Dr.Jass
Pastor of Muppets
As discussed elsewhere, I recently purchased a 1971 Challenger. It was owned for about 30 years by a friend who passed away last year. If he ever had a plan for it, nobody knows what that might've been.
To get the factory facts out of the way, we'll decode the data tag:
E44: 318-2 Barrel
D13: 3-Speed Manual Transmission Floor
JH23: Dodge Challenger, high trim, 2dr hardtop
G1B: 318-2BBL 8cyl, 1971 model, Dodge Main, Hamtramck
19____: Sequence Number '19____'
GF7: Dark Green Metallic
H6X9: High price vinyl buckets, black
000: Upper Door Frame: Full Door Panel
A27: Added to production schedule 10/27/1970
_11041: Order Number _11041 (first digit unknown)
GF7: Dark Green Metallic painted roof
U: Build to US FMVSS
B51: Power Brakes (discs on the car)
C55: Bucket Seats
G11: Tinted Glass, All
H51: Single air conditioning w/heater
M21: Roof Drip Rail Moldings
R26: AM Radio w/ Cassette
V7X: Accent stripes, painted, black
26: 26 in. Radiator
EN2: End of codes, build on Line 2
Getting into the more mysterious parts of the car:
I initially thought the car had been wrecked, as it has the front clip, doors and steering wheel from an E5 1974 360HP Rallye. However, I no longer believe that to be the case for several reasons. First and foremost, the structure of the car shows no evidence of crash damage. The inner fenders, core support, and frame rails are straight as an arrow and have not been replaced that I (or anyone else) can tell. It has the early-'71 no-slot front bumper on it, which never had guards installed. I can't swear it's original, but it's not from the '74. The radiator number decodes to that of a '71 AC car. The air conditioning itself looks to be 100% complete and original, with no damaged or straightened lines. There's simply nothing to indicate front-end damage that would've required a new clip.
There are other curiosities present. The rear axle appears to have been swapped, possibly from the '74 Rallye. There's a factory-issue rear swaybar with which this car wasn't built. It doesn't have a front swaybar, y'see. The axle, springs, and swaybar are painted bright red (apparently it was a thing--the same was done to my '78 Trans Am) but that doesn't appear to have been done while that stuff was installed on the car since there's no overspray. The diff is a Sure Grip, which seems more likely to be found on an HP car than a lowly 318, although with a manual, who knows? The gears are either 3.23 or 3.55. The original steering wheel was in the trunk; I believe it's original because I don't think he'd have bought a cracked wheel for it. The decklid is a '70-'71 part with spoiler cutouts, but it's got factory black paint. The front seats are early hard-back parts with the '70-'71 release buttons, and what I saw under the covers looks like '71 upholstery... but it's white. Neither the decklid nor the front seats are original to the car, and neither is the non-AC dash pad that has the '71 VIN held on with rosette-head rivets. The car isn't coded for disc brakes but has them; Kev says that wasn't uncommon (his '71 Charger is the same way, but they are on his build sheet). Possibly the worst of all, for some reason it has an A-body transmission in it. What the...?! Exactly what driveshaft is in there?
One more curiosity is the carburetor: It's a Rochester 2GV. According to my research, that carb saw limited use in 1971 Mopars. It uses a specific fuel line, still on the car, that cannot work with a Carter BBD or Holley's copy thereof. What's weird is that factory literature says it's 318 with AC only, Plymouth only, and automatic transmission only... yet there it sits, looking to be 100% original, on a 3-speed manual Dodge. While I have no doubt it's OE due to the non-molestation of the engine bay overall, I'd have a hard time convincing show judges. It'll never come to that, but it is strange.
