Hi everyone thank you for your nice comments on the car and thank you again Nick and yes I'm not changing the car I'm keeping it all original. It's also a base model no extras it's also i think a middle line production it was on the production line when it changed from 69 to 70. So one viewer right it is half half . It's are little demon guys when you see me i really can't burn rubber but i can go further. 😂 It's staying as is we have a big demon and now there two Happy devil's his and her s . 😂😂
I test drove a one year old '68 Charger 318" automatic for my Mom, but Dad said $2500 was too much... it was a gorgeous metallic turquoise with white vinyl top and white interior... would have been a great investment... I think the color is the one Nick puts his thumb on at 03:57...
In 1970 my father opened a Texaco gas station and bought a new dodge power wagon with a slant six 4 speed for plowing snow. It worked great. And we get snow in Buffalo NY!
That 225, the leaning tower of power, went in everything! Cars, industrial equipment, water pumps, generators, you name it! A true testimony to it's reliability. Personally, I'd overhaul the motor, give it a little cam, port work and just drive it. Damn good motor....and I'm a Ford man!
@@BigUnitBeef A TURD is exactly what it is when you place it in a big heavy boat of a car like a charger. It had all of 200 ft lbs when it was fresh, set inside a car that deserves at LEAST twice the torque and that was 50 years ago. Today, you'd want much more. If you drove this car, a TURD is exactly what you'd call it, when a 20 year old 4 cyl honda civic blows your doors off.
@@BigUnitBeef I have a '68 t-bird with a 429/C6/3.25LS. I drive a 4 cyl accord as my daily driver. I wouldn't need to bring the T-bird out to smoke this boat. My little beater would smoke it with ease.
Nice to see something different. With it's matching Burnt Orange paint & interior, 150 mph speedometer and a 225 slant 6 it's definitely one rare '70 Charger!
Slant six, 318, 340, 383, 440, or hemi… it doesn’t matter. The ‘69 and ‘70 Chargers are absolutely beautiful cars. Chrysler was on top of their game during the muscle car era. Thanks Nick for preserving these iconic vehicles.
Nick, Here’s your chance to build a 6 cylinder. A little bore and stroke work. Port and polish the head with a 3 angle valve job. Modify the intake. Possible multiple carburetors. Limited slip differential. Now you have a really nice cruiser with decent gas mileage. Keep the 6 cylinder. Worth more with numbers matching engine. Let Nick work his magic!
Nick- what a time machine! I NEVER knew that the 225 was available in a 70 Charger. Sure, Darts; Dusters & the like came with them. I had a classmate back in 73 that had a 225 slant six in his Dart & he tried his darndest to blow it up so he could drop a 318 or a 340 in it, but never could blow it up, no matter how hard he tried. Thanks Nick for the rewind on that!
Thanks for sharing Joyce, and Nick. It’s exciting to see another Charger with a slant six. I purchased my slant sixed ’68 Charger in 1973. I learned from a book on Dodge that it was one of 400 made. As the first car I ever owned, it was my daily driver throughout high school, college and beyond. Sad to say, when the engine needed some work, a mechanic friend, who knew it was my daily driver asked if he could just switch out my engine for another slant six as I'd be back on the road quicker. In my naivety I said "sure". Now, years later it has a 528 crate hemi. While scary fast can be fun, my mind goes back to the peaceful ride of the slant six, and pulling up to a light and wondering if the engine was even running as it was so quiet. EnJoy the peace.
Not only are they bulletproof, they take really nicely to performance mods as well and produce a lot of torque! I'd love to see Nick build one and put it on the dyno one day!
Had a 71 duster with a slant six. 25 below zero, pump it twice, hit the key. It was running smooth as can be. Let it run on high idle for 10 minutes, you were good to go, had some heat on the windshield. Life was good 👍.
I'm telling you Nick, I had an 83 Ram with that 225 in her. I put 400k on that thing and the only thing I ever did was brakes and of course starters. I kept a spare behind the seat. Had it down to about 7 minutes lol. It may sound silly, but I'd like to see that on the dynamometer! I pulled things my cousin couldn't with his GMC 1500 and a 350. She did 75 MPH up hill with a 30 foot camper. She did 75 MPH with no trailer. If it was going down hill (a mountain road) you could get her to go faster. But that's about it. I had a tree shift. Original clutch I bought from my grandfather. He had it replaced when I bought it. That thing was 100% indestructible! I agree. No way I would swap that motor!
