Welcome To MagnumGT.com

1978 was a horrible year for the United States. Jimmy Carter was elected President, Disco was at it’s height, and cars were both ugly and performance dogs. One of the few bright spots was the 1978 Dodge Magnum, which was to have replaced the Charger. At the last minute Dodge executives got cold feet on the “Cord” style grill, renamed the car as the Magnum, and continued with the Charger for 78.

The Magnum was an immediate hit, the Charger was phased out, and the Magnum returned for 1979. The Gas Crisis in the Summer of 78 had automakers scramble to downsize, and the Magnum was replaced by a smaller Slant-6 Mirada for 1980.

This site is dedicated to provide information for those interested in this single bright spot of the late 70s. Please feel free to browse through the pages and posting here, and follow us on Facebook.

Mopar Platform Reference

Mopar Body Platforms

If you would like to learn more about the various Mopar Platforms that Chrysler, Dodge, Plymouth, and Eagle cars were based on — then use the below links to navigate to the various Body topics on www.MoparWiki.com.

The MoparWiki has the ultimate goal of being the best reference for all things Mopar. This is done through collaboration of all willing to help improve the topics by adding information they have and citing a reference. Your help is welcomed.

J/A Body on MoparWiki
P/L Body on MoparWiki
L-Body on MoparWiki
S-Body on MoparWiki

J-Body on MoparWiki
M-Body on MoparWiki
LH-Body on MoparWiki
G-Body on MoparWiki
R-Bodies on MoparWiki

D-Body on MoparWiki

LC-Body on MoparWiki
LX-Body on MoparWiki
K-Car on MoparWiki
F-Body on MoparWiki
E-Body on MoparWiki
A-Body on MoparWiki
B-Body on MoparWiki
Magnum on the MoparWiki
C-Body on MoparWiki
Aero Mopar on MoparWiki

The Original Magnum GT

Magnum GT II
Bonus! Special Bubble-Top Custom Version Included

  • Original year: 1967
  • Company: MPC
  • Scale: 1/25

Build for super speed…or super show! Single cockpit experimental drag car or bubble-topped 2+2 custom car! All of these go and show parts…and many more: single cockpit bubble top, custom interior with 4 bucket seats & rear headrests, cockpit fairing, custom instrument panel, custom console, Cragar wheels, full 2+2 bubble top, 440 magnum engine with ram tubes.


Click image above to see a close-up

Generation Next

Mopar's Generation Next

 

DallasWinZmax800

 

I just finished reading Rob Wolf's excellent editorial in the most current issue of Mopar Collector's Guide — called "Generation Next", an obvious play on Generation X.

In the editorial, Wolf points out that those of us who experienced the Muscle car Revolution first-hand — were the baby-boomers, and are now between 55-70. The Next'rs are in their mid-to-late thirties and their forties. They saw these cars in the childhood when they were still street driven and at shows. The editorial further points out that there is a crop of these Generation Next people working at dealerships, restoration shops, and racing — but they might be the end of the line, and the last to be able to even work on these cars.

That's very true in large part — but there are exceptions. My son Dallas is 24, has been racing Mopars since he was 16 (when he also obtained his NHRA Class IV License), is the crew Chief for all of the cars we race on a National Circuit — and yesterday won NMCA's 2011 "Crew Member of the Year" award at the Award's Dinner at PRI. The newest car he's ever raced is a 78 Aspen — and the oldest a 63 Plymouth. Steven, the Shop Rat at my shop is 19 and works part-time (25-hours a week) at my shop. He too is a Mopar man, and is capable of doing a engine/transmission swap on a mid-60s Mopar pretty quickly. He works for minimum wage because he is able to work on the old Mopars as much as swinging the mop. He has another part-time job where he pulls engines and transmissions on imports for twice what I pay him — but he rather work on old Mopars with us rather than working full time for his other employer. My youngest daughter is 13, and has been going to races with me since birth. She can tell you the year of any B-body and we're setting up my 10-second Vitamin C (63 Plymouth NSS car) for when she hits 16.

