Dont let go of the shifter. Its 1969. Left elbow out the window with one finger on the wheel (you have power steering after all), right hand stays on the shifter (until 4th). You likely had a cigarette in your right hand... so... Reverse, your finger touches the wiper switch. First, you turn on the radio. Third, you tune the radio and the ash tray is right there every time. Your Lifespan was only 52 anyway. Love this episode. Thank you for the entertainment; while most of our cars are stored in the wintertime..
My cousin in Albuquerque got a metallic green one of these new. That torqueflite could take an evening of great street fun and not even whimper or slip.
IMO, Mopar has always made the best muscle cars. Even when you look at their offerings today, the Challenger and Charger are quintessential muscle cars. The Mustang and Camaro look retro and have muscle car engines but drive like sports cars.
Mopar made the best muscle cars in the late 60s and it holds true today. They owned both eras when it came to TRUE muscle cars. Also they made high impact colors like sublime green and plum crazy purple famous and I'm glad they're continuing that tradition today.
@@MattMaranMotoring A hint for you, Matt. While upshifting under throttle, put your left hand at 12 o'clock on the wheel, and LEAVE your right hand on the shifter. You are wasting time and motion. This applies to any stick you drive.
A wonderful retro muscle car review Matt, very enjoyable! A real muscle car, a big car with 2-doors & a big high horsepower engine which is why Dodge is the last place left today for true muscle & a hint of the past glory! I loved my '69 440 Charger's & '70 440 Challenger's, today I drive a newer Hemi Challenger!
Right on! I’m loving everytime my challenger roars to life especially after it’s mid muffler delete and added in vibrants in its place. I wasn’t alive during the true muscle car era but enjoy my modern v8 muscle car! #MoparOrNoCar
Being high above sea level is especially detrimental for a 6bbl/6 pack car because unless the outboard carbs have had the factory lead plugs removed from the idle mixture screw access holes, and then the 2 screws on each of the 2 outboard carbs turned to tune the A/F ratio, it is probably running lean. THAT is one of the best solutions for making the 6bbl/6 pack run better. Access the idle mixture screws on the outboard carbs and then adjust all 3 carbs for idle. Installing the Promax throttle plate on the rear carb allows access to those screws with the carb on the intake and engine running. The front carb screws are easily reached and the center carb has them on the sides of the metering block. If you have a moderate to hot cam on a 6bbl engine, the Promax metering block is a HUGE improvement as the factory unit doesn't play well with low vacuum cams.
Your emotions demonstrate how fun it is to drive these bad boys! I've owned five of these beasts. 3 four speeds and two auto's. Loved the 4spd and hearing the revs through the gears. That's heaven on earth for sure!
No, with the A12 pkg power brakes were not available. Power steering was, though. The black steel wheels came on the car because, a) they were cheap, and b) no one kept the stock wheels on a car anyway. They were quickly swapped for Cragars, Anson Sprints, Keystones or whatever your fave aftermarket wheels were.
So funny when I see and hear young guys drive and then talk about Classic rides that us "Over 60" guys grew up with and drove !! 😉 These were Great cars and still are. 👍
Very cool change of pace Matty-Midnight. Tough part of reviewing a car of this vintage is the context. It is challenging to really be unbiased when driving one. If youtube was around when this came out you would have a million views right now. Innovation is a great thing but sometimes you just want to get your hands dirty and piss off the neighbors with a gnarly V8. All right... all right ....all right.
I can remember as a kid a family friend came back from Vietnam and bought a low miles orange 440 six pack roadrunner. About all I remember was the liftoff hood and the engine. I could barely see over the fender. He was giving everyone rides in it but I was holding the family pet and he bit me in the face so I never got a ride in it.
I really like the fact that you are showing these classic mopar beauties to the rest of the world, nice work. I own a '69 Barracuda Fastback myself, also with the Hurst 4 speed. And I will give you some tips so that next time you will love those shifters: when you are ready for acceleration, grab that shifter and don't let go of it. And like they even said in an old article: don't baby it. But slam it into the next gear. The Hurst mechanisms are able to withstand the force because of two stop bolts, which I am sure are installed in a 440 6 pack car. And when you press the clutch, don't hold your foot down. Press and release in one motion. After this, trust me you will love it. And in my opinion, power steering? Another pump just to give up some muscle turning the wheel? Hell no.
Great review. My dad owned one year's ago! I remember sitting in the front seat as a little kid (on my mom's lap) and he'd drag race it against other cars in the Bay Area for fun!
Should we come back in a week, let some of that adrenalin wear off? We used to drive those things full throttle, blind drunk while doing bongs sheeeeett, and if you never get it over 100, you get 12 demerits boy scout
I was almost 9 when the guy who worked for my uncle bought one new exactly like this one. He backed out into the street threw it in first and nailed it. He forgot to pin the hood and it blew over the car. He then put it in reverse only to run over it. What a memory.
