Years ago, I used to think "The more shit you can throw at a '71 Charger, the better." Scoops, spoilers, R/T doors, stripes, etc. I'm older now, and I much-more appreciate the purity of line and shape over gee-gaw add-on stuff. I still love the front spoiler, but am not a fan of the rear. I don't like the R/T and Super Bee stripe like I once did, and the bulge hood is OK but I'd rather have a flat one now. The scalloped taillamps of the R/T and '72 Rallye now look overwrought and busy to me where the bezels for the standard taillamps have depth and contour that's easier on
my eyes. I like the '71 hideaways which are cleanly designed; '72s have the vertical elements chromed (and in fact are different castings for the headlamp doors and grillework) and as far as I'm concerned were change for the sake of change, and not for the better. I'd still rather have them than any of the open-headlamp grilles. I think on the open-headlamp cars, the '71 grille is the best, and the '72 is the worst.
Mechanically, the '72 is the best of the breed but externally the '71 is better. I loved my '73 Rallye, but there were so many changes for '73 (doors, fenders, suspension) that I'm no longer the fan of the '73-'74 cars I once was. Stretch's car is an amazing example of the breed and I love that car, but I would not be interested in ownership of it short of putting it 100% back to original parts (which of course he's been smart enough to save) and selling it at a profit to buy something I really like and want to play with at no decrease in value--you really can't hurt the value of a car like the LeBaron by hot-rodding it, though with that particular car you'd better damned-well like it, or prepare to lose your ass on it should you sell it. I like it well enough to keep it, do the work, and even with show-quality paint and finish work, it's still a sleeper. I like that about it.
I made money selling the Bee, but not much for a V-code car. My roommate did a lot better than I on it after he bought it, but to be honest I was glad to be rid of the responsibility of owning a 1-of-1 car. I
had to restore that thing, and though I still may have driven it what happens when a teenager blows a red light and T-bones it? Most likely it would have ended as a garage-kept trailer queen simply out of paranoia.
Buy a style you like, create it in your vision, and if you pile it up go get another low-buck low-perf body and transfer everything salvageable to it. The factory built a lot of musclecars, but the real deal is often beyond our bank. I'd rather have a G-code car I can enjoy than an R-code Charger about which I worry every second.
Damn, I went off the hook again. Sorry.
