This video highlights a 1969 Plymouth Barracuda and its place in muscle car history. Design, performance, and attitude all in one package. Is this your kind of classic? New super flu variant: What ...
If we had to choose one word to describe the late ’60s and early ’70s, it would have to be “groovy,” and the wild styling of that era combined with the height of the muscle car wars made it a weirdly ...
If you ask a muscle car enthusiast to name Plymouth's most famous performance machines, most will rattle off the Hemi 'Cuda or the big-block Road Runners. But tucked away in Chrysler's 1969 lineup was ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
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Produced from 1964 to 1974, the Plymouth Barracuda was developed for the pony car market. As a result, it was restricted to a two-door body style (including hardtops and convertibles). Like all pony ...
The restomod was born out of a collaboration between McLaren and eBay. The online supplied the donor car, a near-stock silver and black ‘Cuda, and let the racing team call the rest of the shot. This ...
Many people think 'Cuda is simply a shortening of the Plymouth Barracuda name. While the 'Cuda was derived from the Barracuda and both rode on the E-body platform, they are not the same car. It's one ...
Chrysler formed the Plymouth division in 1928 as an entry-level brand, borrowing the name from a brand of twine popular with farmers. Both companies leaned on the name's association with early English ...