The plan, you ax? I don't have a good one at the moment. The 318 isn't seized, so I'd like to attempt making it run and possibly move under its own power. I managed to get the carb unseized, thanks to the Rochester gods deciding to use a cast-iron base plate. I'm already mid-process rebuilding a proper E-body-length transmission, which will actually be an overdrive. I'm swapping truck OD parts into a small-block iron case so the bearing retainer fits the existing bellhousing. I'm also rebuilding the beat Pistol Grip found and purchase on the property. If the clutch needs attention, I'll replace it while the trans is out. While it's in the air, it'll get the complete restoration exhaust system that came with my '74. I'd really like to attempt to get the AC working without converting away from the original V2 (not RV2, yes there's a difference) compressor. I'll install the right dash pad, because I have one, cracks and all. Funtional stuff like brakes, suspension (the air shocks gotta go!) gauges, lights, et al will all get any required repairs. Wheels and tires will be replaced forthwith by Western Cyclone II wheels with 255/60R-15 BFGs at all four corners, which were leftovers after I decided to run 17" Minilites on my '74. I have spare Rallye clusters, so one will find its way in there. A Challenger without Rallye gauges is a crime against God.
Despite my inital impression that the car was very solid, I did find a bad spot on the driver's-side rear frame rail, right near the front spring pocket. The left-rear floor is bad, too, but that I already knew. Those parts will be repaired to the best of my ability with the proper parts. The trunk, extensions, and wheel houses are actually in amazing shape, all things considered, and will not require replacement. The fascia/grille and eventually fenders will be replaced by '71 parts. Pray for me--I have to buy a '71 Challenger grille. Oy.
Long-term, I'd like to put a 340 where the 318 currently resides. Initially I was all over stuffing my 440 Six Pack in it, but after realizing how complete the small-block AC system is, I just can't part with it. I have everything to build a '71-spec 340 except the carb and air cleaner, both of which are in "no thanks" territory price-wise, so I'll use a different TQ and the dual-snorkel air cleaner I also purchased when I bought the car. Seriously long-term, the body might get done and painted the original F7 green, which I really like... or I may just leave it as a beater.
I have serious "new toy" fever, but this thread isn't going to get a lot of updates in the near future. I have two other cars on the hot plate at the moment, so other than recovering the car and stuffing it into storage I don't expect ot get a ton done with it for some time.
Initial "as-found" pictures are here if you're curious. I'll post more pictures and possibly video on Recovery Day, hopefully with better wheels and tires mounted!
To get the factory facts out of the way, we'll decode the data tag:
E44: 318-2 Barrel
D13: 3-Speed Manual Transmission Floor
JH23: Dodge Challenger, high trim, 2dr hardtop
G1B: 318-2BBL 8cyl, 1971 model, Dodge Main, Hamtramck
19____: Sequence Number '19____'
GF7: Dark Green Metallic
H6X9: High price vinyl buckets, black
000: Upper Door Frame: Full Door Panel
A27: Added to production schedule 10/27/1970
_11041: Order Number _11041 (first digit unknown)
GF7: Dark Green Metallic painted roof
U: Build to US FMVSS
B51: Power Brakes (discs on the car)
C55: Bucket Seats
G11: Tinted Glass, All
H51: Single air conditioning w/heater
M21: Roof Drip Rail Moldings
R26: AM Radio w/ Cassette
V7X: Accent stripes, painted, black
26: 26 in. Radiator
EN2: End of codes, build on Line 2
Getting into the more mysterious parts of the car:
I initially thought the car had been wrecked, as it has the front clip, doors and steering wheel from an E5 1974 360HP Rallye. However, I no longer believe that to be the case for several reasons. First and foremost, the structure of the car shows no evidence of crash damage. The inner fenders, core support, and frame rails are straight as an arrow and have not been replaced that I (or anyone else) can tell. It has the early-'71 no-slot front bumper on it, which never had guards installed. I can't swear it's original, but it's not from the '74. The radiator number decodes to that of a '71 AC car. The air conditioning itself looks to be 100% complete and original, with no damaged or straightened lines. There's simply nothing to indicate front-end damage that would've required a new clip.
