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Should Dodge have built a 70 Daytona?

Started by Ghoste, November 13, 2005, 11:18:53 AM

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Should Dodge have built a 70 Daytona?

Yes
27 (84.4%)
No
5 (15.6%)

Total Members Voted: 32

Ghoste

Big Block Sam had this pic posted in the thread on picking a Daytona color and it got me thinking.  I've seen pics in magazines of 70 Daytonas that other people had created but this one looks really good (sorry but the Watermelon and the purple one are a little too garish for me).  How many think the 1970 would have made a better street Daytona?  The light up marker lights, the "aerodynamic" scoop on the door, Hemi badge moved to the front, sleeker high back buckets.  Would it have outsold the Superbird in 1970 or languished as well?

hotrod98

As much as I love my '69, I have always loved the seats and door scoops on the '70's. I never did like the wrap around bumper all that much, but never actually hated it either. Of course, with the daytona nose that would not have been an issue anyway. I think that it would have been great if they had built a couple of thousand '70's. Maybe I could have afforded a real one if they had.


Normal is an illusion. What is normal for the spider is chaos for the fly.
Charles Addams

Charger_Fan

Quote from: Ghoste on November 13, 2005, 11:18:53 AM
Would it have outsold the Superbird in 1970 or languished as well?
I bet it would have languished too. Back then, most people thought the wing cars were fraking hideous. A lot of the Superbirds the dealers practically had to give away...some Daytona's too, for that matter.
So, although I do agree with you on your points of why it's better, I doubt a '70 Daytona would have had much better luck.

The Aquamax...yes, this bike spent 2 nights underwater one weekend. (Not my doing), but it gained the name, and has since become pseudo-famous. :)

TruckDriver

Quote from: CHARGER_FAN on November 13, 2005, 12:19:03 PM
Quote from: Ghoste on November 13, 2005, 11:18:53 AM
Would it have outsold the Superbird in 1970 or languished as well?
I bet it would have languished too. Back then, most people thought the wing cars were fraking hideous. A lot of the Superbirds the dealers practically had to give away...some Daytona's too, for that matter.
So, although I do agree with you on your points of why it's better, I doubt a '70 Daytona would have had much better luck.
:iagree:

I said No just for that reason. If they did, I think most of them would of been retuned back into regular Chargers or worse..... Parted out and crushed like Richard Petty did with a show room Superbird.
PETE

My Dad taught me about TIME TRAVEL.
"If you don't straighten up, I'm going to knock you into the middle of next week!" :P

70charginglizard

I think it would have sold a lot better than the superbird did.

The charger just looks a lot sleeker than the bird to me. Not to offend any of our superbird friends here. It's just an opinion.  :icon_smile_wink:
70charginglizard

BigBlockSam

that 70 looks tougher than a 69, the scoops on the door look awesome. i think the stance of this one gives it that race look. i wish i knew more about this car. all Dayton's look keep ass.  ;D
I won't be wronged, I wont be Insulted and I wont be laid a hand on. I don't do these things to others, and I require the same from them.

  [IMG]http://i45.tinypic.com/347b5v5.jpg[/img

6pkrunner

I hate to say it, but I was around when the Daytona and Superbirds were sold at the dealer. When the Daytonas showed up we thought they were some sort of joke put on by the local dealers. When the Superbirds came a year later, well contempt is more what the feeling was. Sorry, but hey we just too out there during those years. Now the hindsight glasses are 20/20, but at the time they were a rolling joke. Today is a different story and I love the Daytonas. Not so mucg the Superdirds who don't have the curves to help the beak and towel rack be part of the package. They still look like an afterthought.

That said, the black version in the picture is a very nice sight. ;D But in 1970 the Daytona would have sold slightly better then the Superbirds. Which is slight to none. Superbirds were converted to plain runners to move them and some sat on lots until 1974 before finding homes. What a difference 30 years makes. :laugh:

Spartan

I remeber them a bit growing up.  I think the are pretty neat, a wild concept; guys like my dad think they are butt-arse ugly.
Over?! its not over until we say it is! Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor?!...Hell no! and its not over now!..(Germans? Pearl Harbor?...shut up, he's on a roll)

BrianShaughnessy

That black one in the top pic is about the nicest one I've seen - or at least it's what I like... got all the goodies - throw in a hemi or a 6 pack,  4 or 5 speed.. yuppp... I like it.  Heck I'd even consider the wheels that Dane put on the yellow one... although I think the new billet type cragars would look pretty dang good too.  :yesnod:


As for back in 70... no they wouldn't have sold any much better than the 69's or the 'birds sold.    They were too far ahead of their time.    And Chrysler was putting more effort into trying to sell the new E-bodies that year.   Also remember the '70 Charger sales were down compared to 69.
Black Betty:  1969 Charger R/T - X9 440 six pack, TKO600 5 speed, 3.73 Dana 60.
Sinnamon:  1969 Charger R/T - T5 440, 727, 3.23 8 3/4 high school sweetheart.

69_500

A 1970 Version would have never outsold the Plymouth Superbird. For 1 they were outlandishly priced to produce. Chrysler was losing money on each one of the street versions that they were selling anyways. So why produce more 70's when you have 69's still on dealership lots to get rid of? I have heard stories of Daytona's and Superbirds still being on lots as late as 1983. Now there is a few cases where the Dealerships' kept the wing cars for promotional reasons, but there were others that were just plain hard to get rid of.

Blakcharger440

A 1970 version Daytona would have definitely outsold the 70 Superbirds,just not by a huge amount.

