I was in high school from '69 to '72. A close buddy's folks owned a Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge dealership so he always had a "demonstrator" to use, mostly Chargers & Road Runners. Never got stuck driving a minivan because there was no such thing!
When you say old, it just bring a smile on my lips, on most of those cars I know them by heart, their entire mechanical and electrical system, I was born and raised into them, now that is pure entertainment, about being old is the best thing ever happened to me, now I am on vacation full time, most kind of you for sharing it with us, blessings to you and your love ones, from the endless summer paradise Puerto Rico Jesus Torres.
I'm 59 years old and I remember all of these automobiles from these eras especially the 70's and 80's thanks for showing the memories of the past especially down here in Oklahoma where I am Thank You.🇺🇲🤠👋🇺🇲
LOL, I remember when Model T Fords we’re still on the road, one of my teachers drove a 1917 Dodge. In 1949 a family friend sold Oldsmobile, he drove a Rocket 88 demonstrator with a clear plexiglass hood, at the time nothing could beat it, this one had manual transmission.
Sigh, I remember. That said I realize what an amazing era I was fortunate to live. Today cars, and most everything are all the same with no character or power.
I grew up in the 1970s. My first car at age 16, in 1975, was a base model Dodge Challenger. My parents financed it for me, But I made the payments. All of them. There was no insurance law in my state back then. I drove that car for 7 years, and traded it for a 1972 Rally Nova. I have since owned many much older cars.
I'll be 90 years old next year and I remember watching new FORDS being made in 1946 at the FORD Plant in Somerville, Massachusetts. I ended up owning one, a convertable, like Biff's car in Back to the Future......
The Volkswagen Beetle delivered fuel economy back in the day. My mother had one in the early 1960's. She told us stories about the car getting 38 miles to the gallon back when most cars were getting 8 to 16 . The Beetle was also a reliable car with the 1300 and 1500 engines.
The only one of these that was noted for having any shortcomings was the 55 Ford. If you didn't change the oil regularly AND use detergent oil, there was a good chance that the rockers would quit getting oil.
HA HA! l'm older, sucks to be this old huh? But at least WE got to drive some of that beautiful old iron, something 99% of these kids kids today will never know. Back in the day when you could open the hood a see the ground on ether side of the motor.
1964/1/2 Mustang . I not only remember them, I OWN one. I also owned a 1967 Mustang and a 1970 Camaro Rally Sport. I also still have a 1996 Mustang. My sister's first car was a 1957 Chevy Nomad that she got as a graduation present from high school.
@@rogerdodrill4733 She had graduated from high school and had a job, silly. Her cruising days were behind her and since my dad was one of the town doctors that eeveyone knew, everyone also knew and me. Anything we might do to earn a bad reputation was strictly off limits as it would get back to my father within 2 days of the time it happened
And to think that I once bought a 6 cyl, automatic good looking and running 56 chevy for 50 bucks. We now own a 65 Dodge Dart. When we met, my wife owned this one and I had a '64". 48 years ago.
I did not see a picture of a 1932 REO (I have a photo of my two brothers and me crouching in front of ours) nor the 1937 Nash Ambassador, my first car. Thanks for posting these.
The 53 - 55 6 cylinder Corvette would have been great had it been equipped with a manual transmission instead of 2 speed Powerglide, and a rear sway bar.
The 55 Vette had the either the Blue Flame 6 (155 hp) or the 265ci V8 (195hp)... and either the 2spd "glide" which was the original "cast iron" case... heavy and not as durable as the 2nd gen Aluminum "glide", or the 3 spd on the floor. The 55 Vette had either a 3.55:1 rear, with the Glide, or a 3.70:1 with the 3 spd. All my FED's (front engine dragsters) had the aluminum powerglide (1957 & later) in them... absolutely loved them, tough as nails and with a manual valve body and heavy duty clutches, etc... could easily handle in excess of 1,200 hp.
Had a 68 Plymouth GTX 440 automatic,man what a fun ride. Sunoco 260 premium fuel was 23 cents a gallon,$2.00 and drive all night with my girlfriend. Life was so good ! except for Vietnam.
I guarantee no 60's or 70's Charger had a V6, and not even a straight 6. The base engine was the 318 V8- the slant 6 from Chrysler went in the Dodge Dart and the Plymouth Valiant and their Dodge A-100 series vans.