Dr. Nick, you are 100% right, keep the charger as is, I have owned a few leaning tower of power slant 6, you can NOT kill them, thanks for the ride, cheers.
Hi Nick, the slant six here in Argentina is a true legend, and by far the most common engine in Dodge vehicles. The only V8 we had in a Dodge, the Dodge GTX coupe (a car made only for this market and a really beautiful one) was the 318, and this is also a legend and still highly sought after. In 1969 my father purchased a brand new white Dodge Polara four doors with front disk brakes and a slant six with 145 hp, with a bodywork of the same family as the coupe I mentioned above. Great memories with that car, and obviously for this reason I'm a mopar guy 😀
I was wondering what is so rare about this 1970 Charger. Well I was certainly surprised when Nick opened the hood, and saw the slant six. The FK5 is definitely a rare color, and the orange interior is very unusual. You just never know what will show up at Nick's Garage, awesome!!
@@NicksGarage Good afternoon George. I never expected to see a 70 Charger equipped like this one, a true unicorn. I'm always looking forward to Monday's videos which are the high point of my day. My sister had a 1967 Dodge Dart GT Convertible, that had the slant six. It was Y2 yellow with a black top. A very nice car that got a lot of looks.
Nick, there is a Lady in my neighborhood with a 1969 Chevelle 2 door with a 6 cylinder automatic.. I believe She has daily driven it since new. Still does!
I bought a 1968 Charger in 1973 with the 318. It had a black interior , dark green paint , consol shift selector. Paid $1500 for it , by 1975 I could only get $500 for it because of high gasoline prices and V8 cars were called air polluters.
It may be considered rare now but back when it was new I bet this car was harder to sell than Bud lite beer is now , lol I remember seeing oddballs like this in dealer lots , they would sit on the lots forever ....
Small engine for that car. Not much muscle in that muscle car. Actually, it’s not really a muscle car with that engine in it. They put those slant 6’s in everything. Real workhorses. Of course, I’m jaded. My dad bought a Chevy Nova for my mom, but I couldn’t get him to buy one with a v8. Instead, he bought one with a 250 cu straight 6. Of course, that was the car I got to drive to University on the days it was my turn to car pool. One of the other guys in the pool got to drive his mom’s brand new 1969 302 Mustang (white with a blue vinyl interior, bucks seats and console). I was so jealous.
That would explain the taillights and the taillight panel, that looks like the one from a 69, because they are no rectangular reflectors in it and the holes for the taillight trim that goes around 70 only, are missing.
Absolutely love this car. Please tell her to keep it as a slant six. Those motors were legendary. Maybe even more legendary than Hemis. When growing up we had two 3/4 ton Dodge vans. Each of these had a slant, six three speed on the column. I learn to drive on one of them. It had manual steering and brakes with a huge steering wheel. We drove those vans until they rusted apart with several hundred thousand miles on them. That sound brings back memories.
That body style tho, damn... No wonder it doesn't matter if the Charger is a 318 or 440... They hold their value on looks alone, even with the flip-up headlights being up...
Very nice to see a Slant 6 225 my dad a had a 73 Valiant and 77 Volare with that same engine very bulletproof. Would be nice to see a rebuild of this and Dyno test. Oh and viewers don't know that the engine came with two piece exhaust manifolds 3 cylinder each so a nice upgrade that can be done to put true Dual exhaust front to back it will have a cool sound.
Most of today's collector cars were yesterday's daily drivers. I've had a couple of those engines. They deliver a lot without asking for much in return.
I had a '64 Dodge van with a Slant 6 for so many years, I got tired of driving it. Bull-It-Proof! It kept cracking exhaust manifolds inside the doghouse. so I called my friend Ted Gotelli of Gotelli's Speed Shop, and got some Hooker headers with dual exhaust. It had low-end torque like a dump truck!. It's probably still running somewhere, Cheers, --bd
My father had a '70 Charger R/T (440) that was FK5 burnt orange with a burnt orange interior. It had power windows too. Unfortunately, it was a Northeast car and was rotted to almost nothing by the time he got rid of it. Bought it in '74 with 19k miles on it.
My first car was a 1974 Plymouth 2DR Scamp with a 225 Slant Six. It was great on gas, lower insurance rates and a beautiful copper color called Sienna. It had a beige vinyl top and matching interior. I bought it off the lot for $3000, brand new. Drove it for four years and sold it to my sister who drove it another six years. Fun car.
