Random pictures thread

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Stopped for gas today here in Connecticut. While filling my van I noticed they left the little magnetic numbers on the pump top. Couldn’t help myself hehehehe

Cliff Ramsdell
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Great picture!
Thanks! Car was my daily driver from 1978 until the Wife and I were married in 1982 and then I tucked it away in the garage at my Mothers. We drove the Bee to and from the Chapel in '82. I got the restoration done just in time for our Daughters wedding in Sept 2019 and she wanted to be driven to the alter in it, figuring the car had good luck with the wife and I still together after all these years. Ended up using both cars for her and her eight bridesmaids.
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Thanks! Car was my daily driver from 1978 until the Wife and I were married in 1982 and then I tucked it away in the garage at my Mothers. We drove the Bee to and from the Chapel in '82. I got the restoration done just in time for our Daughters wedding in Sept 2019 and she wanted to be driven to the alter in it, figuring the car had good luck with the wife and I still together after all these years. Ended up using both cars for her and her eight bridesmaids.
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One of the best stories i have read!
 
Magnificent Mopar: Kyle Kohr’s Historic 1968 Dodge Dart
Kyle’s Dart is one of six that Dodge plucked the 383 cubic-inch engine out of on the assembly line, and stuffed a 440 cubic-inch mill in its place so the car could race in SS/EA. Racers like Dick Landy, Bob Lambeck, Ron Mancini, and Charlie Allen received one, and the rest went to dealerships. Kyle’s Dart was campaigned by Charlie Allen in 1968 and 1969 before it was sold, then converted to a 1971 Dart to race in Pro Stock. For the next 40 years, the Dart was a test mule for Chrysler Power Magazine before Kyle’s dad purchased it.

“My dad bought the car and it got passed around to a few of his friends until I got it in 2009. I decided to turn it back to a ’68 with a paint job similar to the one it had when it was first raced. I wanted to restore the car back to exactly how it was in 1968 if I needed to, but I also wanted to competitively race the car. So, the obvious choice was to build an NHRA stocker out of it,” Kyle says.
The immaculate Dart was fully restored by Kyle at his own shop; he built the chrome-moly roll cage himself, the first he had ever done, plus he did all of the sheet metal work. The engine has a set of 906 heads, an Edelbrock intake, and a Carter AVS carburetor on top of it. Behind the engine is a Pro Trans 727 TorqueFlite and ATI torque converter.

Kyle plans on running his killer Dart as much as he can in 2021 at NHRA events. It’s really cool to see a car that could be in a museum or tucked away in a private collection still being used as a racecar. And if you see Kyle’s Dart at an event make sure you take a long look at it because it’s one of the few chances you’ll get to see a legendary car remaining in the wild.
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