All thrills, no frills...this is what muscle cars are all about. Take in that rich gas smell and enjoy the rumble of the big block. Unleash the beast with a press of your foot. Love it. Thanks for the honest review!
I appreciate the video. If you experienced a lightly modded 440 6bbl POWER shifting vs taking it easy between gears, that is a whole different experience than the way you shifted. I'm not knocking you, just relating my own experience with my warmed up 440 6bbl Roadrunner. I still tap the clutch to shift gears, but at the track, I keep the gas pedal on the floor, and that keeps the 2x 500 CFM outboard carbs open! The first time I hit 2nd gear like that, the glove box popped open because it wasn't fully latched and dust came out from under the dash. Lol.
Back in the day when cars had more realistic ground clearance. Now I see a lot of cars with broken plastic parts hanging down in front from dragging the sidewalk as they enter driveways. That’s why the last several vehicles I’ve bought were trucks and truck based SUV’s.
A real good review....one thing to mention, the 440 six pack setup was actually real close to the hemi option...mind you, most street hemi owners suffered with carb ills and tuning, the six pack setup with the vacuum end carbs, were much more user friendly. You never really had to "play" with the carbs like the hemi, also the hydraulic cam had non adjustable valve train. Performance times stock were actually on par with the street hemi, or VERY close. A very flexible and brilliant package.
We now have cars that will take over control of the vehicle, making people less and less capable of driving. I was a trucker for over 10 years, it is shocking how many people can't back up a trailer or even shift.
I am amused by the comments of the younger viewers. Let me set the record straight. A properly tuned Six Pack 440 with modern rubber on the rear will smoke your Toyota Camry. These cars were fucking fast. Back in my day (late 60's in Oklahoma City), wheel-spin was the enemy and if you could find a pair of drag slicks, you could knock two seconds off your quarter mile times. Of course we can never go back to those times but trust me, we had some serious shit too.
In the late 70s to mid-80s, I drove my 1970 440 Six Pack Dodge Challenger R/T as a daily driver. Manual steering was a real bear at slow speed and I had forgotten all about that little gem till I saw your video. Another item I seem to have forgotten over time is that you could develop I mighty right calf muscle driving that car. Lots of throttle spring to overcome just tooling around town. I often wish I still had that car but I'm glad to have had my time in the seat with it. I also remember lots of time under the hood trying to keep those three Holleys happy as well. That part I surely don't miss. Very glad to have survived those years as it was always way too tempting to throw my leg into it; pushing with just a strong calf wasn't the best way to wake up the Six Pack and let the 440 breathe properly. With the Dana 60 and 4-11 gears out back, it would go upstairs real quick. Too quick actually. It was also a really quick way to find yourself staring wide-eyed out a side window while trying to keep the car in a straight line. My car had the Slap Stick automatic and power brakes so those were my two luxuries. Maybe in a few years, I'll get another one after I retire and relive my youth. We'll see. Prices for a decent one have gotten really out of hand since I paid $3,000.00 to buy my 100% bone stock original from the original owner. Please keep the videos coming.
The newer ones are better and the 440-6 was advertised at 390 horsepower but was really 325 hp. No way it can beat the newer Dodge cars with 5.7 V-8 putting out 375 REAL hp.
They are great cars! Fast enough when stock, but when you start tweak them with stroker crank to over 500 cube that's when things get whole lots of fun.
That's a sick ass car. 50 years from now low mileage hellcat redeye's and first gen hellcats will be worth silly money. Assuming we are still allowed to drive...
In my early 20's (only 25 now) I built transmissions at an auto shop and my boss who owned the place had a super bee on a lift fixing it up. They taught me all I know so while I was learning in the morning I'd have to take out the trash and shop rags and I'd always check with the supervisor when I showed to make sure there wasn't anything special he wanted and while the car was there he'd always say "don't get near that super bee!". Of course I took pics though
This is fantastic!! I'm a huge fan of Mopar musclecars. My dad sold his 1970 Charger on Monday. It was sad to see it go after 32 years but hopefully the new owner enjoys its it like we did.
@@MattMaranMotoring My parents are getting older and priorities change so it was time to let it go. He still has a 1966 Plymouth Barracuda, it's not very fast but it is fun to drive with a 273 V8 and a 4-speed.
MOPAR. They never had the curvy beauty of the Chevy Camaros or Ford Mustangs. These cars had just square balls to the wall performance. Square and hardcore. Beautiful cars💪👍👍☝❤
I remember being scared shitless as a passenger in one of these cars back in 75. telephone poles looked like they were standing still as my neck got snapped back with each shift . Those 6-packs hit hard when winding the engine out.