@@JohnSmith-cf4gnGM had a V6 that went into Buick Skylarks in the 60's and some GMC pickups, but Ford and Chrysler were years from V6's. That was my objection to the video. I think sometimes video producers see "6 cylinder engine" and assume V6. Of course the same mistake can be made with 8 cylinder engines.
I had a 65, with 4 on floor, and those cooool exhaust resonators. Mine had a 273 Hypo, with 4 barrel, and a mild cam. BLACK with the wide red racing stripe. I got so many tickets, and lost license for 6 months of the loanly months. then bought a used 66 dart station wagon, with a 3 on the tree, and a slant six ! Loved that little wagon for it was NOT noticed by the cops. drove it until 1979, when bought my first 79 Dodge truck. Also a slant 6 with three on tree.
I think this announcer is from a foreign country. The bettle was known as slug bug, not punch buggy. As kids, when u saw 1 ,1st, u said slug bug & punch your sibling in the arm they couldn't retaliate until they saw another 1 & they had to see it first. Great fun on long rides to relatives place w long boring h/ways
9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1
@@siseley1 My daily driver from 1988 until 1998, was a Red on Red, (the rarest colour combo) 1965 Formula S Commando Barracuda with a rebuilt 273, a 904 tranny, high stall torque converter, into a 3:23 8 1/4" rearend. Very similar to yours. The Commando also had high flow manifolds into twice pipes. I am sure you know. Drove that thing for over 150,000 miles, until I could no longer keep up with the inevitable cancer in that early B-body. Absolutely LOVED that sled!
The Oldsmobile Rocket 88 was a performance car, but not a muscle car, (the term "Muscle Car" originated with the 1964 Pontiac GTO.). Also, that first Olds V8 was underrated. It made more than 135 horsepower.
Yes, the 58 Fury in "Christine" was red, but the production Fury in 1958 was only available in a Buckskin Beige color. If you wanted a different color, you would have had to pay to dealer to have it repainted for you. That 58 Plymouth you are showing is a Belvedere.
My dad bought a new Belvedere in 58, Black & White. The "Push Button" 727 Torqueflite Tranny's reverse piston was constantly going out on him. In 1955, he had come home with a brand new Plymouth Savoy with the "flathead 6" (last year for the 6 ??)... Ughhhhh!! A new 55 Chevy Belair would have been Wayyy nicer!!
I am 72 years old and I also remember most of these cars. My parents had a 1956 Chevrolet BelAir. At the time my parents were a young married couple with a growing family of children and the family had to move from Cleveland Ohio to Los Angeles California. My father and a friend of his drove a brand new 1956 Chevrolet from Cleveland to Los Angeles. Since money was tight with a young growing family the only option on this 1956 Chevrolet BelAir was the optional heater defroster. The car was equipped with the old inline 6 cylinder engine, not the new V-8 engine. Also the car had the three speed column shift manual transmission, not the new Powerglide Automatic transmission. Also there was no clock and no car radio.
My parents also had a 55 Chevrolet Bel Aire four door when I was a kid they kept it for quite a few years as I recall not sure what was under the hood as I was quite young at the time I'm 64 at present. But it was quite the car and if I"m not mistaken it was the car my dad was driving when my front upper teeth were knocked out when he hit a huge rut when I was about four or five years old while returning from a blueberry picking trip. I apparently did a face plant into the dash at the time he hit that rut or was it a huge chunk of tree trunk I don't recall exactly what it was, Just that my face hit the hard unpadded dash of that car full force knocking loose the four top teeth in my mouth left hanging by threads of nerves from the roots I think I recall that it was extremely painful but like I said I was only about 1 or 5 years old at the time, could have been four as my brother wasn't born at the time and we're roughly four years apart,.
The ford pavilion had a ride that featured 1st yr mustang convertibles on a conveyer belt setup that I rode on at ny fair. We drove cross country in 61 nomad 9 pass sw from Denver to attend
Being over 80, I owned several of these wonderful cars. It is unfortunate that you didn't include some video on the Olds Toronado. I owned a 67, and loved that car.
