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"Barn Find"

Md11hud

Member
Local time
8:09 AM
Joined
May 11, 2013
Messages
14
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Location
Kirkland, WA
I've been into Mopars for some time as my Grandfather was a Chrysler/Plymouth dealer in Olympia, WA, and my dad still owns his 1952 Chrysler Saratoga with 331 Hemi power that he got as his High School graduation gift. He drove it off the railroad car brand new and his first stop was the body shop to have it nosed and decked. I got to drive the 52 when I was in High School. I have passed on the Mopar bug and now my wife has a 1940 Plymouth truck on a Dakota chassis, my daughter has a 1972 Plymouth Scamp that my son and I built for her to drive in High School, and my son has two Aspens, a 1971 Dart Swinger and 1968 Chrysler Newport 2 door. My daily driver is a 2009 Dodge Challenger R/T in B-5 blue (one of 2000) and last week I picked up my first B Body, a 1968 Charger.

There is an interesting story to go along with the Charger. My son, who works two jobs as a mechanic and body man, was with his body man boss at the auto recycling yard, of course in the Mopar section. They were approached by a guy asking some Mopar specific questions, and after he figured out they knew what they were talking about, he mentioned that he had a 1968 Charger in his garage that he might be interested in selling.

After a couple of months of talking it up, my Son convinced me to check out the car. What we found was a three owner, ex California car that had never been wrecked, not been hacked up, and never been restored. It was also always garaged, but had not been touched since 1990 when the seller had taken most of the interior out and placed in inside storage. He assured us he had all the trim, and that it was in good shape. The original 383 was gone, but he had installed a replacement 383 and Headman headers and aftermarket mufflers.

I agreed to a price, and next week we brought out the car trailer and towed her home (to many thumbs up on the road). A good wash job got most of the 23 years of dust off and we started the job of inventory and making a list of things that had to happen to get her back on the road. The floors and trunk are nice, the quarters are going to need some work and the fenders are a bit bunged up, but it is nothing my son can not handle. Our plan is to get her driving first and then tackle one area at a time so she is never off the road for long.

I first had to reinstall the gauges, which were in very nice shape. The only bad thing on the interior is the radio panel was hacked up for a modern radio. The rest is in very nice condition. I had to replace half the instrument lights, and resolder the circuit breaker pin connections, but all the gauges work now. And the car only had 9000 miles on her...(or 109? or 209?) I then had to take out the electric fuel pump and replace with stock manual pump as his wiring was messing with the ability of the key to engage the starter relay. Also the neutral safety switch is kaput. With that figured out, she willingly turned over. Adding a rebuilt carburetor and fuel line to a jerry can caused the engine to fire! Once we got all the vacuum ports capped or routed properly, she actually ran fairly well.

Today, I took her for her first spin in 23 years. The 727 tranny worked well, but we were limited to up and down the driveway as our next job is refurbishing the brakes (Thankfully the E brake worked just fine). We picked up rotors and spindles from an M body and after machining them and installing new calipers and a new disc master, we will be on the road to stopping on a dime. DSC_0003.jpgDSC_0072.jpgDSC_0068.jpgDSC_0067.jpgDSC_0064.jpgDSC_0055.jpgDSC_0023.jpgDSC_0018.JPGDSC_0015.jpgDSC_0014.jpgDSC_0012.jpgDSC_0009.jpgDSC_0008.jpgDSC_0007.jpgDSC_0004.jpgDSC_0073.jpg
 
hi and welcome to the site sounds its gonna be a great project keep posting :headbang:
 
Welcome from Illinois Md11hud. The dash doesn't look 'hacked' up. Just taken apart. The area where radio goes looks right just minus radio plate. Hole beneath that is for A/C grill/fins on models so equipped.
 
Welcome to the site - cool story and great looking starting point for a restoration. What are your plans for it - was it an original yellow car?
 
Very cool find, neat car! My gramps had an old farm house in Redmond next to the VFW. I haven't been back there in 40+ years.

What does the paper say inside the hood?
 
Love the '68 Chargers, the color & with black interior, black vinyl top, black bee-stripes....wow! :eek:s_dancing2:



SONNY

Please keep it pale yellow
 
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Welcome from Illinois Md11hud. The dash doesn't look 'hacked' up. Just taken apart. The area where radio goes looks right just minus radio plate. Hole beneath that is for A/C grill/fins on models so equipped.
To clarify, the part that is "hacked up" is the radio plate. I do have the original AM radio, but will be looking for a plastic surround. I found one in the Paddock catalog already.
 
Welcome to the site - cool story and great looking starting point for a restoration. What are your plans for it - was it an original yellow car?
Yes, this is an original yellow car. Also, no vinyl top, so the roof is in really nice shape except for one dent from a tree limb. The plan is to make it an R/T clone with 440 and 4 speed. We are installing disc brakes and 11 inch drums next to get her road worthy, but our plan is to take it to shows as is this summer and then this fall start body work, one panel at a time so it is not all in pieces and not drivable. My son and I have found that a driving car is more likely to be worked on, and I don't mind driving a car with one or two fenders in primer or final paint. I am leaning towards a Burnt Orange with black butt stripe as the final color, but we shall see. As this will never be a show car ( although the paint will be excellent ), I am not worried about factory date stamped VIN tag matching, price is no object stuff, just a nice looking, sunny weather driver.
 
Very cool find, neat car! My gramps had an old farm house in Redmond next to the VFW. I haven't been back there in 40+ years.

What does the paper say inside the hood?

i'm guessing you are referring to the paper on the trunk lid? That is the original sticker for jacking instructions! So that is the original paint under the trunk lid.
 
welcome to FBBO, 68 Charger R/T was my first car back in 1974, that's great project you got there...
 
More progress, first drive out of the shop

I got the dash put back together, and the engine fired up and tuned in enough to take her for a short spin on the farm. We are still working on the brakes, and hopefully will get to them next week. We had a set of 17 inch Magnum 500's from another project that look pretty good on the Charger. DSC_0081.jpg
The trunk floor is beautiful, no rust to speak of.DSCN1876.jpg
The front drum brakes are going away next week, to be replaced by rotors and spindles from an M body.DSCN1868.jpg
Oops, somebody forgot the tranny cover. Good thing they are easy to find.
The headers have a bit of surface rust, but are pretty solid.DSCN1867.jpg
Traction bars and air shocks, oh my.DSCN1862.jpg
Gas tank was in nice shape with just one big dent, but pretty clean inside with no rust holes.DSCN1861.jpg
Original Mono dash speaker being replaced with 2 30 wattersDSCN1860.jpg
Dash going back togetherDSCN1858.jpg
All the dash gauges now work after a bit of solder and new lights.DSCN1857.jpg
After the first trip down the driveway. I am waiting for a new tire for the other rear Magnum wheel. Right now we are running the steelie with old rubber, and the peg leg diff has no trouble spinning that one rear tire. Sorry about the tire marks on your driveway Pop.DSCN1878.jpg
My 2009 toy and my 1968 toy.DSCN1886.jpg
No doubt they are relatedDSCN1882.jpg
The view most drivers will see.DSCN1888.jpg
 
I love the slap stick in the pre-71 car.

Always wanted to do that.
 
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