There are other curiosities present. The rear axle appears to have been swapped, possibly from the '74 Rallye. There's a factory-issue rear swaybar with which this car wasn't built. It doesn't have a front swaybar, y'see. The axle, springs, and swaybar are painted bright red (apparently it was a thing--the same was done to my '78 Trans Am) but that doesn't appear to have been done while that stuff was installed on the car since there's no overspray. The diff is a Sure Grip, which seems more likely to be found on an HP car than a lowly 318, although with a manual, who knows? The gears are either 3.23 or 3.55. The original steering wheel was in the trunk; I believe it's original because I don't think he'd have bought a cracked wheel for it. The decklid is a '70-'71 part with spoiler cutouts, but it's got factory black paint. The front seats are early hard-back parts with the '70-'71 release buttons, and what I saw under the covers looks like '71 upholstery... but it's white. Neither the decklid nor the front seats are original to the car, and neither is the non-AC dash pad that has the '71 VIN held on with rosette-head rivets. The car isn't coded for disc brakes but has them; Kev says that wasn't uncommon (his '71 Charger is the same way, but they are on his build sheet). Possibly the worst of all, for some reason it has an A-body transmission in it. What the...?! Exactly what driveshaft is in there?
One more curiosity is the carburetor: It's a Rochester 2GV. According to my research, that carb saw limited use in 1971 Mopars. It uses a specific fuel line, still on the car, that cannot work with a Carter BBD or Holley's copy thereof. What's weird is that factory literature says it's 318 with AC only, Plymouth only, and automatic transmission only... yet there it sits, looking to be 100% original, on a 3-speed manual Dodge. While I have no doubt it's OE due to the non-molestation of the engine bay overall, I'd have a hard time convincing show judges. It'll never come to that, but it is strange.
The plan, you ax? I don't have a good one at the moment. The 318 isn't seized, so I'd like to attempt making it run and possibly move under its own power. I managed to get the carb unseized, thanks to the Rochester gods deciding to use a cast-iron base plate. I'm already mid-process rebuilding a proper E-body-length transmission, which will actually be an overdrive. I'm swapping truck OD parts into a small-block iron case so the bearing retainer fits the existing bellhousing. I'm also rebuilding the beat Pistol Grip found and purchase on the property. If the clutch needs attention, I'll replace it while the trans is out. While it's in the air, it'll get the complete restoration exhaust system that came with my '74. I'd really like to attempt to get the AC working without converting away from the original V2 (not RV2, yes there's a difference) compressor. I'll install the right dash pad, because I have one, cracks and all. Funtional stuff like brakes, suspension (the air shocks gotta go!) gauges, lights, et al will all get any required repairs. Wheels and tires will be replaced forthwith by Western Cyclone II wheels with 255/60R-15 BFGs at all four corners, which were leftovers after I decided to run 17" Minilites on my '74. I have spare Rallye clusters, so one will find its way in there. A Challenger without Rallye gauges is a crime against God.
Despite my inital impression that the car was very solid, I did find a bad spot on the driver's-side rear frame rail, right near the front spring pocket. The left-rear floor is bad, too, but that I already knew. Those parts will be repaired to the best of my ability with the proper parts. The trunk, extensions, and wheel houses are actually in amazing shape, all things considered, and will not require replacement. The fascia/grille and eventually fenders will be replaced by '71 parts. Pray for me--I have to buy a '71 Challenger grille. Oy.
Long-term, I'd like to put a 340 where the 318 currently resides. Initially I was all over stuffing my 440 Six Pack in it, but after realizing how complete the small-block AC system is, I just can't part with it. I have everything to build a '71-spec 340 except the carb and air cleaner, both of which are in "no thanks" territory price-wise, so I'll use a different TQ and the dual-snorkel air cleaner I also purchased when I bought the car. Seriously long-term, the body might get done and painted the original F7 green, which I really like... or I may just leave it as a beater.
I have serious "new toy" fever, but this thread isn't going to get a lot of updates in the near future. I have two other cars on the hot plate at the moment, so other than recovering the car and stuffing it into storage I don't expect ot get a ton done with it for some time.
Initial "as-found" pictures are here if you're curious. I'll post more pictures and possibly video on Recovery Day, hopefully with better wheels and tires mounted!