Who's old? These cars don't look so old to me. My first four cars were a 1937 Ford, a 1949 Ford and a 1050 Chevy and a 1958 VW. I bought the '37 in 1959.
I owned and loved to drive my first car..... It was a 1964 Dodge Dart. I got it in the 1980's and it was my favorite car . You never forget your first car and that was mine. And if I could I would get another one. Love from Marysville California
me the same but people vote for ruthless criminal repub corporations that own allll reps!!!! so suck it up it will not get better people will believe and buy any thing. designed to .keep the slaves in poverty.
In 1964 my brother-in-law bought a new Chev Impala SS . A builder was building a new house and wanted that car so bad he took it for the down payment on the house. The house was $16,000. Time when both houses and cars were within the average working man reach.
You could not get a V6 in any Chrysler product in the 60s. The Charger's base engine was the Slant 6, an inline 6 cylinder. The only V6s available in the 60s were the Buick V6, later sold to Kaiser Jeep, and an Italian car called the Lancia. All other 6s were INLINE 6s, not V6s.
My late father owned a '57 Chevy in black and white trim, and dark gray upholstery...still recall how that newer car smelled, even though I was very young while he owned it.
@@lorenschwiderski my first car was a ‘56 Fairlane Victoria with the two tone starmist blue and colonial white with the 312 Thundervire engine. Still check listings to see if it ever comes up for sale.
@plainolded5030 11:40 "Dual stacked headlights" made me wonder also. Never heard that term. I thought it meant on top of each other and not next to each other, though high.
ah those were the days, It started withe a 53 Olds super 88 2 door sedan that ran like the wind. I remember my 66,68 and 71 bugs which turned into a 63 Corvair Monza Spyder Tooo have those cars today to set along my Subaru outback with the WRX motor, what a ride that is..
Growing up with these cars is a lot different than hearing about them 50, 60 or even 70 years later. Luckily, i still have the fun of owning and driving a 65 Galaxy 500.
Yep all beautiful cars they were. So many memories that young people today will never know. Cars are just transportation these days. No wonder young people are mad. And the best part the women didn't hate us all.
Awesome video! These are cars my parents drove or remember people driving. My sis-in-law drove a 1966 Ford Mustang. I remember the 1958 Plymouth Fury from the Stephen King/John Carpenter horror classic *"Christine".* Another Mopar car that I've come to like was the 1969 Dodge Charger. I remember it from the TV series *"The Dukes of Hazzard".*
I dont need to see these cars in the video, I remember them. Right now, 15 feet from where Im typing this, is a 1957 Thunderbird that Im getting running after 17 years for a customer. Its a great break from the late model scrap metal I usually work on. The first car I worked on in our high school shop was a 1955 Chevy back in 1972.
One other car that I feel is iconic and sure as hell don't feel old when I see one and it's an Import , 1961- 75 Jaguar XKE!!!!.Enzo Ferrari once said that the Jaguar XKE was the most beautiful car he'd ever seen!!!!.
The Thunderbird sure looks great and is a pleasure to drive - as long as the road is straight. If you want to drive curves in a sporty mode, you better forget it.
7:58 I preferred the drop nosed model that followed. To me it is still the best looking car on the road. I never had the money to buy one but have always lusted for one.
I grew up in an era where you could identify every vehicle on the road by make and model. Now days, they all look alike. Can't tell a Toyota from a Ford.
I hate new cars style too. Half of cars on road are foreign, think of all the people in auto work who have lost jobs & standard of living to other countries
On road trips our parents would keep us busy as to who could guess the make of the next oncoming car. My sister was two year younger and, I swear, could identify cars a mile ahead. It was uncanny. Cars were that distinctive in the 50s. Even model years, from the same manufacturer, were distinctive.
19:37 It is funny how modern technology overshadows those old muscle cars. I have a 2008 Cadillac CTS V-6 with direct injection that produces 305 HP and does 0-60 in 5.8 seconds with a top speed of a little over 155 MPH.
I am old. Almost 70....lived through all these classics on the road. Loved it then....love it now.
Not only do I recall them, I had them, I still have some.
At 77, I too am old, but I still have great memories of having owned some of these beauties…
I was in high school from '69 to '72. A close buddy's folks owned a Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge dealership so he always had a "demonstrator" to use, mostly Chargers & Road Runners. Never got stuck driving a minivan because there was no such thing!
