The Mopar 440 powered late '60s Dodge and Plymouth cars, with both standard and iconic high-performance versions putting their stamp on the muscle car era.
Straight off the bat, it's the engine sizes. The Mopar 383 V8 displaces 383 cubic inches (6.3 liters), sitting between the 340 (5.6 liters) and 440 (7.2 liters). The 340, 383, and 440 all are part of ...
Chrysler's 440 was always known as a cheap route to making respectable street power. In the days of old, the 440 cars were really something special, and a modified 440 car was just that much more ...
We all know the 440 big-block is the largest-displacement V-8 engine built by Chrysler, and when it comes to a combination of torque, power, and drivability, the 440 ranks as one of the best engines ...
In the late 1950s, Chrysler decided to cease production on its FirePower V8 engines. These were massive, hemispherical engines that would be revived in the mid-1960s and be rebranded to what we now ...
Over the years, Chrysler has produced a number of powerplants with the potential for making incredible street brawling horsepower. While the small-block 340 has its strong points, it doesn't quite ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
The Charger is perhaps the most muscle car in the history of this glorious species that once dominated Planet Piston with unquestionable might. Dodge nailed it in the head with their second generation ...
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