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Those of us drawn to old cars are often lured by their classic styling, admiring the lines and details that hark to an era past and imagining how cool it would be to roll down the road in something a bit different. But a few minutes behind the wheel is often all it takes to make plain just how far even the most average family sedan has come in terms of driving manners. Danny Plotkin found himself faced with that reality after he acquired a very well preserved '61 Plymouth Savoy. The original owner had selected the absolute base-level drivetrain, a 170-cu.in. Slant Six engine backed by a column-shifted three-speed. It took about three blocks for the novelty to wear off.

When it did, Plotkin's inner hot rodder began to emerge as plans for a period-appropriate street cruiser took form. After collaborating with Mike LaBrecque of LaBrecque Autocraft in East Windsor, Connecticut, Plotkin decided that the Plymouth should look like a drag strip refugee, circa 1962. That meant the Slant Six could only be replaced with something that had been available at that time. As Plymouth was positioned at the bottom of the Chrysler food chain, it wasn't always privy to the corporation's best hardware, though there was some trickle-down for 1961, topping out with the Sonoramic dual-quad 383.

But then Plotkin learned that Plymouth had listed a cross-ram 413 among the available engines in the AMA specifications for the Savoy, even though it never built a single example of that combination. But by listing it as an available combination, Plymouth opened the door to stock-class racers who wanted to build their own. The famed Ramchargers drag racing team of Chrysler engineers reportedly did just that, and Plotkin decided he would as well.

Amazingly, Plotkin and LaBrecque were able to locate a complete long-ram 413 that had come from a Chrysler 300 wrecked 25 years earlier. Yet as the plans for the engine build progressed, they found it would be easier to use a 440, which enjoys a far broader selection of service and speed parts, but maintains the same outward dimensions, so it would accept the long-ram intake setup. Similarly, a '71 TorqueFlite was selected to stand in for the '62 version, though earlier push-button controls were employed.

Meanwhile, the decision was made to dismantle the Plymouth completely in preparation for one of the mirror-finish black paint jobs LaBrecque had become known for. While the unit-body hull was stripped and mounted to a rotisserie for straightening, the front subframe was disassembled, stripped, painted and rebuilt, including a disc-brake upgrade. In the rear, the leaf springs were moved inboard an inch on each side to mount a narrower B-body 8¾-inch axle. After the subframe was returned to the unit-body, the warmed-over 440--now good for an estimated 500hp--was mated with the TorqueFlite, which in turn was supplemented with a Gear Vendors overdrive unit to take the edge off the 4.11 gears for highway cruising.

The Plymouth was dressed out with a new interior in original material and set on 15-inch steel wheels, the 8-inch-wide rears mounting reproduction Firestone "pie-crust" cheater slicks. Despite its appearance, the Savoy spends most of its time on the street, though opening the electric exhaust cutouts and punching those buttons at full throttle can bring back the early '60s in an instant.

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