am. A limited Collector Edition car was offered that featured a dedicated paint scheme and colors, special wheels, interior upgrades, and a host of standard features including the WS6 Ram Air package. A total of 2,391 were produced and have become quite collectible today.Since it has a/c, it is also equipped with the 400 CID Ram Air III V8 that makes 366 hp, (a/c was not available when the Ram Air IV V8 was ordered). This judge is quite rare, being one of around 3,639 Judge hardtops produced for 1970. A total of 3,054 GTOs were produced with the Ram Air III V8 and manual transmission that year.
The special paint with gold accents identifies this car as an "SE" or Special Edition. Since it also has T-tops, it can be identified as an RPO Y82 Special Edition, (non T-top SE cars fell under RPO Y81 for 1977). The hood scoop on this car says "T/A 6.6," which indicates the W72 Pontiac 400 CID V8. The W72/4-speed manual transmission combination was good for 200 hp. As near as I can determine, all of these factors make this car extremely rare, being one of 2,699 produced for 1977.
The phrase "Pony Car" is most often associated with the Ford Mustang. Introduced on April 17, 1964, the Mustang was a runaway sales success with around 22,000 cars sold ON THE FIRST DAY. One million cars arrived 18 months later.
What a lot of people don't realize is that the Plymouth's Barracuda was introduced on April 1, 1964, beating the Ford Mustang to market by two weeks. Unfortunately, it didn't really matter as the Mustang outsold the Barracuda by more than 5 to 1. By the end of 1966, the Mustang's lead had widened to almost 16 to 1.
This is a very rare car. Of the 38,029 Barracudas produced in 1966, the Formula S accounted for only 5,316 of them, and only 2,970 came with the 4-speed manual transmission like this car.