One of Plymouth’s wildest, head-scratching relics from the muscle car glory days is hitting the block at Mecum Kissimmee come ...
The very first 1970 Plymouth Hemi Cuda is up for sale. Not one of the first, not one of those pseudo-rare muscle cars that happened to roll off the factory line on a Tuesday instead of a Thursday; ...
There’s something special about listening to a classic V8 muscle car screaming down the drag strip, and that’s exactly what we’re getting with this racing video between a 1969 Chevy Chevelle SS and ...
An extremely rare 1970 Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda Convertible is among the featured lots at Mecum's auction scheduled for January 6-16 in Kissimmee, Florida. Mecum doesn't publish pre-auction estimates, but ...
The 1970 Plymouth HEMI Cuda was the high-water mark for Chrysler muscle cars of its era. The 1970-74 E-body Plymouth Barracuda and its sibling, the Dodge Challenger, were Chrysler's "pony cars," ...
All legends have to start somewhere. The Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda is considered one of the greatest muscle cars of all time, perhaps the greatest. The early 1970s classic combines burly styling with a ...
Remember the 1970 Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda that we saw come out of a barn after 40 years back in February 2022? Well, the same guy also had a 1970 Dodge Challenger R/T Hemi. And he decided to let it go ...
DURING the 1970 model year, Plymouth manufactured a total of 19,515 Cudas, a vehicle Henry Mauney Jr. describes as “a car just short of a race car for the street.” Of that number of Cudas, only 635 ...
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 ...
With only a few hundred built, the 1971 ’Cuda Convertible became a Halloween-colored legend—orange, black, and brutally honest ...
If you track back to the 1970s, it was a fascinating time for American muscle cars. It was an era defined by brilliant designs, screaming engines, and an arms race to dominate the drag strip.
In 1972, somebody lost one of the great muscle cars for $51.45, the sum for which the Bedford National Bank of Bedford, Iowa, repossessed this real R-code 1970 Plymouth Hemi Barracuda convertible.