@@billolsen4360 those 12 window volkswagon vans were close enough. Just crappier heaters
When you say old, it just bring a smile on my lips, on most of those cars I know them by heart, their entire mechanical and electrical system, I was born and raised into them, now that is pure entertainment, about being old is the best thing ever happened to me, now I am on vacation full time, most kind of you for sharing it with us, blessings to you and your love ones, from the endless summer paradise Puerto Rico Jesus Torres.
Thanks you for sharing it with us.
I must be getting old, I was around before any of those cars were made.👍🏻👍🏻
Me too. I'm sneaking up on 80.
Me too... way before.
Your NOT Alone Man !! lol
@@Wilett614 Lets try 84!
I'm 59 years old and I remember all of these automobiles from these eras
especially the 70's and 80's thanks for showing the memories of the past
especially down here in Oklahoma where I am Thank You.🇺🇲🤠👋🇺🇲
My 1969 CJ Mustang that I purchased June of 1969 is STILL in my garage...
Loved dad's red 1967 Charger ❤
I remember all these cars as I was born in the late 50s. We would occaisionally still see 1930s cars on the roads.
❤At 73 I remember the mid 50s.There were lots of late. 40s still around in rust free British Columbia Canada.
LOL, I remember when Model T Fords we’re still on the road, one of my teachers drove a 1917 Dodge. In 1949 a family friend sold Oldsmobile, he drove a Rocket 88 demonstrator with a clear plexiglass hood, at the time nothing could beat it, this one had manual transmission.
Sigh, I remember. That said I realize what an amazing era I was fortunate to live. Today cars, and most everything are all the same with no character or power.
Our family had 3 Mustangs during the 1960s. The last one being a fastback. Good memories.
Thanks God im so old so i remember them, Best and most beautiful cars ever made.
I grew up in the 1970s. My first car at age 16, in 1975, was a base model Dodge Challenger. My parents financed it for me, But I made the payments. All of them. There was no insurance law in my state back then. I drove that car for 7 years, and traded it for a 1972 Rally Nova. I have since owned many much older cars.
I also had a '72 Rally Nova, black on black.
I'll be 90 years old next year and I remember watching new FORDS being made in 1946 at the FORD Plant in Somerville, Massachusetts.
I ended up owning one, a convertable, like Biff's car in Back to the Future......
The Volkswagen Beetle delivered fuel economy back in the day. My mother had one in the early 1960's. She told us stories about the car getting 38 miles to the gallon back when most cars were getting 8 to 16 . The Beetle was also a reliable car with the 1300 and 1500 engines.
In the late 50s and early 60's our family car was a 55' Olds 88 2dr/ht. The first time I saw the Mustang live was at the 64-65' NY Worlds Fair.
Yes im.old now! I remember my dads cars and trucks from the 1950s and 60s
The only one of these that was noted for having any shortcomings was the 55 Ford. If you didn't change the oil regularly AND use detergent oil, there was a good chance that the rockers would quit getting oil.
I guess I am old then, as I am as old as those 55 Chevys.
HA HA! l'm older, sucks to be this old huh? But at least WE got to drive some of that beautiful old iron, something 99% of these kids kids today will never know. Back in the day when you could open the hood a see the ground on ether side of the motor.
1964/1/2 Mustang . I not only remember them, I OWN one. I also owned a 1967 Mustang and a 1970 Camaro Rally Sport. I also still have a 1996 Mustang. My sister's first car was a 1957 Chevy Nomad that she got as a graduation present from high school.
She must have gotten a bad rep. As loose girl to cruise a station wagon around at high school age
@@rogerdodrill4733 She had graduated from high school and had a job, silly. Her cruising days were behind her and since my dad was one of the town doctors that eeveyone knew, everyone also knew and me. Anything we might do to earn a bad reputation was strictly off limits as it would get back to my father within 2 days of the time it happened
I'm 81. I think so. I remember cars from the 40s.
I was born in the mid 50's and when I was 5 or 6 I got to ride i our neighbors 59 caddy convertable. I thought it was the coolest car ever!
And to think that I once bought a 6 cyl, automatic good looking and running 56 chevy for 50 bucks. We now own a 65 Dodge Dart. When we met, my wife owned this one and I had a '64". 48 years ago.