My buddy had a 73 (think it was a 73) Charger 3 speed Slant 6 back in high school. Jacked up, wide tires and the biggest hood scoop JC Witney sold in the early 80s late 70s. It looked FAST, had that reflective strip on the sides too. I had a Pontiac then with a 400 4sp I'd actually swap cars with him to save gas going to see my girlfriend an hour away and he'd race everybody he could with my car. Really didn't mind driving that Slant at all but stopped swapping with him when I noticed how bald my tires were. He never lost a race anyway. 😂
Hello Nick ,George, krew and Everyone. My uncle love those Slant Sixs engines . He swore by them . He had one in a Dodge Dart , that he kept and drove for 30 years or so ...Beautiful Blue color . Tough old engines, keep the oil change and coolant in it and it will run forever ...
My brother has a LOADED six banger barracuda convertible. He wanted to put a Hemi in it and I talked him out of it. It's a unique car for sure. He can buy a Hemi Cuda easily. He can't buy a slant six barracuda convertible anywhere. I don't think I've ever seen one.
Cool car! I also noticed it has the plain jane trim too, no finish panel around the taillights and no upper door trim, no bucketseats, I've seen very few 70's with that plain trim level! Thanks for sharing Nick!
You must truly appreciate Nick's love for Vintage Muscle Cars, even ones with a Slant 6. If the car were properly restored it would be worth alot being 1 of 300 units produced.
My first car was a Dodge Lancer with slant six and push button auto, bought when I was 16. Sweet memories, coming back when I hear and see this Charger.
I had a 63 Plymouth valiant 6 cylinder. I put a manual choke on it. It could be -30 below ,people cranking, fighting to start their cars. My slant 6 always started. Appreciate them for what they are.
One of my buddies in the mid seventies had a 70 Charger 500 FK5 with burnt orange interior with white vinyl top. At the time the muscle cars were getting worn out and rust in the rear quarters, this one was pristine. We had never seen a muscle car with anything but black interior. A great ride.
Hi Nick, great car video! Here in Australia we have 245 and 265 HEMI straight 6 cylinders that had 160hp stock and upto 300hp in RTs versions. Chrysler said they have the power of an 8 with the economy of 6 and apparently Chrysler spent 33 million in the 60/70's developing them. I know you would love one of these engines if you ever got your hands on one! Take care from Down Under
Of the 300 6 cylinder Chargers built in 1970, I can imagine that only a tiny percentage of them are left with the original motor. This Charger might be more rare than we think.
Love to hear Nick's French accent. Takes me back to being a teenager and 2 friends from Quebec. Rael and Rejean Phanoueff. Great guys and both had epic Mopars.
There is a couple who own and restored a 1970 slant six Challenger convertible, red exterior and red interior. They brought it to Carlisle several times and the car was the center of attention! Kudos to them and to the owner of this Burnt Orange slant six Charger.
I'm so glad that this car survived all it's previous owners and any bad accidents. I certainly can't picture anyone from 1970 opting for a 6 cylinder muscle car!
I didn't know they were that rare. I had one. Mine was green with green interior. It was rusted to oblivion 30 years ago, but it still ran. I sold it to some local guys and never saw it again. Sadly I have no photo and no VIN. I do have a 1970 Challenger, slant 6, burnt orange exterior and interior. That one is in pretty good shape. I was going to put a 440 in it. Maybe I should keep the slant 6 in it?
I agree with you Nick, keep it with the six cylinder, have nick get everything working properly so it will pass emissions test, have it painted the original color and just drive it. This is from a Chevy guy for almost 50 years. 😁🧓
My dad bought a brand new 1965 Plymouth Fury with a 6 cylinder and that's the car I learned to drive with 11 years later. I really loved that car. Every now and then I dream about the Clunker as it came to be known in its' later years.
Nice to see a car not hot rodded once in a while.. not that there is anything wrong with that... I have a 74 C10 chevy truck... almost that same color but GM calls is grecian bronze... 6 cyl four speed with granny low.. all original 102 k miles... sometimes i want a V8 in it but it does everything i ask as a working truck ... my other car is the hot rod ... Thanks for sharing
Nick, in 1966 my dad bought a brand new Mercury Comet Caliente, cardinal red with a white painted top. Beautiful car. A few days later he got that same rebel plate that's on this very special charger. The Rebel was an early 60's TV show.
