

Please contact us anytime for more information or to come see the vehicle in person.(First Posted October 22, 2013) What really separates the hard core car freaks from the semi-pros is in what mental image they conjure up when you say “early Dodge Dart”. The website is and our phone number is (888) 227-0914. This vehicle is located in our showroom in Morgantown, Pennsylvania, conveniently located just 1-hour west of Philadelphia on the I-76 Pennsylvania Turnpike. Also, a 400 vehicle barn find collection is on display. As I said, “Greased Lightning!”Ĭlassic Auto Mall is a 336,000-square foot classic and special interest automobile showroom, featuring over 450 vehicles for sale with showroom space for up to 1,000 vehicles. Shifting was a breeze with the pistol grip, and it has plenty of power.Īll sorted out direct from 1964 Dodge boys, this simple design, great restoration, and dazzling polished aluminum mill, you will be assured of getting plenty of looks at the show or on a jaunt down main street. It drove smoothly, no power steering, and brakes were excellent. Nary a drip to be found anywhere, this undercarriage is tight! An 8.75 Challenger rear with 3.50 gears, drum brakes in back and disc brakes in front.Īs I slip into this great interior, I'm amazed how good it looks! A turn of the key and she fires right up and has a sound that makes it sound like it has a much larger engine. Very slight surface rust on the usual steel characters, but mostly black undercoated, no rust floorpans, and rockers. Polished Jack Clifford headers wind their way past the intakes and form a neat bundle before exiting out to the 2-1/2” pipes and hi flow mufflers.
1964 dodge dart manual#
An A833 4-speed with overdrive manual transmission is bolted to the back. Also, of note the large intake valves and the head have been ported, and smoothed. Inside there is an Erson cam, a polished aluminum intake, and an Edelbrock 500 CFM 4-barrel carb to feed the slanter. 225 Cubes in slant 6-cylinder form, and the aforementioned 1962 cast aluminum block. Popping the hood, we are met with polished aluminum heaven. Lest I forget, the trunk deserves a word, with perfect interior red paint, and the checked vinyl liner straight and flat. A vintage Sun Tach is mounted to the column right behind the original steering wheel. A look to the dash and we see the true to 1964 restored dash, in beautiful black steel and horizontal ribbed aluminum front. Between the buckets is a wood topped Mopar pistol grip shifter which sits proudly in a sea of very clean black carpeting. The rear bench is also as close to perfection one can get and emulate the styling of the buckets. The front buckets also have nice chrome trim supporting the bottom and back outer corner of the bolsters. White piping and a perfectly preserved Fratzog also in white is seen in the middle of each seat back. Front buckets in black vinyl have inner horizontal ribbing with smooth outer bolsters. Simply elegantly done, this interior is pristine. Steel Cop Car wheels with a dish outer ring, and small chrome inner cap has a black Fratzog logo in the center. The rear of this car also has 2 individual round taillights from which emerges just a hint of a tail fin topped in chrome. The chrome trim with the GT badge frames the slight bump in the hood.

A nicely preserved bumper is just below, and this has 2 round turn signal lights hanging from the bottom. Upfront the round single headlights and bezels flank a narrow horizontal grille with a spaced DODGE badge in the center. Bathed in very nice red paint, just a few faults throughout, but mostly unremarkable. I'd personally prefer it down, because the car has a nicer line with it that way. There are lots of other goodies so read on!Ī black canvas convertible top with a clear plastic window tops this car off and moves up and down with ease. It retains its original look from 1964, and sports 11” Cop Car wheels. It has a small production aluminum block form 1962, and other work and attachments aplenty. This piece of Dodge history is like greased lightning. There are still many conspiracy theories about it…

The designer made up the gibberish term due to being obligated to come up with a name. If you're wondering what that word means (it sounds German, doesn't it?), it's totally meaningless. Fratzog (1962-1976): A fractured deltoid shape commonly compared to a rocket or triangle, was named the Fratzog.