I did not see a picture of a 1932 REO (I have a photo of my two brothers and me crouching in front of ours) nor the 1937 Nash Ambassador, my first car. Thanks for posting these.
The 53 - 55 6 cylinder Corvette would have been great had it been equipped with a manual transmission instead of 2 speed Powerglide, and a rear sway bar.
The 55 Vette had the either the Blue Flame 6 (155 hp) or the 265ci V8 (195hp)... and either the 2spd "glide" which was the original "cast iron" case... heavy and not as durable as the 2nd gen Aluminum "glide", or the 3 spd on the floor. The 55 Vette had either a 3.55:1 rear, with the Glide, or a 3.70:1 with the 3 spd. All my FED's (front engine dragsters) had the aluminum powerglide (1957 & later) in them... absolutely loved them, tough as nails and with a manual valve body and heavy duty clutches, etc... could easily handle in excess of 1,200 hp.
Front sway bar is more important for flat, no body roll, cornering
Had a 68 Plymouth GTX 440 automatic,man what a fun ride. Sunoco 260 premium fuel was 23 cents a gallon,$2.00 and drive all night with my girlfriend. Life was so good ! except for Vietnam.
LBJ & Nixon will never live down Vietnam
Icon. The MOST overused word since Amazing.
Ugh, I know.
I guarantee no 60's or 70's Charger had a V6, and not even a straight 6. The base engine was the 318 V8- the slant 6 from Chrysler went in the Dodge Dart and the Plymouth Valiant and their Dodge A-100 series vans.
I had a '67 Dodge Coronet that had a slant 6.
. I had a 69 Charger with a 225 slant 6 cylinder with a 3 spd standard on the column. (3 on the tree) Rare and factory stock.
@@JohnSmith-cf4gnOK- but that was NOT a V6- as stated in the video. And I looked it up- Dodge made 462 with the six.
@@timmccreery6597 I know. They didn't make V6s back then.
@@JohnSmith-cf4gnGM had a V6 that went into Buick Skylarks in the 60's and some GMC pickups, but Ford and Chrysler were years from V6's. That was my objection to the video. I think sometimes video producers see "6 cylinder engine" and assume V6. Of course the same mistake can be made with 8 cylinder engines.
A friend owned a '71 Charger,I drove it once,it was an awesome experience,a beautiful,powerful car.
Wow! I owned 3 of those vehicles shown. Well, the Mustang was a 1966, but close enough. Okay, make it 4. I forgot about the 1963 VW Beetle I had.
Yes, those Land Yachts were great
And todays foreign cars look like boat anchors.
53 vettes had a straight 6
Actual 64, Plymouth Barracuda. Out before the mustang, barely
I had a 65, with 4 on floor, and those cooool exhaust resonators. Mine had a 273 Hypo, with 4 barrel, and a mild cam. BLACK with the wide red racing stripe. I got so many tickets, and lost license for 6 months of the loanly months. then bought a used 66 dart station wagon, with a 3 on the tree, and a slant six ! Loved that little wagon for it was NOT noticed by the cops. drove it until 1979, when bought my first 79 Dodge truck. Also a slant 6 with three on tree.
I think this announcer is from a foreign country. The bettle was known as slug bug, not punch buggy. As kids, when u saw 1 ,1st, u said slug bug & punch your sibling in the arm they couldn't retaliate until they saw another 1 & they had to see it first. Great fun on long rides to relatives place w long boring h/ways
@@siseley1 My daily driver from 1988 until 1998, was a Red on Red, (the rarest colour combo) 1965 Formula S Commando Barracuda with a rebuilt 273, a 904 tranny, high stall torque converter, into a 3:23 8 1/4" rearend. Very similar to yours. The Commando also had high flow manifolds into twice pipes. I am sure you know. Drove that thing for over 150,000 miles, until I could no longer keep up with the inevitable cancer in that early B-body. Absolutely LOVED that sled!
April Fool's Day, 1964.
The Oldsmobile Rocket 88 was a performance car, but not a muscle car, (the term "Muscle Car" originated with the 1964 Pontiac GTO.). Also, that first Olds V8 was underrated. It made more than 135 horsepower.
