Author Topic: What defines a "clone"?  (Read 2124 times)

Offline 1 Wild R/T

  • Resident
  • *****
  • Posts: 4594
Re: What defines a "clone"?
« Reply #30 on: July 01, 2014 - 10:44:51 AM »
just bustin'  :grinyes:


i had a '70 fury conv. that i swapped the front drums for the 11.75" discs off a '72 new yorker. man those brakes were awesome!

All good, just wanted to get the facts straight, someone might actually care... I've worked on these cars since 74, the technical details is something I've always paid attention to... I hate seeing wrong information posted & accepted as fact... 
JS27N0B 70 Challenger R/T Convertible  FJ5 Sublime, Show Poodle w/90,000 miles since resto
WS27L8G 68 Coronet R/T Convertible  PP1 Bright Red, Project
RM21H9E 69 Road Runner Coupe R4 Performance Red, Sold...
5H21C  65 Falcon 2 dr Wagon... Dog Hauler...




Offline 1 Wild R/T

  • Resident
  • *****
  • Posts: 4594
Re: What defines a "clone"?
« Reply #31 on: July 01, 2014 - 11:02:41 AM »
For those who are interested, from Barry Washington's website...
 http://www.hamtramck-historical.com/images/TSBs/1970/D70-25-2%20page1.jpg
This is the TSB sent to dealers/techs describing the changes the a T/A vs a standard Challenger... It's an 8 page document so to see the rest just delete the 1 near the end of the address & substitute 2-3-4 etc...
JS27N0B 70 Challenger R/T Convertible  FJ5 Sublime, Show Poodle w/90,000 miles since resto
WS27L8G 68 Coronet R/T Convertible  PP1 Bright Red, Project
RM21H9E 69 Road Runner Coupe R4 Performance Red, Sold...
5H21C  65 Falcon 2 dr Wagon... Dog Hauler...

Offline joelson6

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 577
Re: What defines a "clone"?
« Reply #32 on: July 02, 2014 - 07:13:54 PM »
awesome!