My old 70' Roadrunner 383 4spd 3,91.1 gear set up same interior same everything hurst long throw shifter 4 wheel drum brakes no power steering ran 0-60 in 6 seconds n was a beast to steer race but I miss that car
Great review Matt I'm a big fan of classic Mopars my dad has a 1972 Dodge Charger with the 340 in it and then my grandfather had a 1971 Plymouth Satellite Sebring Plus with a 383 One day I'm going to follow suit and have my Mopar It's my dream.
Bought a new 69 383 Bee then found out the 6 pack was coming within 6 months. Just couldn't wait I needed a daily driver. By years end I traded the Bee in on a Hemi Charger RT... talk about "go fast"
Kevin Ryan, I insist on rowing my own gears! Such an engaged, tactile connection with the powertrain, and once the skills involved in shifting well are accomplished, it makes ripping up the 1320 that much better
Your title - hard to drive - No they were not. None of my Super Bees had any type of power assisted equipment and all were standard trans cars. I did however make my 1968 to a road car from a drag pack auto. It too had a standard trans from the factory and non assisted clutch. And none of them had any type of braking trouble with non pwr assist drum brakes. This car here is a beauty.
This was not a car for the weak bodied person. Once you learn the gear system and the shifting gate to RPM ratio, you could hit some savage torque to speed ratios. This car was seriously dismissed as a muscle monster. This car was never meant to be an every day street driver. This thing was meant to do some serious performance.
That clock was running backwards, I guess the video was played backwards for that segment? Also, 'Sure-Grip' was Chrysler's term for their limited-slip differential back then. Sure-Grip or not, if you were giving that thing anywhere near full throttle in first without blowing those skinny bias-plies off of it with a Six-Pak and 4.10s, that thing isn't making anywhere near the power it would properly tuned at a lower elevation. A relatively mild 360 through a 4-speed and 3.91s can be a handful on stock size modern radials in a B-Body.
Good review Matt. I think you may be the perfect ambassador to bridge the gap between your younger audience and classic muscle cars us old guy still revere.
Beautiful Super Bee and nice review! I can vouch for the sloppy shifter, I had a 69 Roadrunner with that same shifter/console setep. Loved the styling but it was sloppy as hell, not for drag racing! And yes, the clutch was definitely not for sissies.
I have a black 68 coronet RT built 440 highrise two 4 barrels, tubed, rollcage, ponybarrel. Absolutely rust free it was an old drag car taken off the road early in it's life. Stole it for $4000 five years ago with new paint. Everybody was afraid of it. Not me. The paintjob was worth more than what I paid for the whole car. Best thing I ever did.
Its called a SureGrip rear end. You should have still spun the tires quite a bit if its running right. Looks like it hesitated when you stepped into it to me.
I LEARNED how to shift an A833 4 speed on my '68 Road Runner. Loong factory pistol grip, powershifting about a 12" throw from 1st to 2nd with my elbow crashing into the bench seat. I didn't know anything else, so I didn't think it was difficult.
Had one just like it back in early 70s. Purchased it from a police officer for 1400 dollars. Cruise for 3.00 a day when premium was 33.9 a gallon aw the good old days
at 9:40 when he romps on it ? that thing didn't even open "2" Barrels fully let be all 6.... I know because I own one ! and can tell you there is NO WAY all 6 barrels opened 1.) By the SOUND 2.) by the time between shifts plus 3.) the fact that the Tires never broke loose in 1st. If he would have actually gotten all 6 Barrels open ? he would have sh*t his pants FULL STOP !
Doesn't matter..the horsepower was claimed to be 390 on the 440-6 pack but is really only 325 hp--and any 2019 Dodge 5.7 that puts out 375 horsepower will blow this old rust bucket off the road...
@@chadhaire1711 WTF are you talking about ? You just make yourself sound like such a dorkus erectus village idiot ? Our '69 440-6 BBL "survivor", UN-restored, UN-Rebuilt.... WHEEL Dyno'd @ 320 hp with the Air Cleaner removed, and has clocked a best of 13.45 @ 105 mph ? But you can believe whatever you want there pea-brain.
@@dirtlump The hp of this engine is 325 not 390. You already admitted your run was not stock pea brain. Any 2020 Dodge with 5.7 V-8 can beat your car at the strip in spite of being 450 pounds heavier.
This was the quickest recorded muscle car, Ronnie Sox (factory mopar team drag racer) ran a 12.91 ET in one back in the day (4-speed). That's the quickest ET of any tested muscle car back then besides I believe the 427 corvette. They also made a roadrunner version, they are known as the 1969 1/2 A12 cars.
BULLCRAP...a stock 440-6 never ran more than high 13's--more like 13.8 on a good day. The 12.9 times were NOT STOCK. Further more the horsepower of the 440-6 was advertised as 390 but is really 325, so it could never have reached the 12 second bracket anyway.
