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Mopars Of Month:
May 2004
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2004
May
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1971 Dodge Dart
Convertible By
Kenneth Schmidt -
Huntington, NY
Back in 1971 you could not order a Dodge
Dart performance convertible. What you could do if you had to have one
is wait 20 years, buy a really messed up 1969 Dodge Dart GT convertible,
scavenge 1967 to 1976 Dart parts, ( including a relatively clean 1971
Dart Swinger to donate its rear clip ) get out the drill and
reciprocating saw and get busy. |
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Taking on a
project like this takes a lot of guts and a solid
belief that once you start, you will go all the way.
It's hard to take a saw and drill to a car that is
still driveable, even though it looks terrible. I
never drove the car when I purchased it. ( The rear
end gears were in the trunk ). I towed it home with
my rusty 1971 Demon and had a towing accident. Thus
the beginning of 4 of the toughest years a car ever
gave an owner. Anything that could go wrong, did.
Even the personalized plates came back "FERSHAIR"
instead of "FRESHAIR".
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As I tore into the car, I discovered
it may have been in a bad accident back in 1969. The convertible dash
VIN didn't match the hardtop fender tag or the third different engine
serial number even though all were of 1969 vintage. Also, under the
maroon exterior paint was light yellow from the driver's seat to the
back, and B5 Blue from the seats to the front. The collectibility was
nonexistent, so I decided to build the high performance 1971 Dart
convertible Dodge never did. |
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My car had an 8 3/4 rear, but the
273 V-8 and a console shifted A904 automatic had to give way to a
vintage 1971 340 coupled to a console shifted A-727. This required a
different drive shaft. The '73 saddle mount K-frame made motor mount
destruction a thing of the past. The less troublesome '74 power disc
brakes up front are cheaper on the wallet and came out of a 6 cylinder
donor car. This change required the rear axles be changed for cut down
C-body axles a la Moser Engineering. I finished them off with large bolt
rallyes and '72 "nut" centers because I prefer their look to the cone
center caps. The rear now has those big 11" Chrysler drums and a 3:55
sure grip rear for that quick hook-up and stopping. |
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Moving to the body, I drilled all the
trunk pan spot welds and strategically sawed away the quarter panels
leaving only the rim surrounding the boot trim and removed all the '69
rotted metal. Using the same procedure, I removed a '71 rear clip and
transplanted it onto the remaining unibody rails. The front clip is a
bolt-on installation except for two tabs that had to be welded to the
front lower radiator support to attach the front valance pan. |
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That troublesome lower windshield
plastic trim had been replaced with the stainless steel hardtop piece by
installing the clips before I bought the car. The '71 hood sports those
fresh air twin scoops with re-chromed bezels and 340 emblems. Rounding
out the exterior of the car are the side view racing mirrors and the
relocated quarter panel emblems. |
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The interior also has major
conversion work. 1971 high back buckets and a rear bench with the '71
pattern shrunk onto the smaller convertible rear bench frame, replaced
the '69 low back bucket seats and the all black '69 pattern rear bench.
The seat belts were also changed to the 1971 units. The doors inside
still carry the GT emblems, but the panels are 1971 Swinger units. The
dash was changed twice. After removing the '69 steel dash frame, I
installed the stock 1971 unit from the Swinger donor car. |
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After much consideration and
some prodding from Joel Cooper of D.A.R.T.S., I decided to go all the
way in this area too, and put together a 1971 rallye dash complete with
factory tach and A/C. It took three dashes to make this one unit. The AC
section from a damaged dash was grafted onto a dash whose radio section
( a round knob unit, 1971 only ) was intact. The wood grain covers over
the area where the grafting took place. 1969's had the ignitions in the
dash, so changing the dash required changing the column to one with a
key switch. Because of the console shifter, this necessitated that the
column also be "selectorless." |
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Other special features
include: |
- Electronic ignition using factory
harness wires wrapped into the 1971 engine bay harness.
- 1971 gas tank with shortened vapor
tube to fit in the convertible.
- Chrysler cruise control.
- Front and rear sway bars.
- Special trim on the top of the doors
and quarter panels.
- Pneumatic trunk release.
- Factory AM/FM, converted by Radio &
Wheelcover Worlds to a high power stereo with cassette inputs.
- Bumblebee stripe.
- Chrome exhaust tips/stainless steel
exhaust.
- Glass rear window.
- NOS side markers and hood trim.
- The rear bumper is an NOS '72 Scamp
unit, but 1970 Darts had this unit without the jack slots.
- Light packages/lock packages.
- Exterior colors are 1977 Bronze and
Black Sunfire metallic.
- Seats are Black with Burnt Orange
inserts in the Duster/Demon pattern.
- Mopar vintage battery.
- 3 speed wipers.
It's hard to believe the difficulty involved in creating a
"correct-looking" A-body 340, auto, A/C, P/S, P/B conversion. There are
so many little brackets, different pumps, hoses, etc.
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Not to take anything away from the
Dart convertibles built by Mother Mopar-they are truly outrageous. But I
believe if the boys over at Dodge had waited a few more years before
axing the convertible from the Dart line-up, this machine is pretty
close to what they could have done from the factory. I think it's the
best packaging of the '67 - '76 Dart parts mixed into one vehicle. |
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I would sincerely like to thank: |
Joel Cooper - D.A.R.T.S. | Jacks Auto
Parts | Herbee Dodge West Babylon, NY |
All the folks at Year One Inc. |
Legendary Auto Interiors | Bay Shore Tire & Auto - Bay Shore, NY |
Genuine Classic Brakes - Bohemia, NY |
J&T Auto Upholstery - Lynbrook, NY |
R/M Restoration - Farmingdale, NY |
Banner Transmission - Bellmore, NY |
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Hempstead Lincoln Mercury for an excellent
paint job. Bob Koenig for tons of help and the 1971 340 engine and other
assorted Dart parts. Roland and assistants for his body work. And many
others too numerous to list. I especially want to thank my brother Kurt
and my Dad Ron for their help in fixing my problems as they occurred. |
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Lastly, I wish to thank my wife JoAnne. The
car didn't get finished before we were married, as planned, and it took
many hours away from our time together and certainly a ton of money to
finish. JoAnne, you're the best. |
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Back in 1995 Mike Toot from Florida told me
while he admired my recently finished Dart and that he was also
converting a late 60's Dart convertible into a 1970 model. He requested
copies of the pictures depicting the conversion and a description of how
I did the rear 1/4 panel and trunk work. Last summer he sent me pictures
of his 1970 Dart convertible. He chose red paint and a white interior
and top. He also installed a Bumblebee stripe, also white. As of last
summer he had not changed the dash and interior styling from its
original style, because the interior had been recently restored to its
proper vintage. |
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We both hope to attend a show together
so that we may photograph the 2 cars together and show Mopar hobbyist's
2 of none built 1970's Dart convertibles. The cars Dodge should have
built! |
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