These kids are rare — but they do exist. They can exist in greater numbers if "Generation Next" will take the time to pass the heritage along. It takes a little psychology — and it takes getting to them when they're still young. In the case of Dallas, I took him to every car show and race I ever attended since he could be pushed in a stroller. He learned old Mopars before he could be corrupted but any kids with Imports. Same with motorcycles. I'm a Harley man, and much to his mother's chagrin, I bought him a large touring bike at 15 and took him riding with me until turning him on his own at 18. He learned from me, instead of on a crotch rocket by some punk with his hat on backwards and 300 body piercings. Steven's father is a die-hard Mopar man, and like Dallas, Steven never saw an import parked on the property. My youngest daughter was given her first go-cart at 5, and helped to assemble her 6-speed dune buggy at 8. She started driving on the property at 10.

My generation did a lot to create the Generation Next people, and now it is their duty to pass this along to their kids — and the earlier the better. Take them to car shows and tell them about why these cars are so special. Include them with the washing and working on your cars. Build a project together. I bought Dallas his first car at 15 — a 78 Magnum with a warmed over 360, as he had a special license to drive to and from school. He still has that car. We built his (now — but started as a 12-second) 10-second 72 Demon together when he was 15 — which we still have.

It doesn't have to end with the "Generation Next", if the Generation next will take the time to drag their kids away from the X-Box, and get them into the garage working on cars with them. A father is his son's biggest influence — and he only has a limited time to use that influence. My generation needs to do the same with our grandchildren.

 

 

Mopar Swag

Announcing Old Hippie’s Gift Shop

http://www.oldhippie.com/images/oldhippiegiftshopSP.jpg Point your browser to www.OldHippiesGiftShop.com to scope out some very kool stuff with a Drag Racing, Mopars, and/or Humor Theme.
  • T-shirts (White & Colored; Men, women, kids)
  • Calendars
  • iphones, ipads, & computers
  • Household & office
Just tons of kool swag

You Can Create A Web Site Like MagnumGT.com

There is a new look and feel for the web sites of three cars currently running in Nostalgia Super Stock.

If you've not created a web site for your race team, you might considering doing so. While winning is the number one secret to attracting sponsors, a web site is number two, and a Media Kit is number three.

Many feel like it is beyond their pay grade to create a team web site — but it actually very simple, and requires no programming experience. Word Press is a free application that allows the would-be web master to have a blog on the front page, and a number of information pages linked in the NavBar. It will cost less than $10 a year to register your Domain name (IE: BigRedRam.com), and just a few bucks a month to host it on a web server. There are no other expenses. The secret is to find a web host that will automatically install Word Press for you.

I've created a step-by-step set of detailed instructions to create your own Word Press web site — from registering the name, to selecting the host server, to installing Word Press, to creating your custom "Look & Feel", to posting context, to Search Engine Optimization. If you've ever registered and posted to a forum — you're over-qualified to create your own web site. Click –> Word Press for Dummies

Major Redesign of MagnumGT.com

MagnumGT | Bright Spot in the Dark Disco Ages

zHMMmagnum28



I spent the weekend redesigning this very old (Created the same day as MoparStyle.com was) site to better promote the Dodge Magnum’s and MoparStyle.

The site’s main focus is Magnums — as opposed to all Forgotten B-Bodies. This isn’t meant to be a slight on the other Forgotten Bs — but more to highlight the Magnum model.

I encourage those of the other Forgotten B Models to create sites for them. You can register a domain name very cheaply at Search, Register and Transfer Web Domain Names and More — and Big Kahuna Hosting has hosting that can automatically install Word Press (what I used for MagnumGT), and you don’t need to know a lick of programming to create and maintain a web site. Other Word Press sites I’ve created include:

Nostalgia Super Stock Racing
Texas Whale Racing
Dave Duell Classic | The Best NSS Event in America
www.moparstyle.com
Old Hippie
Dave Schultz
Big Red Ram
Vitamin C Racing | Nostalgia Super Stock Racing
DDS Enterprises, Inc.
Chairman Obama dot com | Spreading around your wealth
Get Out of the UN
Red Neck Humor – a little Red Neck Humor to brighten your day
George D. Schultz

There are Big Kahuna Hosting forums at Big Kahuna Hosting Forums if you would like to ask questions on how to do your own web site. I will only answer questions there — and not in PMs or posts elsewhere.

but back to MagnumGT.com — I’ll be going through the pages over the balance of this week and dress them up, and add some new material. There is another thread in this forum if you have something you would like to add to the site.

Let me know what you think, and check back at least monthly as I intend to stay on top of the site better than I have done in recent years.