@@chadhaire1711 chad haire has no clue just a bullshitter the first a12 roadrunner came with documentation that it ran a 12 91 u need to know how to drive a mopar
@@frigglebiscuit7484 They can't on the street because of traction is bad on street pavement.........on the track it will Gomer. Same with 800 hp Redeye.........and both will beat your 400 ci Franken-Car.....LOL...
@@Welcometofacsistube I haven't done a deep dive on who did what first but I wouldn't call MB "junk". I mean during the time frame we're talking about here they (MB) built cars like tanks. Sure they (MB) had a down period but not for very long, while others have had decades of "junk"🙊🤔
Dont let go of the shifter. Its 1969. Left elbow out the window with one finger on the wheel (you have power steering after all), right hand stays on the shifter (until 4th). You likely had a cigarette in your right hand... so...
Reverse, your finger touches the wiper switch.
First, you turn on the radio.
Third, you tune the radio and the ash tray is right there every time.
Your Lifespan was only 52 anyway.
Love this episode. Thank you for the entertainment; while most of our cars are stored in the wintertime..
You forget "drive it like Ronnie Sox"!
Yes you nailed that one right sure brings back memories
Dude, this is exactly what I was looking for. A classic car reviewer.
This takes me back to the days of his other channel, Vintage Car Fan!
ha, I'm working on it ;)
This was a good review. You might like My Car Story @mycarstory ruclips.net/video/oKmxxAumqh8/видео.html
samspace81 Oh... Dilly Dilly! I will check out some of your videos
My cousin in Albuquerque got a metallic green one of these new. That torqueflite could take an evening of great street fun and not even whimper or slip.
The 1st time ned Flanders drove a six pack mopar..🤣
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!
@Eric Buck Lolz
Hahahaha! Yep. Got a little excited there didn't he. Might have pee'd his pants a little....We grew up with this stuff.
😆😂 lmao!
Texas cruiser 4 speeds a great .
IMO, Mopar has always made the best muscle cars. Even when you look at their offerings today, the Challenger and Charger are quintessential muscle cars. The Mustang and Camaro look retro and have muscle car engines but drive like sports cars.
Mopar made the best muscle cars in the late 60s and it holds true today. They owned both eras when it came to TRUE muscle cars. Also they made high impact colors like sublime green and plum crazy purple famous and I'm glad they're continuing that tradition today.
Well in honesty the fact that they handle is a fair and needed add on I appreciate the old schools but if I had one I would definitely resto mod it
I agree, but I wouldn't be mad if the Challengers drove like Mustangs or Camaros.
@@dreyn7780 Throttle steering? Like drifting?
Dreyn 77 As the interweb says, 'lolwut'?
I would love to see you doing more classic car reviews👍
I'll have one more next week, after that I'll have to wait for more owners to offer their classic cars.
Matt Maran Motoring Damn buddy, you can really drive. 😎
I agree. It's cool to see how thrilled he is with how hard those are to drive. Imagine tracking one.
@@MattMaranMotoring A hint for you, Matt. While upshifting under throttle, put your left hand at 12 o'clock on the wheel, and LEAVE your right hand on the shifter. You are wasting time and motion. This applies to any stick you drive.
This is the type of content I want to see Matt please do more of these classic cars
I'll try to do more, just need owners to offer more cars!
Chrysler called their LSD 'Sure Grip'.
Thanks!
that start uppppppppppppp.......
yooo its slap
A wonderful retro muscle car review Matt, very enjoyable! A real muscle car, a big car with 2-doors & a big high horsepower engine which is why Dodge is the last place left today for true muscle & a hint of the past glory! I loved my '69 440 Charger's & '70 440 Challenger's, today I drive a newer Hemi Challenger!
That's awesome, they must have been a blast to own! You'll like next week's review then too!
Well I drove two modern Challengers and really didnt liked the huge size and important mass of the car...
@@secretm.5896 well the challenger is a modern muscle car and the roomy of the others such as the Camaro and Mustang
Right on! I’m loving everytime my challenger roars to life especially after it’s mid muffler delete and added in vibrants in its place. I wasn’t alive during the true muscle car era but enjoy my modern v8 muscle car! #MoparOrNoCar
Being high above sea level is especially detrimental for a 6bbl/6 pack car because unless the outboard carbs have had the factory lead plugs removed from the idle mixture screw access holes, and then the 2 screws on each of the 2 outboard carbs turned to tune the A/F ratio, it is probably running lean. THAT is one of the best solutions for making the 6bbl/6 pack run better. Access the idle mixture screws on the outboard carbs and then adjust all 3 carbs for idle. Installing the Promax throttle plate on the rear carb allows access to those screws with the carb on the intake and engine running. The front carb screws are easily reached and the center carb has them on the sides of the metering block. If you have a moderate to hot cam on a 6bbl engine, the Promax metering block is a HUGE improvement as the factory unit doesn't play well with low vacuum cams.