Yes, the 58 Fury in "Christine" was red, but the production Fury in 1958 was only available in a Buckskin Beige color. If you wanted a different color, you would have had to pay to dealer to have it repainted for you. That 58 Plymouth you are showing is a Belvedere.
My dad bought a new Belvedere in 58, Black & White. The "Push Button" 727 Torqueflite Tranny's reverse piston was constantly going out on him. In 1955, he had come home with a brand new Plymouth Savoy with the "flathead 6" (last year for the 6 ??)... Ughhhhh!! A new 55 Chevy Belair would have been Wayyy nicer!!
The last year for that flathead six was 1959 and as for th1955 Plymouth it was quite a Change over the 54.
I am 72 years old and I also remember most of these cars. My parents had a 1956 Chevrolet BelAir. At the time my parents were a young married couple with a growing family of children and the family had to move from Cleveland Ohio to Los Angeles California. My father and a friend of his drove a brand new 1956 Chevrolet from Cleveland to Los Angeles. Since money was tight with a young growing family the only option on this 1956 Chevrolet BelAir was the optional heater defroster. The car was equipped with the old inline 6 cylinder engine, not the new V-8 engine. Also the car had the three speed column shift manual transmission, not the new Powerglide Automatic transmission. Also there was no clock and no car radio.
My parents also had a 55 Chevrolet Bel Aire four door when I was a kid they kept it for quite a few years as I recall not sure what was under the hood as I was quite young at the time I'm 64 at present. But it was quite the car and if I"m not mistaken it was the car my dad was driving when my front upper teeth were knocked out when he hit a huge rut when I was about four or five years old while returning from a blueberry picking trip. I apparently did a face plant into the dash at the time he hit that rut or was it a huge chunk of tree trunk I don't recall exactly what it was, Just that my face hit the hard unpadded dash of that car full force knocking loose the four top teeth in my mouth left hanging by threads of nerves from the roots I think I recall that it was extremely painful but like I said I was only about 1 or 5 years old at the time, could have been four as my brother wasn't born at the time and we're roughly four years apart,.
We had a 55' Olds Rocket 88 with heater, radio and auto trans.😁
I really wish the guy writing these scripts did some research. So many major errors.
Agreed ! You can surely TELL this guy NEVER saw these cars back in the day they were New lol
It's a BOT, what did you expect?
These kinda vids could be made into a pretty good drinking game.
So many of the 1955 Chev clips were not originals but modified custom jobs....still enjoyable !
The first example of the 1955 Belair in this video is actually a 210
03:15 Thats the NY Worlds Fair. I was a kid somewhere in that crowd as my first time seeing the Mustang live as it rotated on thar pedestal.
The ford pavilion had a ride that featured 1st yr mustang convertibles on a conveyer belt setup that I rode on at ny fair. We drove cross country in 61 nomad 9 pass sw from Denver to attend
Being over 80, I owned several of these wonderful cars. It is unfortunate that you didn't include some video on the Olds Toronado. I owned a 67, and loved that car.
I had one back around 1975, it was my first husband's. I believe it was a 1969. Good times!
Who's old? These cars don't look so old to me. My first four cars were a 1937 Ford, a 1949 Ford and a 1050 Chevy and a 1958 VW. I bought the '37 in 1959.
@jjhor yeah I would say having a 1050 Chevrolet is pretty old😂😂😂😂,
The 1960 Chrysler 300F was a better-looking car than anything Chrysler/ Stellantis has put out in the 21st century!
FAMOUS OLD CARS :
@00:44 : 1955 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
@02:04 : 1964 FORD MUSTANG
@03:35 : 1957 FORD THUNDERBIRD ( TWO SEATER )
@05:10 : 1959 CADILLAC ELDORADO ( LARGE TAIL FINS )
@06:38 : 1963 CHEVROLET CORVETTE STING RAY ( FIBERGLASS BODY & HIDEAWAY HEADLIGHTS )
@08:08 : 1960 CHRYSLER 300F
@09:47 : 1953 CHEVROLET CORVETTE ( AMERICA'S FIRST SPORTS CAR )
@11:18 : 1958 PLYMOUTH FURY
@12:50 : 1969 DODGE CHARGER
@14:25 : 1950 OLDSMOBILE ROCKET 88
@16:00 : 1967 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE
@17:20 : 1955 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
@18:40 : 1968 SHELBY MUSTANG GT500
HONORABLE MENTION :
1967 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE
1968 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER AND GTX
1967 PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA
1972 PLYMOUTH DUSTER
1956 CHEVROLET
1957 CHEVROLET
1968 AMC JAVELIN
made me subscribe, great work my brother!!!