OMG that slant is a runner . Always enjoyed the smooth torque WHAT A JOY CONGRATS JOYCE . NICK IS TOPPS YOU ARE THE BEST HANDS IN THE UNIVERSE . YOU GOT THE BEST ALL AROUND GOD BLESS YOU.
I love V8 but this car must be original ! In the Chevrolet Opala in Brasil ist fhe six-cylinder with turbo very strong ! Over 2000 HP on the Drag strip (Opala metal) !
As an 17 yo in 1975 I was given a 'hand me down' old/tired yellow 1969 Plymouth Belvedere coupe that had the 225 slant six and ran fine. But it looked just like the GTX the 'older' guys up the street had. Too bad that car got stolen in NYC and never recovered. This old man still thinks about that car now and then. Paul (in MA)
Love the interior 👍🏻💯 index the plugs Nick set of extractor would do it good with a 2/quarter system owned many slants here in Australia 🇦🇺 you can ajust the valve lash on exhaust an inlet a bit
We had them in our Valiants, here in Australia. My dad's 1966 Valiant wagon, the first car I drove. Such a capable engine was the slant 6. How I miss those days , too. Thanks for sharing, Nick.
haha 3/4 Hemi ive heard that the pistons are around the same size as a hemi . I can tell you want to work on that motor to get it on the dyno. Rare car you are right to tell her to keep it this way. 30 miles to the gallon put a sure grip in it
Hi everyone thank you for your nice comments on the car and thank you again Nick and yes I'm not changing the car I'm keeping it all original.
It's also a base model no extras it's also i think a middle line production it was on the production line when it changed from 69 to 70. So one viewer right it is half half . It's are little demon guys when you see me i really can't burn rubber but i can go further. 😂 It's staying as is we have a big demon and now there two Happy devil's his and her s . 😂😂
Are you going to get Nick to rebuild the engine and paint it up? Would look great with the new Burnt Orange Metallic.
Thanks you for letting us show your car off a bit, Joyce. We hope you enjoy it for many years.
Enjoy the car, Joyce!!
I test drove a one year old '68 Charger 318" automatic for my Mom, but Dad said $2500 was too much... it was a gorgeous metallic turquoise with white vinyl top and white interior... would have been a great investment... I think the color is the one Nick puts his thumb on at 03:57...
So very glad to hear that you're keeping your car normal and enjoyable!
In 1970 my father opened a Texaco gas station and bought a new dodge power wagon with a slant six 4 speed for plowing snow. It worked great. And we get snow in Buffalo NY!
That 225, the leaning tower of power, went in everything! Cars, industrial equipment, water pumps, generators, you name it! A true testimony to it's reliability. Personally, I'd overhaul the motor, give it a little cam, port work and just drive it. Damn good motor....and I'm a Ford man!
If you were a Ford man, you'd know the 300-6 was a far superior engine and used far more often in industrial equipment than this turd.
@@Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism I don't disagree, but turd is a bit extreme.
@@BigUnitBeef A TURD is exactly what it is when you place it in a big heavy boat of a car like a charger. It had all of 200 ft lbs when it was fresh, set inside a car that deserves at LEAST twice the torque and that was 50 years ago. Today, you'd want much more. If you drove this car, a TURD is exactly what you'd call it, when a 20 year old 4 cyl honda civic blows your doors off.
@@Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism then go drive a tuner
@@BigUnitBeef I have a '68 t-bird with a 429/C6/3.25LS. I drive a 4 cyl accord as my daily driver. I wouldn't need to bring the T-bird out to smoke this boat. My little beater would smoke it with ease.
Amazing it made it all that time without being swapped to a v8
A 150 mph speedometer with that motor is the greatest act of faith I've seen I saw a Yugo with wide tires and a hood scoop. Cool ride.
Nice to see something different. With it's matching Burnt Orange paint & interior, 150 mph speedometer and a 225 slant 6 it's definitely one rare '70 Charger!
With that " six pack " under the hood I bet it was lucky to top out at 90 mph .... lol
In high school in the late 1960s six cylinder cars were very common. This charger is a real diamond in the rough. I am with you Nick keep it original.
Slant six, 318, 340, 383, 440, or hemi… it doesn’t matter. The ‘69 and ‘70 Chargers are absolutely beautiful cars. Chrysler was on top of their game during the muscle car era. Thanks Nick for preserving these iconic vehicles.
Nick,
Here’s your chance to build a 6 cylinder. A little bore and stroke work. Port and polish the head with a 3 angle valve job. Modify the intake. Possible multiple carburetors. Limited slip differential. Now you have a really nice cruiser with decent gas mileage. Keep the 6 cylinder. Worth more with numbers matching engine. Let Nick work his magic!
