MenuClose
In This Article
Category: Classics
Make: Dodge
Model: Dart

Refurbished 1962 Dodge Dart 440 nine-passenger station wagon for sale on Hemmings.com. From the seller's description:

Has a 1970 318 rebuilt with aluminum intake with a 4bbl. Carb. a 904 pushbutton trans. rebuilt with an 8-3/4 rear. New aluminum radiator to keep things cool. Runs and drives wonderfully...loves 70-80 hwy speeds. Interior is very good, has factory tinted windows, roof rack, power steering, underdash cold AC. Behind the speaker grille on dash is a remote controlled AM-FM CD player. Power rear window performs as it should. Bumpers and stainless trim are nice. Police car wheels and dog dish hubcaps with new tires. California body. This car has some flaws, has had some rust repair but drives terrific, shows terrific, everything works, and is very unique. Powder blue, with tutone blue interior. I have owners manual, and service manual, as well. Clear NC Title

1962 Dodge Dart

  • $13,500
  • Asheboro, NC
  • https://www.hemmings.com/classifieds/cars-for-sale/dodge/dart/2242538.html
  • See more Dodge Darts for sale on Hemmings.com.

    Recent
    RPO Z06 Makes the New-For-’63 Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray Race Ready and Extremely Valuable
    Photo: GM Media Archives

    Due to changing external forces, General Motors had a fickle relationship with factory-backed racing in the 1950s and 1960s, and the corporation was ostensibly keeping motorsports at arm’s length when the second-generation Corvette was nearing its debut. This didn’t stop the engineers behind Chevrolet’s sports car from designing and building the specialty parts the new Sting Ray would need to establish dominance in competition. The Regular Production Option code Z06 was selected for 199 coupes, and surviving examples of that limited production run are considered the most coveted and valuable road-legal 1963 Corvettes in existence.

    Regardless of what the official GM policy on racing was at the time, the Corvette team had long been actively encouraging motorsports and the glory that brought to this model and Chevrolet as a whole. Privateers who wanted to compete in their 1962 roadsters could specify RPO 687 to gain heavy-duty suspension and braking components, as well as a quicker steering ratio and 37-gallon fuel tank; ticking the RPO 582 box brought a 360-horsepower 327-cu.in. V-8 topped with Rochester mechanical fuel injection. Versions of these special upgrades would have a place in the new-for-’63 Sting Ray as well, for a time similarly bundled under RPO Z06, a.k.a. “Special Performance Equipment.”

    Keep reading...Show Less
    1958 Pontiac Bonneville Sport Coupe, front quarter

    For 1958, all-new styling at every General Motors passenger-car division ushered in big changes, just as the corporation was celebrating its 50th anniversary. It was also the final year with Harley Earl at the helm of GM design. Though the new models were longer and lower in proportion than in previous years, Earl’s signature use of excessive chrome remained unabated. That brightwork continued a trend that had dominated automotive design throughout the Fifties. For 1958, it worked seamlessly with those new designs that presented a broad departure from previous years.

    Currently listed on Hemmings Auctions are a pair of faithfully restored hardtop coupes from the GM catalog from that momentous year. With wide chrome grilles surrounding four headlamps and copious brightwork including side trim the length of the body, this 1958 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe and 1958 Pontiac Bonneville Sport Coupe both handsomely display the heavily Earl-influenced styling that made headlines for GM.

    Keep reading...Show Less

    Trending