I owned and loved to drive my first car..... It was a 1964 Dodge Dart. I got it in the 1980's and it was my favorite car . You never forget your first car and that was mine. And if I could I would get another one. Love from Marysville California
I own a '57 red & white Thunderbird. Whenever we are out in her, she bever fails to get a lot of love. Named her Destiny. Seemed fitting.
Old,I can remember when you could buy a home for 6000.00 dollars
me the same but people vote for ruthless criminal repub corporations that own allll reps!!!! so suck it up it will not get better people will believe and buy any thing. designed to .keep the slaves in poverty.
In 1964 my brother-in-law bought a new Chev Impala SS . A builder was building a new house and wanted that car so bad he took it for the down payment on the house. The house was $16,000. Time when both houses and cars were within the average working man reach.
You could not get a V6 in any Chrysler product in the 60s. The Charger's base engine was the Slant 6, an inline 6 cylinder. The only V6s available in the 60s were the Buick V6, later sold to Kaiser Jeep, and an Italian car called the Lancia. All other 6s were INLINE 6s, not V6s.
GMC pickups had a V6 at that time. Not offered by Chevy. Had weird shaped valve covers compared to most engines.
@@ivanleterror9158 had valve covers like 348 /409 v8. Had 62 GMC 305 V6 & 58 Impala 348
10:24 So that is what a Blue Flame 6 looks like. I have learnt something.
11:42 Those ain't no Dual Stacked headlights!
I'm 83 and worked on many of these in a local garage. The first Mustang had an inline six NOT a V8.
Not olny that but some of those V-8 Mustangs were the smaller 260 V-8s.
This is cool😊😊😊😊
My late father owned a '57 Chevy in black and white trim, and dark gray upholstery...still recall how that newer car smelled, even though I was very young while he owned it.
Always in love with these cars!
Hw about showing examples that aren't extensively modified?
The Crown Victoria and Fairlane are two different cars --- both very nice, in their own ways
The Crown Victoria was part of the Fairlane model line. Fairlane, Fairlane Victoria, Fairlane Crown Victoria, Fairlane Crown Victoria Skyliner.
@@douglasmckinley-sr1507 You are correct. totally forgot about those variants. I stand corrected.
@@lorenschwiderski my first car was a ‘56 Fairlane Victoria with the two tone starmist blue and colonial white with the 312 Thundervire engine. Still check listings to see if it ever comes up for sale.
Never did Chrysler put a V6 in a big body Charger. It would have been a big dud.
They did put Slant Sixes in them .
Automobile styling and design died the day Lee Iacocca passed.
Harley Earl.
Oh God. Suddenly I’m feeling my 70+ years. Holy moly! 😮
No stacked headlights on a 58 Dodge.
@plainolded5030
11:40 "Dual stacked headlights" made me wonder also.
Never heard that term. I thought it meant on top of each other and not next to each other, though high.
RIGHT ON!!!!
I bought a 1972 corvette in 72 for$5200.00 350 hp with automatic and a/c. Still have it to this day.
ah those were the days, It started withe a 53 Olds super 88 2 door sedan that ran like the wind. I remember my 66,68 and 71 bugs which turned into a 63 Corvair Monza Spyder Tooo have those cars today to set along my Subaru outback with the WRX motor, what a ride that is..
Growing up with these cars is a lot different than hearing about them 50, 60 or even 70 years later. Luckily, i still have the fun of owning and driving a 65 Galaxy 500.
I owned a 1967 Fairlane GT . Forrest green with white interior , bucket seats and a full console . 390 four speed .
At 70-I remember them all!
Yep all beautiful cars they were. So many memories that young people today will never know. Cars are just transportation these days. No wonder young people are mad. And the best part the women didn't hate us all.