Even though I love the Mustang I can appreciate the classic looks and power of this car. Thanks for the look back. I love classic cars.
If you want the modern version of this, get the Challenger Scatpack Widebody in manual. No modern mustang will give you that feeling
Your emotions demonstrate how fun it is to drive these bad boys! I've owned five of these beasts. 3 four speeds and two auto's. Loved the 4spd and hearing the revs through the gears. That's heaven on earth for sure!
My dad had 2 and said he would keep the last for me when I got older but didn't 😢
No, with the A12 pkg power brakes were not available. Power steering was, though. The black steel wheels came on the car because, a) they were cheap, and b) no one kept the stock wheels on a car anyway. They were quickly swapped for Cragars, Anson Sprints, Keystones or whatever your fave aftermarket wheels were.
Matt, its called a "tick tock tach"🛎
Thanks for the info!
Klasse Act Same dash used in all the B bodies depending on spec.
Anyone else notice the second hand on the clock going backwards?
Bryan Baker - it wasn’t; it was functioning normally.
So funny when I see and hear young guys drive and then talk about Classic rides that us "Over 60" guys grew up with and drove !! 😉
These were Great cars and still are. 👍
@TerryWeinhold Yes Sir they sure do ! 👍
I did 70 in first gear, 69 Super Bee 383 magnum 4 speed. Bought in 1976, sold 1982. Still regret selling it.
Bad Ass Ride. A12 Roadrunners/Super Bees are my all time favorite muscle car
Very cool change of pace Matty-Midnight. Tough part of reviewing a car of this vintage is the context. It is challenging to really be unbiased when driving one. If youtube was around when this came out you would have a million views right now. Innovation is a great thing but sometimes you just want to get your hands dirty and piss off the neighbors with a gnarly V8. All right... all right ....all right.
I can remember as a kid a family friend came back from Vietnam and bought a low miles orange 440 six pack roadrunner. About all I remember was the liftoff hood and the engine. I could barely see over the fender. He was giving everyone rides in it but I was holding the family pet and he bit me in the face so I never got a ride in it.
Very funny story. That sucks ha ha
I really like the fact that you are showing these classic mopar beauties to the rest of the world, nice work. I own a '69 Barracuda Fastback myself, also with the Hurst 4 speed. And I will give you some tips so that next time you will love those shifters: when you are ready for acceleration, grab that shifter and don't let go of it. And like they even said in an old article: don't baby it. But slam it into the next gear. The Hurst mechanisms are able to withstand the force because of two stop bolts, which I am sure are installed in a 440 6 pack car. And when you press the clutch, don't hold your foot down. Press and release in one motion. After this, trust me you will love it. And in my opinion, power steering? Another pump just to give up some muscle turning the wheel? Hell no.
Early squad 9:40 back road reaction
Great review. My dad owned one year's ago! I remember sitting in the front seat as a little kid (on my mom's lap) and he'd drag race it against other cars in the Bay Area for fun!
My 440 became a lot more fun to drive once I bolted an A-833 behind it with a good diaphragm clutch. Became a whole different car at that point.
Should we come back in a week, let some of that adrenalin wear off? We used to drive those things full throttle, blind drunk while doing bongs sheeeeett, and if you never get it over 100, you get 12 demerits boy scout
Nothing beats classic Murican muscle🇺🇸
I was almost 9 when the guy who worked for my uncle bought one new exactly like this one. He backed out into the street threw it in first and nailed it. He forgot to pin the hood and it blew over the car. He then put it in reverse only to run over it. What a memory.
You're hilarious with the shifter. That shifter is bullet proof....handle it like a man.
That’s problematic 🤓 🤡
REAL MAN driving A REAL CAR is a rarity nowadays....
Best reviewer on RUclips doing the classics... brilliant. Keep em coming, brother
Thanks Jenel!
That's about $120,000 worth of fun!
All thrills, no frills...this is what muscle cars are all about. Take in that rich gas smell and enjoy the rumble of the big block. Unleash the beast with a press of your foot. Love it. Thanks for the honest review!
Please keep doing the classic car reviews! You don’t get to see these cars a lot especially as period correct as this is!
Ahhhh that sound. Serenity.
These classics are so special. I adore them. If you are ever able to get your hand on any European classics, especially Porsches, please review them.
I appreciate the video. If you experienced a lightly modded 440 6bbl POWER shifting vs taking it easy between gears, that is a whole different experience than the way you shifted. I'm not knocking you, just relating my own experience with my warmed up 440 6bbl Roadrunner. I still tap the clutch to shift gears, but at the track, I keep the gas pedal on the floor, and that keeps the 2x 500 CFM outboard carbs open! The first time I hit 2nd gear like that, the glove box popped open because it wasn't fully latched and dust came out from under the dash. Lol.
