Although Nash pioneered the compact car market with the Rambler in 1950, the big Detroit automakers didn't join the segment until the late 1950s (some in the early 1960s). Plymouth was among the first ...
The Duster lineup was available with four engines in 1970. The car continued to share most parts with the Valiant (hence the name Valiant Duster, which continued to be used until 1971), as Plymouth ...
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The most overlooked Mopar muscle car of the 1970s
The 1970s were packed with headline-grabbing Mopar legends, yet one compact coupe quietly matched their pace while rarely ...
The Duster 340 came into being in 1970 as an affordable alternative to the big-block Road Runner. To be part of the RTS, it needed to run at least 13.90s, which it did in testing with the optional ...
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 ...
This ‘bring-it-on’ Plymouth compact looks like a formidable contender even when sitting still, especially with those fat boy tires out back and the skinny ones up front. This car wasn’t built for ...
Starting way back in 1951 with the release of the V-8 Hemi engine, Chrysler (now Stellantis) has been building automotive high-performance cars for the motoring public. A large part of that exciting ...
*Estimated payments are calculated by Cars.com and are for informational purposes only. We’ve estimated your taxes based on your provided ZIP code. These estimates do not include title, registration ...
*Estimated payments are calculated by Cars.com and are for informational purposes only. We’ve estimated your taxes based on your provided ZIP code. These estimates do not include title, registration ...
A driver for a southwestern crime organization leaves rivals in the dust in a 1970 Plymouth Duster that revives memories of a time when gas guzzling was as American as apple pie and nobody cared. Ah, ...
During the years before and during the Second World War, commentators on the Pacific battle theater sometimes referred to the Japanese enemy as the yellow peril. Though smaller in stature than ...
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