You seem to have a thing for butterscotch.
moparman76_69 wrote: Since there isn't a front shot I'm guessing 71-72? Is it beige or gold? I had a 74 in beige and my dad had a 72 in beige.
Looks like a '73 to me. Big front bumper, but the thin '71-72 rear.
Love the fj, atrocious lol, isn't that a little optimistic? Like the new rig too. You have good taste.
My three-year-old likes the Land Cruiser because "you put your kids in the trunk." I'd drive the Dart though. Trial by fire and all that.
Nice score! If it's safely made it on a 40 mile trip, everything working, I'd put a spare ignition module in the glove compartment, a AAA card in my wallet, and take the Dart. They were designed for long highway cruising and handle it great.
Take the Dart! Even the worst darts (ie. the sub $500 crapheaps which went on BABE rally 3 or 4 times) have survived that 1500 mile trip.
One of the crazies who did that with Team Two Horsement of The Carpocalypse lives in Atlanta and has lots of Mopar connections if you need an assist when you get down there. Just shoot me a note and I can get you 2 in touch if needed.
Congratulations for creating a ridiculously huge inner battle within me.
I'm completely paralyzed trying to figure out which of those two vehicles is giving me the biggest boner, and i don't even LIKE Mopars.
Lets kick the tires and light the fires, Boss. If anything's gonna happen, it'll happen out there....
DART!
and if the wheel widths and offsets are the same front to rear, and if the front and rear tires are the same sizes, i'd swap LF and RR tires, so you've got two BFG's on the driver's side and two no-names on the passenger side. aesthetics, that's all.
I'm a little leery of taking a new-to-me car on a serious trip, but ... it IS a Dart.
Take basic tools and spares as noted above, and have fun!
In case you haven't heard, the Slant Six Forum (http://slantsix.org/) and For A-Bodies Only (http://www.forabodiesonly.com/) are your friends.
having driven an a-body mopar for the better part of 20 years, take the damn dart if you aint figured it out by now.
plan on eating ballast rsistors/ecm/points at some point every 1000 miles or so. like other guys said, keep spares. for some reason, if those spares are on board, the parts are 1000000 times less likely to actually go bad. as soon as i started carrying spares, i never had another failure. go figure.
also, prior to leaving, chect the front end out good. it still wouldnt stop me from taking the trip, but it would let me know if the tires will get me home. the lca bushings will destroy tires quicker than fat elvis can clean up at shoneys.
You can probably do a complete tuneup on the slant six in the time that it takes to brew a thermos full of coffee for the ride.
Taking a road trip through south Georgia in October in a classic car should be a must for any car enthusiast. The weather was good for most of the trip and the car did exceptionally well. I took the Dart obviously...
Me and my buddy Mario loaded tha car up to the gills with camping stuff and headed out of town around 2:00. We would have left a little earlier but Mario had a meeting and could not get out of it. One advantage the cruiser has over the Dart is obviously storage room. We had stuff crammed everywhere. You can also see in the photo below our sweet entertainment system . The Dart is equipped with a factory A/M radio which still functions as it should. However I really did not feel like listening to sports radio for 6 hours so I took my "boom box" out of the garage and rigged it up with a cassette adapter so I could listen to "Pandora" off my phone. It worked like a charm...
Here is Mario standing by the Dart...
Obligitory picture in front of Ga sign as we cross the border...
Yet another gas stop. Either the Dart has the smallest tank in the world or its gas gauge is super inacurate. It would read 1/4 tank after about 130 miles and I could never put more then 8 gallons in it.
We pulled into Braselton Ga about 9:00 or so. I took this picture in the parking lot of the supermarket when we purchasing supplies, ie; beer and food.
Thanks to the Dart we scored a sweet camping spot. As we were driving through the infield looking for a spot to set up our tents we were acosted by multiple old school Mopar fans. After striking up a conversation about the car they offered us the space near them. We ended up talking to them the rest of the weekend, cool guys...
Here is the Dart in front of its home for the weekend...
I am really glad I decided to take the Dart to the Petit Le Mans. I felt like a minor celebrity, and it was neat seeing peoples reaction to the car. I can't tell you how many people randomly struck up conversations with us about the car, but it was alot.
At one point there was a hot asian chick in an Audi R8 driving in front of us through the infield. I didn't hear any comments about her as we drove past but I had several people point at the Dart and wave and or comment on it. I guess that is the south for you...
You've probably got an 18 gallon tank, or thereabouts - and a bad ground at the gas tank sender. Mopars have higher resistance the emptier the tank is, and if the ground adds resistance - it reads emptier.
I found out the hard way on my truck project that Chevies are the opposite - a bad ground makes the tank read too full.
Gearheadotaku wrote: Great story and good choice of car. No pics of the hot chic in the R8?
Unfortunatly not. I was driving and we were behind her...
Great to live vicariously through your adventure. Been to Florida, Been to Road Atlanta, Never driven a Dart on the trip and had such a memorable adventure. Thanks for sharing.
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