Back in the day when cars had more realistic ground clearance. Now I see a lot of cars with broken plastic parts hanging down in front from dragging the sidewalk as they enter driveways. That’s why the last several vehicles I’ve bought were trucks and truck based SUV’s.
A real good review....one thing to mention, the 440 six pack setup was actually real close to the hemi option...mind you, most street hemi owners suffered with carb ills and tuning, the six pack setup with the vacuum end carbs, were much more user friendly. You never really had to "play" with the carbs like the hemi, also the hydraulic cam had non adjustable valve train.
Performance times stock were actually on par with the street hemi, or VERY close. A very flexible and brilliant package.
Road runner super bee my favorite two cars. Love the old mopars.
Love it. One of the best cars of 1969.
Matt , it’s so cool to see you review these older muscle cars ! Especially for those of us that never got a chance to drive one . Thank you !
Watching you shift reminded me of how far removed we are from those days in the process of driving.
Everyone wants Automatics so they can hold their phones and put on make up at the same time. Men included...
We now have cars that will take over control of the vehicle, making people less and less capable of driving.
I was a trucker for over 10 years, it is shocking how many people can't back up a trailer or even shift.
When driving took skill! My 2018 Crosstrek shifts so soft you can flick it into first gear basically. Love a clutch you have to stand on.
I am amused by the comments of the younger viewers. Let me set the record straight. A properly tuned Six Pack 440 with modern rubber on the rear will smoke your Toyota Camry. These cars were fucking fast. Back in my day (late 60's in Oklahoma City), wheel-spin was the enemy and if you could find a pair of drag slicks, you could knock two seconds off your quarter mile times. Of course we can never go back to those times but trust me, we had some serious shit too.
Great job dude, you reviewed a real car, this came out when men were men and sheep were scared.
My Uncle had a brand new '69 Dodge Coronet R/T with a 440, 727 torqueflite. He described that car simply as "an animal".
In the late 70s to mid-80s, I drove my 1970 440 Six Pack Dodge Challenger R/T as a daily driver. Manual steering was a real bear at slow speed and I had forgotten all about that little gem till I saw your video. Another item I seem to have forgotten over time is that you could develop I mighty right calf muscle driving that car. Lots of throttle spring to overcome just tooling around town. I often wish I still had that car but I'm glad to have had my time in the seat with it. I also remember lots of time under the hood trying to keep those three Holleys happy as well. That part I surely don't miss. Very glad to have survived those years as it was always way too tempting to throw my leg into it; pushing with just a strong calf wasn't the best way to wake up the Six Pack and let the 440 breathe properly. With the Dana 60 and 4-11 gears out back, it would go upstairs real quick. Too quick actually. It was also a really quick way to find yourself staring wide-eyed out a side window while trying to keep the car in a straight line. My car had the Slap Stick automatic and power brakes so those were my two luxuries. Maybe in a few years, I'll get another one after I retire and relive my youth. We'll see. Prices for a decent one have gotten really out of hand since I paid $3,000.00 to buy my 100% bone stock original from the original owner. Please keep the videos coming.
The newer ones are better and the 440-6 was advertised at 390 horsepower but was really 325 hp. No way it can beat the newer Dodge cars with 5.7 V-8 putting out 375 REAL hp.
When he said "one last second gear pull" I immediately look at the video duration and almost cried when I saw it was in the end.
They are great cars! Fast enough when stock, but when you start tweak them with stroker crank to over 500 cube that's when things get whole lots of fun.
That's a sick ass car. 50 years from now low mileage hellcat redeye's and first gen hellcats will be worth silly money. Assuming we are still allowed to drive...
In my early 20's (only 25 now) I built transmissions at an auto shop and my boss who owned the place had a super bee on a lift fixing it up. They taught me all I know so while I was learning in the morning I'd have to take out the trash and shop rags and I'd always check with the supervisor when I showed to make sure there wasn't anything special he wanted and while the car was there he'd always say "don't get near that super bee!". Of course I took pics though
Got my ass chewed out for taking pics of the interior lol worth it just to be half way inside that monster
I believe Mopar called their limited slip a Sure Grip, GM called their limited slip Posi-Traction and Ford called Their limited slip Traction Lok.
Those were the day's! What a classic. Thanks
This is fantastic!! I'm a huge fan of Mopar musclecars. My dad sold his 1970 Charger on Monday. It was sad to see it go after 32 years but hopefully the new owner enjoys its it like we did.
Wow, sorry you guys sold it, but I hope the new owner enjoys it! I'm glad you liked the video!