Nick- what a time machine! I NEVER knew that the 225 was available in a 70 Charger. Sure, Darts; Dusters & the like came with them. I had a classmate back in 73 that had a 225 slant six in his Dart & he tried his darndest to blow it up so he could drop a 318 or a 340 in it, but never could blow it up, no matter how hard he tried. Thanks Nick for the rewind on that!
Thanks for sharing Joyce, and Nick. It’s exciting to see another Charger with a slant six. I purchased my slant sixed ’68 Charger in 1973. I learned from a book on Dodge that it was one of 400 made. As the first car I ever owned, it was my daily driver throughout high school, college and beyond. Sad to say, when the engine needed some work, a mechanic friend, who knew it was my daily driver asked if he could just switch out my engine for another slant six as I'd be back on the road quicker. In my naivety I said "sure". Now, years later it has a 528 crate hemi. While scary fast can be fun, my mind goes back to the peaceful ride of the slant six, and pulling up to a light and wondering if the engine was even running as it was so quiet. EnJoy the peace.
Not only are they bulletproof, they take really nicely to performance mods as well and produce a lot of torque! I'd love to see Nick build one and put it on the dyno one day!
Had a 71 duster with a slant six. 25 below zero, pump it twice, hit the key. It was running smooth as can be. Let it run on high idle for 10 minutes, you were good to go, had some heat on the windshield. Life was good 👍.
A good old reliable Slant Six. One of the best engines ever made in my opinion.
We need to see a high performance Slant 6 on Nick's dyno.
Unless it’s a Clifford 4bbl-390cfm carb- the factory ones were mid 60s and u never see them period
Restore to original absolutely! Very sharp colour I do recall that from my youth. Looks very dazzling on a bright day.
Nick, love the car! There were only 182 slant six Base model 70 Chargers (XH29).....of those only 19 were FK5 Burnt Orange paint.
Thanks for the info.
Why does a '70 Charger have '69 taillights & tail panel? 🤔
....@@sportsterray66..... Was assembled early August of 1969. Change of year to 1970.
I'm telling you Nick, I had an 83 Ram with that 225 in her. I put 400k on that thing and the only thing I ever did was brakes and of course starters. I kept a spare behind the seat. Had it down to about 7 minutes lol. It may sound silly, but I'd like to see that on the dynamometer! I pulled things my cousin couldn't with his GMC 1500 and a 350. She did 75 MPH up hill with a 30 foot camper. She did 75 MPH with no trailer. If it was going down hill (a mountain road) you could get her to go faster. But that's about it. I had a tree shift. Original clutch I bought from my grandfather. He had it replaced when I bought it. That thing was 100% indestructible! I agree. No way I would swap that motor!
Her / she 😂
Dr. Nick, you are 100% right, keep the charger as is, I have owned a few leaning tower of power slant 6, you can NOT kill them, thanks for the ride, cheers.
They sure were hard to kill. Back here (New Zealand) in the day we used them in the stockcars and they never failed race after race just kept going.
Hi Nick, the slant six here in Argentina is a true legend, and by far the most common engine in Dodge vehicles. The only V8 we had in a Dodge, the Dodge GTX coupe (a car made only for this market and a really beautiful one) was the 318, and this is also a legend and still highly sought after.
In 1969 my father purchased a brand new white Dodge Polara four doors with front disk brakes and a slant six with 145 hp, with a bodywork of the same family as the coupe I mentioned above. Great memories with that car, and obviously for this reason I'm a mopar guy 😀
I was wondering what is so rare about this 1970 Charger. Well I was certainly surprised when Nick opened the hood, and saw the slant six. The FK5 is definitely a rare color, and the orange interior is very unusual. You just never know what will show up at Nick's Garage, awesome!!
We could not agree more. A very unusual Charger. Thanks for stopping by, Eugene.
Very beautiful car the inside and the engine first time i see straight 6 in a charger regards from Greece Nick 🇬🇷👍❤️ nice video
@@NicksGarage Good afternoon George. I never expected to see a 70 Charger equipped like this one, a true unicorn. I'm always looking forward to Monday's videos which are the high point of my day. My sister had a 1967 Dodge Dart GT Convertible, that had the slant six. It was Y2 yellow with a black top. A very nice car that got a lot of looks.
