Outside of avid classic muscle enthusiasts, not many people know that the 1964.5 Ford Mustang didn't invent the pony car segment that came to define the American enthusiast car market in the late ...
How many HEMI Cuda convertibles have you seen? I mean, all of them that were put together since you first learned how to count. 10? 20? 30? Alright, stop. Anything above 21 is a lie because that’s how ...
The late sixties could easily claim the top spot on the “the greatest times to be alive” contest if the poll were to be conducted solely among a specific group of subjects: muscle car fans. The ...
The very first 1970 Plymouth Hemi Cuda is up for sale. Not one of the first, not one of those pseudo-rare muscle cars that happened to roll off the factory line on a Tuesday instead of a Thursday; ...
DURING the 1970 model year, Plymouth manufactured a total of 19,515 Cudas, a vehicle Henry Mauney Jr. describes as “a car just short of a race car for the street.” Of that number of Cudas, only 635 ...
Chrysler formed the Plymouth division in 1928 as an entry-level brand, borrowing the name from a brand of twine popular with farmers. Both companies leaned on the name's association with early English ...
Need a reason for why the collector car market is absolutely the hottest thing around? How about 3.5 million reasons? This rare 1971 Plymouth Hemi Cuda sold at Mecum Auctions Seattle last night for a ...
June 2014, Mecum Auctions, Seattle. The bidding had already crossed seven figures, and the room had gone quiet. The kind of quiet where seasoned collectors stop pretending they’ve seen it all. When ...
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 ...
Perhaps due to the low volume built and even-smaller surviving population, Plymouth Hemi ‘Cudas are among the most valuable and sought-after cars from the muscle car era. Finding one in mint condition ...