When it comes to American cars in the muscle-car era, there's never-ending debate as to which brand had the best-looking offerings in the showroom and which had the best engines—but hands down, Mother ...
It usually takes years to develop an automotive product and get it to market. But, occasionally, a good idea, a few months, a good supplier relationship and a phone call from the back of a minivan are ...
For a substantial number of engines made over the course of automobile history, most of them bear the name of the car company that produced them, like Chevrolet or Ford. After all, it makes it easy to ...
The Mopar name, Chrysler's clever blend of letters from its motor parts arm, is synonymous with powerful engines from the muscle car era. Today, Mopar continues to set the standard for high ...
Straight off the bat, it's the engine sizes. The Mopar 383 V8 displaces 383 cubic inches (6.3 liters), sitting between the 340 (5.6 liters) and 440 (7.2 liters). The 340, 383, and 440 all are part of ...
In the history of engines made by Mopar — the parts division of Stellantis, who owns Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and more — the flashiest of the bunch naturally come from the height of the muscle car era ...
The Dodge Scat Pack lives in a special corner of American car culture. Say the name, and most gearheads picture a loud, naturally-aspirated HEMI V8 lighting up the rear tires of a Challenger or ...
It usually takes years to develop an automotive product and get it to market. But, occasionally, a good idea, a few months, a good supplier relationship and a phone call from the back of a minivan are ...