Who would want a slant 6 cylinder motor under the hood of a charger
@@rodneyhopper22 Not me!!! My 500 has a built 440 under the hood. I would never order a Charger with anything less than a 426 Hemi, or a 440.
Nick, there is a Lady in my neighborhood with a 1969 Chevelle 2 door with a 6 cylinder automatic.. I believe She has daily driven it since new. Still does!
I bought a 1968 Charger in 1973 with the 318. It had a black interior , dark green paint , consol shift selector. Paid $1500 for it , by 1975 I could only get $500 for it because of high gasoline prices and V8 cars were called air polluters.
Finally a 225 Straight Six, Can’t wait to see you build a modified leaning tower and get it on the Dyno.
I love it! Keep the engine! Paint the car the original FK5....beautiful color.
It may be considered rare now but back when it was new I bet this car was harder to sell than Bud lite beer is now , lol
I remember seeing oddballs like this in dealer lots , they would sit on the lots forever ....
That powertrain was probably instrumental in it surviving the gas embargoes and insurance hikes of the 70s.
Small engine for that car. Not much muscle in that muscle car. Actually, it’s not really a muscle car with that engine in it. They put those slant 6’s in everything. Real workhorses. Of course, I’m jaded. My dad bought a Chevy Nova for my mom, but I couldn’t get him to buy one with a v8. Instead, he bought one with a 250 cu straight 6. Of course, that was the car I got to drive to University on the days it was my turn to car pool. One of the other guys in the pool got to drive his mom’s brand new 1969 302 Mustang (white with a blue vinyl interior, bucks seats and console). I was so jealous.
@@gorflunk Nah , plenty of hemis and 440's survived just fine ....
This is RARE ! After dekoding the vin tag one of 17 built, and one of the first built at August 4. 1969.
That would explain the taillights and the taillight panel, that looks like the one from a 69, because they are no rectangular reflectors in it and the holes for the taillight trim that goes around 70 only, are missing.
I would not change this thing on that car. I saw one about a year ago at That had a 6 cylinder. It is such a cool car. I love the 6 cylinder.
Absolutely love this car. Please tell her to keep it as a slant six. Those motors were legendary. Maybe even more legendary than Hemis. When growing up we had two 3/4 ton Dodge vans. Each of these had a slant, six three speed on the column. I learn to drive on one of them. It had manual steering and brakes with a huge steering wheel. We drove those vans until they rusted apart with several hundred thousand miles on them. That sound brings back memories.
Burnt Orange interior. I had a 70 R/T 440 Six Pack White with burnt orange interior. I miss it everyday.
I know of a similar in Massachusetts. The owner bought it out of California. 727 originally.
Had a 1987 D100 pickup. Slant six with 4 SPD od and 2:91 diff. Got almost 20 mpg.
That body style tho, damn... No wonder it doesn't matter if the Charger is a 318 or 440... They hold their value on looks alone, even with the flip-up headlights being up...
I love that interior! It's so unique!
Looks like a painted roof instead of vinyl, Nick. Even rarer. What an awesome 70 Charger!!
Thanks for the ride Nick!
Please show an update when she gets it done.
Very nice to see a Slant 6 225 my dad a had a 73 Valiant and 77 Volare with that same engine very bulletproof. Would be nice to see a rebuild of this and Dyno test. Oh and viewers don't know that the engine came with two piece exhaust manifolds 3 cylinder each so a nice upgrade that can be done to put true Dual exhaust front to back it will have a cool sound.
Awesome looking car please please keep the slant six
Most of today's collector cars were yesterday's daily drivers. I've had a couple of those engines. They deliver a lot without asking for much in return.
I had a '64 Dodge van with a Slant 6 for so many years, I got tired of driving it. Bull-It-Proof! It kept cracking exhaust manifolds inside the doghouse. so I called my friend Ted Gotelli of Gotelli's Speed Shop, and got some Hooker headers with dual exhaust. It had low-end torque like a dump truck!. It's probably still running somewhere, Cheers, --bd
👍 I agree Nick, Its a jem with that 6.
Nick, This is the last year that the Hp was 145 and torque was 215 same as my 1960 Dodge Dart
One of my high-school buddies drove an identical 70 charger with a 318, was spotless
My father had a '70 Charger R/T (440) that was FK5 burnt orange with a burnt orange interior. It had power windows too. Unfortunately, it was a Northeast car and was rotted to almost nothing by the time he got rid of it. Bought it in '74 with 19k miles on it.