Ghoste

Were there 69's still on the lots?  I thought the 69's were pretty much a sellout.  It was the Plymouth that came as a great surprise. (saleswise that is)

purple70rt


ChargerBill

A car that was a "give-away" is now one of the most sought after muscle cars of all time...go figure. Hey, if I couldn't have a real Daytona, I'd take a '69 or '70 clone. I also like the 71, 72 Dayclonas... In fact, the only Charger that looks strange as a Daytona IMO is a '68...something about it just isn't right.
Life is a highway...

bull

I may be wrong but I heard once (and believe) that Chrysler was planning on making a '70 Daytona Charger and that's why the front bumper is the way it is. I'm sure the main reason they didn't do a '70 Daytona was because of something going on with the stock car circuit; something like the Hemi ban or Petty's switch to Plymouth.... I dunno.

hemigeno

Bull is on the right track.

The Daytona was originally intended to be a '70 model year release, which is why they incorporated the '70 front clip components into the design.   When the Charger 500 didn't win the Daytona 500 in February of 1969 (which was a function more of Charlie Glotzbach's tire strategy than inferior aerodynamic characteristics of the 1969 Charger 500 setup), the edict came down from Bob Rodger, etc... Win At Talladega, by introducing the Charger Daytona early.

Since they had to build the cars AND give Creative Industries time to make the conversion over to a Daytona, AND ship all the cars prior to the early-September Talladega race, they had to make the early-release Daytona a '69 model year car.   They could have had a few 1970 street Daytonas built by the Talladega race, but not all 500 required under the then-current Nascar homologation rules.

Had Charlie Glotzbach won the '69 Daytona 500, the Charger Daytona would have been a 1970 model year car.

One of the fallout effects the Daytona had was to change the homologation rules that Nascar had at the time.   When the Charger Daytona came out, they required only 500 street version cars to be produced in order to race that body style in Nascar-sanctioned races.   Big Bill didn't want to see that type of one-upsmanship from the manufacturers, so he tried to make it economically difficult to produce these special models.   That's why the Plymouth Superbirds are so much more plentiful.   After the introduction of the Daytona, Nascar changed the requirement to 1 car to be produced for every 2 dealerships, rather than just a flat 500.   As a result, nearly 4 times as many Superbirds were required.   They went ahead with the Superbird anyway (for whatever reason, perhaps to make sure that Petty came back from his one year stint with Ford).

Chrysler had no intention of making a full model year run of 1970 Charger Daytonas once the move was made to release the Daytona as 1969 model year cars.   To do so would have been financially irresponsible.   They HAD to produce the Superbirds in those kinds of numbers, but why would they intentionally produce cars they were going to lose their shirts on if they didn't have to (since they could still race the 1969 Daytona body style for a few more years)?   If the car had been a huge, popular hit, then they may have considered it.   That wasn't the case, so they only did what they had to in order to keep the body style on the track.

It's nice to think about a '70 Daytona, but it was not a practical option for any car manufacturer.

:Twocents:

Geno

hotrod98

I turned 16 in Feb 1972. We went downtown to the dealers to look for a car. The plymouth dealer had a new superbird and a new 70 hemi cuda. When my dad saw the bird he started laughing. He said that it was the absolutely most rediculous car that he had ever seen. The salesman told us that hey had been trying to sell the car for two years. I think they had come down to around $2500 if I remember correctly. I wanted the cuda but dad said hell no. The hemis had a real bad reputation as being a piece of crap to drive on the street. The closest thing to a cuda was a 318 barracuda that was ugly as hell. We ended up going to the chevy dealer and buying a low mileage 69 chevelle SS396. A local guy still has that superbird and won't sell it. Ten years ago a guy offered him 50k for the car when it was worth maybe 25k at the most. It's been almost totalled twice. The guy that bought the hemi cuda works for our dealership now. He sold it a couple of years ago to a collector. I sold the 69 ss in 2002.


Normal is an illusion. What is normal for the spider is chaos for the fly.
Charles Addams

Ghoste

Well, I guess that explains why those parts look more at home on the '70.

69_500

Anyone happen to know why all the superbirds were built before Jan 1st of 1970?




Anyone other than GENO.

hemigeno

Quote from: 69_500 on November 14, 2005, 08:43:39 AM
Anyone happen to know why all the superbirds were built before Jan 1st of 1970?




Anyone other than GENO.

Ohhhh!!!   Ohhhh!!!!   I know!!!   I know!!!!   

:wave:

KMPX2

They were total sales flops some sitting on lots for years. They are loved now but were jokes back then

Chris G.

Quote from: 69_500 on November 14, 2005, 08:43:39 AM
Anyone happen to know why all the superbirds were built before Jan 1st of 1970?




Anyone other than GENO.

I'll take a guess and say because Jan 1st,1970 meant you needed some sort of bumper or bumper guards on the front. Am I in the ballpark? :shruggy:

69_500


Old Moparz

I think all '70 Chargers should get a nose cone & wing for aesthetics.  :D
               Bob               



              Going Nowhere In A Hurry

Charger_Fan

Pretty cool story, Hotrod. :thumbs:

To go along with Geno's story, I read somewhere that when the designated official was counting the Daytonas, that there weren't 500 actually completed at the time of the count...somewhere around 480 or so. So they drove a few from the front of the pack back around to be counted twice. :D
Anyone know if that's true or not?

The Aquamax...yes, this bike spent 2 nights underwater one weekend. (Not my doing), but it gained the name, and has since become pseudo-famous. :)