My 66 Dart has a 8 3/4 SG with no "towing package". Like always, Tony doesn't do his homework and goes off half cocked, spouting stuff that isn't true.Good article but he is wrong about the rear end option. Those barracudas came factory with the 7-1/4” or optional in 66 was an 8-3/4 rear. I believe it was the towing package. I know this because my 66 barracuda has one.
You know that, I know that, hundreds here know that, Tony doesn't have a clue.You could get an 8.75 in a dart or barracuda in 65.
You could get an 8.75 in a dart or barracuda
Mike- I thought the towing package was just an option package? I could be wrong. Back in 66’ it is to my understanding that the package was upgraded cooling, stronger rear axle and lower ratio.My 66 Dart has a 8 3/4 SG with no "towing package". Like always, Tony doesn't do his homework and goes off half cocked, spouting stuff that isn't true.
Yes- before the 340 even existed- lmao!"Same cam as 340"??
Mike- I thought the towing package was just an option package? I could be wrong. Back in 66’ it is to my understanding that the package was upgraded cooling, stronger rear axle and lower ratio.
The fact it was called “towing” was just a selling point as chrysler if they sold the trailer hitch and or trailer wiring… it was dealer add on. As for UTG. He has a lot of followers but it seems his research is sometimes little to none. Or his research is from the wrong sources. He uses a lot of filler words and sentences I assumed was to increase the length of his videos. His videos are pretty good quality so I will assume he has a crew of people but I don’t know the man. When I see his, “boomer chair.” I click off. lol!
That is the facts I’m sure UT did not see or get the memo on. Maybe he can chime in and comment. Nice detective work tool man!The towing package is another option that includes HD springs and shocks as well as the 8 3/4. I see the trailer tow package wasn't available with the 273-4. Mine has the Rallye Package you see listed on the left and the 8 3/4 rear with 3.23 Sure Grip.
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And how many of his followers believe the misinformation that he says.That is the facts I’m sure UT did not see or get the memo on. Maybe he can chime in and comment. Nice detective work tool man!
Yes I do believe late 65. I got my 8.75 out of a 65 barracuda from the wrecking yard.My understanding is they were “sort of” available in the late 65 model year.
I parted out a late 65 Dart GT (mid June build) with a 4 speed and had an 8.75 3.23 non-SG. The motor was gone but everything else was there in an extremely rusty body
The 7 1/4 Sure Grip's were pretty strong. The opens carriers weren't. An open carrier with 13" bias ply tires weren't a good combo.I thought the video was inaccurate and biased. But I have to make a comment about the 7.25 rear end reliability.
It’s been nearly 58 years since I bought my ‘65 GoGo in September of 1966. I can’t recall the mileage on it, but it was low, probably less than 7,000 miles. I beat the hell out of that car, racing it at the strip and on the street (mostly.) My first set of tires lasted 6,000 miles - and I didn’t rotate them. The stock Auburn clutch ( a three-spring design, as I recall) didn’t last very long, so I replaced it with a clutch from a local rebuilder that was sort of a “poor man’s Sheifer.”) That clutch was much stiffer, and I beat the pedal so hard, that the pedal assembly cracked the firewall at the mount, forcing me to weld it up. Somewhere I picked up a set of SBP 14” wheels with recapped “cheater slicks” that I used for the strip and selected street events. I read every article I could find on tuning and hopping up the 273. The two most helpful were one on jetting the AFB, and setting up the distributor, which I did on the Sun distributor machine in the very well-equipped auto shop at NW Classen. My final mod was a “dump” pipe I welded in just past the “Y” in the exhaust pipe. Running 104 octane DX Super Boron (Sunoco 260 in other areas) I could break into the high 14’s at the local stip in OKC (I believe it was called Sun Valley.) The standard limited-slip never missed a beat until I sold the car the following summer to help pay for my college tuition. It had a little over 16,000 miles on it, and was on its’ third set of tires. The little 7.25 never failed to leave two dark strips on the asphalt with either slicks or street tires. It was also very quick off the line, which won a lot of races on the street.
As for this guy’s. love for Mustangs and Camaros, I owned a ‘65 Mustang 225hp 289 four-speed a few years after that, as well as a ‘67 Camaro with a very built 350. My Dart out-handled and out-stopped both of them, and I thought it was a better car overall, not to mention having a back seat large enough for recreational purposes. It was also quicker and faster than my Mustang, and I beat a bunch of stock 289’s on the street with my Dart. I was looking for a Formula S Barracuda when I bought my car, and didn’t even know a Dart GoGo existed until I saw mine on a used car lot across the street from my high school. I did know about the 235hp 273, and it was love at first sight when I raised the hood and saw that beautiful motor. The Hurst Competition Plus was icing on the cake, as was the yellow paint, gorgeous black interior, and, just like the Formula S, rally stripes. It even had a small RAC tach mounted on the dash.
Just my two cent’s worth.
i refuse to click on any of that idiots videos. hard to believe that clown has any followers.
That guy....I do not watch tony, as so much stuff he says is wrong..
I love the 273, either in two or four barrel mode. I own a 65 GT four speed Dart lifetime until me Arizona car, and a 69 273 Dart. I prefer 273 engines in that every one I ever had also gets better mileage, and will run with a 318 in the same car.
Just my opinion