@@MattMaranMotoring My parents are getting older and priorities change so it was time to let it go. He still has a 1966 Plymouth Barracuda, it's not very fast but it is fun to drive with a 273 V8 and a 4-speed.
Those are cool too, love the big rear window.
MOPAR. They never had the curvy beauty of the Chevy Camaros or Ford Mustangs. These cars had just square balls to the wall performance. Square and hardcore. Beautiful cars💪👍👍☝❤
OMG, Now I'd take this MOPAR over anything today, hands down! But then I was a pre-teen when they were new..:-)
The '69 Super Bee A12 and the '69 Road Runner A12 are one of the most tough cars of all time! Nice video, mate!
I remember being scared shitless as a passenger in one of these cars back in 75. telephone poles looked like they were standing still as my neck got snapped back with each shift . Those 6-packs hit hard when winding the engine out.
12:15 this is why these are called muscle cars lmao
Keep reviewing the Muscle Cars! Especially Mopars! Sweet... Sick exhaust note...
My old 70' Roadrunner 383 4spd 3,91.1 gear set up same interior same everything hurst long throw shifter 4 wheel drum brakes no power steering ran 0-60 in 6 seconds n was a beast to steer race but I miss that car
Mopar or no car...... PERFECT cruising car..
Great review Matt I'm a big fan of classic Mopars my dad has a 1972 Dodge Charger with the 340 in it and then my grandfather had a 1971 Plymouth Satellite Sebring Plus with a 383 One day I'm going to follow suit and have my Mopar It's my dream.
Thanks Jonathan! That's awesome, best of luck getting yours!
Had a 68 Road Runner 383 single 4 barrel that was a blast to drive. I was always envious of the 440 6 pack cars. I'm sure they were even more fun.
Bought a new 69 383 Bee then found out the 6 pack was coming within 6 months. Just couldn't wait I needed a daily driver. By years end I traded the Bee in on a Hemi Charger RT... talk about "go fast"
I love that you’re reviewing some classic American muscle! You’re a well rounded car guy.
He can't even shift it...
Not sure how this guy got behind the wheel of such a legendary car… sucks when people don’t appreciate what they have.
My father had one of these with the 383 when he was young.
I absolutely love the rear end of this car, probably one of the best looking ones ever to be designed, imo
Love it! Old school power, love the manuals.
Kevin Ryan, I insist on rowing my own gears! Such an engaged, tactile connection with the powertrain, and once the skills involved in shifting well are accomplished, it makes ripping up the 1320 that much better
Amazing colour. Another great review, Matt!
That shifter lever just looks bad ass.
Your title - hard to drive - No they were not. None of my Super Bees had any type of power assisted equipment and all were standard trans cars. I did however make my 1968 to a road car from a drag pack auto. It too had a standard trans from the factory and non assisted clutch. And none of them had any type of braking trouble with non pwr assist drum brakes. This car here is a beauty.
This was not a car for the weak bodied person. Once you learn the gear system and the shifting gate to RPM ratio, you could hit some savage torque to speed ratios. This car was seriously dismissed as a muscle monster. This car was never meant to be an every day street driver. This thing was meant to do some serious performance.
There was more leg room in the backseat because the wheel base was two inches longer than the Road Runners.
That car is so badass
That clock was running backwards, I guess the video was played backwards for that segment?
Also, 'Sure-Grip' was Chrysler's term for their limited-slip differential back then. Sure-Grip or not, if you were giving that thing anywhere near full throttle in first without blowing those skinny bias-plies off of it with a Six-Pak and 4.10s, that thing isn't making anywhere near the power it would properly tuned at a lower elevation. A relatively mild 360 through a 4-speed and 3.91s can be a handful on stock size modern radials in a B-Body.
A real mans car.
Good review Matt. I think you may be the perfect ambassador to bridge the gap between your younger audience and classic muscle cars us old guy still revere.
i had 1 of these when i was 18, but mine was a 383 we switched to a 440, it was b5 blue, i loved it with the 440 in it, and it had the 727 auto
Beautiful Super Bee and nice review! I can vouch for the sloppy shifter, I had a 69 Roadrunner with that same shifter/console setep. Loved the styling but it was sloppy as hell, not for drag racing! And yes, the clutch was definitely not for sissies.
I got to drive in a 440 6 pack exactly like this one. Every time he slammed it into another gear the tires were chirping. What a ride!!!!
A12 is the pinnacle of muscle cars imo
U run on the 2 bbl and under full throttle the outer two barrels kick in. Pretty easy to drive
Really miss this style car review as in the sporty stuff!! Loved the acceleration as always haha.
dude finally!!!! yes please do some classics! nothin wrong with that. you'll always find fans for those cars.
I see why my dad went with the Torque Flite back in the day. Great review.
no car today has that sound.its sick
Had a red '68 Coronet R/T 440 back in the day, traded it on a '65 Vette fastback, worst thing I ever did, miss that R/T every day!