Awesome video! These are cars my parents drove or remember people driving. My sis-in-law drove a 1966 Ford Mustang. I remember the 1958 Plymouth Fury from the Stephen King/John Carpenter horror classic *"Christine".* Another Mopar car that I've come to like was the 1969 Dodge Charger. I remember it from the TV series *"The Dukes of Hazzard".*
What about DeSoto? You mainly focused on Ford even though there were companies with much more successful vehicles!
I’m old - I inherited my first car from my older brother. It was 1955 Ford.
I dont need to see these cars in the video, I remember them.
Right now, 15 feet from where Im typing this, is a 1957 Thunderbird that Im getting running after 17 years for a customer. Its a great break from the late model scrap metal I usually work on.
The first car I worked on in our high school shop was a 1955 Chevy back in 1972.
A car I had that is overlooked is an Opal GT the baby Vet.
One other car that I feel is iconic and sure as hell don't feel old when I see one and it's an Import , 1961- 75 Jaguar XKE!!!!.Enzo Ferrari once said that the Jaguar XKE was the most beautiful car he'd ever seen!!!!.
The Thunderbird sure looks great and is a pleasure to drive - as long as the road is straight. If you want to drive curves in a sporty mode, you better forget it.
The Dodge Charger NEVER had a V-6, a least the real ones didn't.
7:58 I preferred the drop nosed model that followed. To me it is still the best looking car on the road. I never had the money to buy one but have always lusted for one.
What about the Pontiac GTO?
What about the Chevy 1963 and 64 impala? Surprise you left these out.
I had a 68 Charger with a 318 in 1977, it wasn't that bad on gas and rode okay...
In fact, I still remember the knob on the steering wheel of the pick-up
Where is the Pontiac GTO?
Yes I'm old and getting older by the minute. I remember my first car was a 69 Cougar.
Corvair .NE. Corvette vw67 last year for 6volt AND swing axle!!!
At 1:53, what is that thing hanging on the right side of the can. It look like a hasp with a padlock. I remember those cars. I had one.
Caught my eye also. It's a camera used for some of the moving shots from the side.
Thank you Ed!
@@laurielenig9939 Yep, likely an action cam of some sort, like a GoPro, affixed with either a suction cup mount or it's magnetic.
I grew up in an era where you could identify every vehicle on the road by make and model. Now days, they all look alike. Can't tell a Toyota from a Ford.
I hate new cars style too. Half of cars on road are foreign, think of all the people in auto work who have lost jobs & standard of living to other countries
On road trips our parents would keep us busy as to who could guess the make of the next oncoming car. My sister was two year younger and, I swear, could identify cars a mile ahead. It was uncanny. Cars were that distinctive in the 50s. Even model years, from the same manufacturer, were distinctive.
How do you go from a 1963 Covair to a 1963 Corvette...
My 1st car was an 8 year old 1960 TBIRD.
Yeah, muscle car, two barrel, four barrels carburetor, I bought a used GM Impala, 2 doors, but one hell of power.
still have my 56 chevy an six corvairs
an i have a 69 mach 1 tang
271 hp was only available in the K version. The basic 289 4 barrel put out 225hp.
One of each please😎😎
I remember every one of those beauties. What a great time to be young.
Those first two Chevy's originally had 6 cylinder engine.s as the gold "V" is missing from the hood and trunk lid.
19:37 It is funny how modern technology overshadows those old muscle cars. I have a 2008 Cadillac CTS V-6 with direct injection that produces 305 HP and does 0-60 in 5.8 seconds with a top speed of a little over 155 MPH.
U should trade it for an old shelby that will hold its value better & be as fast
Is this part 1? You missed the 1960's Pontiac Firebird and Trans Am. Brilliant cars
I knew the 57 Chevy would be a classic even before it was a Classic!
Where is the Packard,?s, studebakers and Hudsons, plus Willy's ? I'm 92 and still remember these great Independents
The 64 Mustang was Labeled as the Secretaries Car it was a Rebodied Falcon , the T-Bird was cool , Frank Senatra Drove one ...
I AM 66 AND A STROKE VICTIM OF THE COVID VACCINE .I DROVE A 1967 CHEVY BEL AIR IN THE 70'S AND 80'S CARS BACK THEN, RARELY LASTED OVER 100,000MILES!!!
I don't need to recognize cars to know I'm old, my body tells me everyday.