My first car was a 1974 Plymouth 2DR Scamp with a 225 Slant Six. It was great on gas, lower insurance rates and a beautiful copper color called Sienna. It had a beige vinyl top and matching interior. I bought it off the lot for $3000, brand new. Drove it for four years and sold it to my sister who drove it another six years. Fun car.
Really nice to see such a rare charger
My buddy had a 73 (think it was a 73) Charger 3 speed Slant 6 back in high school. Jacked up, wide tires and the biggest hood scoop JC Witney sold in the early 80s late 70s. It looked FAST, had that reflective strip on the sides too.
I had a Pontiac then with a 400 4sp I'd actually swap cars with him to save gas going to see my girlfriend an hour away and he'd race everybody he could with my car. Really didn't mind driving that Slant at all but stopped swapping with him when I noticed how bald my tires were. He never lost a race anyway. 😂
Hello Nick ,George, krew and Everyone. My uncle love those Slant Sixs engines . He swore by them . He had one in a Dodge Dart , that he kept and drove for 30 years or so ...Beautiful Blue color . Tough old engines, keep the oil change and coolant in it and it will run forever ...
My brother has a LOADED six banger barracuda convertible. He wanted to put a Hemi in it and I talked him out of it. It's a unique car for sure. He can buy a Hemi Cuda easily. He can't buy a slant six barracuda convertible anywhere. I don't think I've ever seen one.
Stay with the 6 cylinder.
Yes! Keep that original. Love it
Cool car! I also noticed it has the plain jane trim too, no finish panel around the taillights and no upper door trim, no bucketseats, I've seen very few 70's with that plain trim level! Thanks for sharing Nick!
my first car , not bad for a daily driver for a teenager 44o magnum slapstick R/T
Very sweet ride!
Wow 8/4/69 scheduled production date. Probably one of the first built for the '70 model year. Odd that it has a '69 style tail panel.
The killer body style Joyce can't beat original . Love it everyday.
Original owner had Supreme self confidence ! Good for him/her .
You must truly appreciate Nick's love for Vintage Muscle Cars, even ones with a Slant 6. If the car were properly restored it would be worth alot being 1 of 300 units produced.
It's kind of like having one of OHC 6's in a GTO or Firebird.
Coke Bottle Charger’s are beautiful, even with the Slant Six
I also have a 73 Duster 225 6 with a $6000 paint job sittin in my shop collecting dust
😂😂 I guess the first give-away was that it’s got drums all the way around…. But great positive spin on it, Nick. And yes, a great conversation piece.
My first car was a Dodge Lancer with slant six and push button auto, bought when I was 16.
Sweet memories, coming back when I hear and see this Charger.
Slant six, fill it up on Monday, drive it All week
I had a 63 Plymouth valiant 6 cylinder. I put a manual choke on it. It could be -30 below ,people cranking, fighting to start their cars. My slant 6 always started. Appreciate them for what they are.
One of my buddies in the mid seventies had a 70 Charger 500 FK5 with burnt orange interior with white vinyl top. At the time the muscle cars were getting worn out and rust in the rear quarters, this one was pristine.
We had never seen a muscle car with anything but black interior.
A great ride.
Careful don't let John Schneider look at your car he may want to put you in a movie for your car LOLOL
I was like "SLANT SIX!" Nick! Rebuild this for her! :)
My son had a 75’ Coronet with a 225, ran great and easy to work on. We also had an 82’ D100 short box pickup worth the 6 cylinder. Bulletproof!
Hi Nick, great car video! Here in Australia we have 245 and 265 HEMI straight 6 cylinders that had 160hp stock and upto 300hp in RTs versions. Chrysler said they have the power of an 8 with the economy of 6 and apparently Chrysler spent 33 million in the 60/70's developing them. I know you would love one of these engines if you ever got your hands on one! Take care from Down Under
I love the color. All I have ever seen is the Green and the Black. This interior really stands out!
Of the 300 6 cylinder Chargers built in 1970, I can imagine that only a tiny percentage of them are left with the original motor. This Charger might be more rare than we think.
Love to hear Nick's French accent. Takes me back to being a teenager and 2 friends from Quebec. Rael and Rejean Phanoueff. Great guys and both had epic Mopars.
There is a couple who own and restored a 1970 slant six Challenger convertible, red exterior and red interior. They brought it to Carlisle several times and the car was the center of attention! Kudos to them and to the owner of this Burnt Orange slant six Charger.