I have a black 68 coronet RT built 440 highrise two 4 barrels, tubed, rollcage, ponybarrel. Absolutely rust free it was an old drag car taken off the road early in it's life. Stole it for $4000 five years ago with new paint. Everybody was afraid of it. Not me. The paintjob was worth more than what I paid for the whole car. Best thing I ever did.
The sale also included a dozen trophies and pictures from Great Lakes dragway in the Early 80's. For sale 68 coronet R/T $40,000 new paint lol
Great review, this car is the ultimate Mopar Street racer, Mopar won the Muscle car wars.. this car was bare bones bargain basement car
Its called a SureGrip rear end. You should have still spun the tires quite a bit if its running right. Looks like it hesitated when you stepped into it to me.
I LEARNED how to shift an A833 4 speed on my '68 Road Runner. Loong factory pistol grip, powershifting about a 12" throw from 1st to 2nd with my elbow crashing into the bench seat. I didn't know anything else, so I didn't think it was difficult.
Good stuff Matt, classics are where its at ;)
Thanks for stopping by Sam!
Had one just like it back in early 70s. Purchased it from a police officer for 1400 dollars. Cruise for 3.00 a day when premium was 33.9 a gallon aw the good old days
at 9:40 when he romps on it ?
that thing didn't even open "2" Barrels fully let be all 6.... I know because I own one ! and can tell you there is NO WAY all 6 barrels opened 1.) By the SOUND 2.) by the time between shifts plus 3.) the fact that the Tires never broke loose in 1st. If he would have actually gotten all 6 Barrels open ? he would have sh*t his pants FULL STOP !
Yup!!! 440-6pack opening up sounds like a freight train. Ole Wimppy here would have shait his diaper.
Doesn't matter..the horsepower was claimed to be 390 on the 440-6 pack but is really only 325 hp--and any 2019 Dodge 5.7 that puts out 375 horsepower will blow this old rust bucket off the road...
@@omcara1 The car is a dog..stock best time would be 13.8 in the 1/4 mile...and modern V-6 can do that....LOL....all show and no go..
@@chadhaire1711
WTF are you talking about ? You just make yourself sound like such a dorkus erectus village idiot ?
Our '69 440-6 BBL "survivor", UN-restored, UN-Rebuilt.... WHEEL Dyno'd @ 320 hp with the Air Cleaner removed, and has clocked a best of 13.45 @ 105 mph ?
But you can believe whatever you want there pea-brain.
@@dirtlump The hp of this engine is 325 not 390. You already admitted your run was not stock pea brain. Any 2020 Dodge with 5.7 V-8 can beat your car at the strip in spite of being 450 pounds heavier.
The car and the restoration are killer! Thanks.
Including the legendary Tick-Tock-Tach!
That damn car is one of sexiest cars ever made!
Great review. Please throw in some classic muscle car reviews every so often.
This things sounds amazing and looks great. I hope to drive something like this some day.
This was the quickest recorded muscle car, Ronnie Sox (factory mopar team drag racer) ran a 12.91 ET in one back in the day (4-speed). That's the quickest ET of any tested muscle car back then besides I believe the 427 corvette. They also made a roadrunner version, they are known as the 1969 1/2 A12 cars.
BULLCRAP...a stock 440-6 never ran more than high 13's--more like 13.8 on a good day. The 12.9 times were NOT STOCK. Further more the horsepower of the 440-6 was advertised as 390 but is really 325, so it could never have reached the 12 second bracket anyway.
@@chadhaire1711 chad haire has no clue just a bullshitter the first a12 roadrunner came with documentation that it ran a 12 91 u need to know how to drive a mopar
@@chadhaire1711 well, on that theory, i can say the dodge demon is BULLSHIT, because people cant get ANYWHERE NEAR the advertised 1/4 mile time.
@@frigglebiscuit7484 They can't on the street because of traction is bad on street pavement.........on the track it will Gomer. Same with 800 hp Redeye.........and both will beat your 400 ci Franken-Car.....LOL...
Love the classic car reviews!
Not too early for ABS, the Imperial had ABS the following year this car was made😉
Interesting, I didn't know they had it that soon, I thought it didn't really hit the mainstream until the 80s.
@@MattMaranMotoring it's true, the Lincoln Mark IV's had ABS a couple years after that even.
Matt Maran Motoring first car to have it. Mercedes likes to lie and claim they did but that typically of German junk
@@Welcometofacsistube I haven't done a deep dive on who did what first but I wouldn't call MB "junk". I mean during the time frame we're talking about here they (MB) built cars like tanks. Sure they (MB) had a down period but not for very long, while others have had decades of "junk"🙊🤔
@@klasseact6663 nah, merc is JUNK. absolute money pits after a certain mileage.