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.
If you think about what American automobile culture was all about in the 1960s, it was obviously the muscle car. People wanted hulking, powerful engines that they could put under the hoods of their ...
Once Chrysler took advantage of the 1967 Dart's wider engine bay by assembling the Dart GT 383 in midyear, it was only a quick evolutionary step to the 440-cubic-inch Magnum model. Since the 383 and ...
Like most things related to the muscle car era, the Plymouth 440 Super Commando big-block V8 engine roared to life in the late 1960s and faded away in the early 1970s. Chrysler produced standard ...
Chrysler's 440 is at least 15ci smaller than its GM and Ford rivals--but it still puts puts up adarn good fight. On Westech Performance's dyno, our 440 made more torque than any other engine in Car ...
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