An XH29. Only in 1970. Bench seat with column shift.
Right on. This one was turning heads at the shop.
Hey Nick, Uncle Tony just put up his comments on the Black Ghost Challenger. Would love to hear your take on it.
As soon as I saw the engine, I was so impressed I'm still smiling.
Beautiful car ! just the way it is
I think you should overhaul that the six cylinder
That Charger would make a nice home for your 528 Hemi 😊
Most definitely keep it!!! Split manifold dual exhaust lill more carb😎😎😎
Really relieved to hear it's going to be painted. That's a little too much patina on it. ;)
Thank you to Joyce and Nick for letting us watch this rare beauty👍
I'm so glad that this car survived all it's previous owners and any bad accidents. I certainly can't picture anyone from 1970 opting for a 6 cylinder muscle car!
Phenomenal! Never saw a B body with original Slant Six. I knew that was an option. Keep it original. What a fun car to cruise and enjoy.
Standard would be a 225 with a 3 speed manual. Anything else would be an option.
The 225 slant 6 has history in Australia. We also had straight 6 in 245 & 265. The 265 is in the Australian VH Charger 1971.
Also 215
I didn't know they were that rare. I had one. Mine was green with green interior. It was rusted to oblivion 30 years ago, but it still ran. I sold it to some local guys and never saw it again. Sadly I have no photo and no VIN. I do have a 1970 Challenger, slant 6, burnt orange exterior and interior. That one is in pretty good shape. I was going to put a 440 in it. Maybe I should keep the slant 6 in it?
Do the 440.
NICK , IT SOUNDS LIKE THE VALVES NEED TO BE ADJUSTED AS THIS ENGINE HAS A SOLID LIFTER CAM !!! BEAUTIFUL EXAMPLE FOR 1970 !!!!
I agree with you Nick, keep it with the six cylinder, have nick get everything working properly so it will pass emissions test, have it painted the original color and just drive it. This is from a Chevy guy for almost 50 years. 😁🧓
My dad bought a brand new 1965 Plymouth Fury with a 6 cylinder and that's the car I learned to drive with 11 years later. I really loved that car. Every now and then I dream about the Clunker as it came to be known in its' later years.
Nice to see a car not hot rodded once in a while.. not that there is anything wrong with that...
I have a 74 C10 chevy truck... almost that same color but GM calls is grecian bronze... 6 cyl four speed with granny low.. all original 102 k miles... sometimes i want a V8 in it but it does everything i ask as a working truck ... my other car is the hot rod ...
Thanks for sharing
Nick, in 1966 my dad bought a brand new Mercury Comet Caliente, cardinal red with a white painted top. Beautiful car. A few days later he got that same rebel plate that's on this very special charger. The Rebel was an early 60's TV show.
I had a slant 6 in 79 dodge powerwagon, it burned more oil than it did gas but it got me there.
We all wish it was 1970 today !!!
OMG that slant is a runner . Always enjoyed the smooth torque WHAT A JOY CONGRATS JOYCE . NICK IS TOPPS YOU ARE THE BEST HANDS IN THE UNIVERSE . YOU GOT THE BEST ALL AROUND GOD BLESS YOU.
I love V8 but this car must be original ! In the Chevrolet Opala in Brasil ist fhe six-cylinder with turbo very strong !
Over 2000 HP on the Drag strip (Opala metal) !
As an 17 yo in 1975 I was given a 'hand me down' old/tired yellow 1969 Plymouth Belvedere coupe that had the 225 slant six and ran fine. But it looked just like the GTX the 'older' guys up the street had. Too bad that car got stolen in NYC and never recovered. This old man still thinks about that car now and then.
Paul (in MA)
Love the interior 👍🏻💯 index the plugs Nick set of extractor would do it good with a 2/quarter system owned many slants here in Australia 🇦🇺 you can ajust the valve lash on exhaust an inlet a bit
We had them in our Valiants, here in Australia. My dad's 1966 Valiant wagon, the first car I drove. Such a capable engine was the slant 6. How I miss those days , too. Thanks for sharing, Nick.
haha 3/4 Hemi ive heard that the pistons are around the same size as a hemi . I can tell you want to work on that motor to get it on the dyno. Rare car you are right to tell her to keep it this way. 30 miles to the gallon put a sure grip in it
I would expect that most Chargers came with the LA 318 or the B 383. The slant 6 was certainly an unusual option in the B body cars.
Nice to see one still all together.