My daughter became the 3rd owner of an all matching numbers, fully documented 69 Charger R/T in Nov15. The car was produced in Dec69 and shipped to Crenshaw Dodge (now defunct) in LA. It was purchased by the original owner (a long time friend) in Aug69. He remembers the salesman trying to interest him in a car from a group of 69 Charger R/Ts with discounted prices. However, none of them had A/C (a requirement) as they were all hemi engines. The salesman even offered to add A/C to one of the hemi R/Ts. He ended up with a factory A/C 440.
He was (and still is) an avid camper and took the R/T on off road camping trips. I've asked him if he had any pictures of these trips. He has plenty but never thought to include the R/T in any of them. It was garaged at his Riverside CA home when not on the road.
In early 2010, my friend decided he was ready to sell the Charger. Since he knew I was into mopars he asked me to help sell it. My next door neighbor, a local fire chief, had always been interested in my mopar resto projects and been looking for a classic car himself. So I brought them together and my neighbor became the 2nd owner of the Charger in Aug2010. The Charger hadn't been run for a couple years, so I trailered it. Here are some pix of loading and arrival to it's new home.
My neighbor and I quickly set about getting the Charger ready to run. We decided to replace the gas tank with a new repro, clean out the gas lines, plugs, oil, et al. I mounted the orig carb on my 70RR 383 and it checked out fine. So we got it running and my neighbor enjoyed it.
The only rust on the car was the trunk floor (of course), and minor issues behind the rear window near the moldings. The front valance was pretty beat up from the camping trips, along with the usual dings. He decided to have the rear window shelf area, valance, and dings repaired, with a repaint. I went with him to the body shop to discuss the work. He decided not to have the engine bay repainted. While this work was going on, he managed to find some NOS green vinyl material to replace the orig vinyl top. This all occurred during 2012. Later my neighbor retired, and moved to northern California.
On 30Oct15 I received an email from him, giving me first shot at the Charger as he was going to sell it. My daughter wanted it, so we made the deal and had it shipped to Temecula CA. We picked it up on 22Nov15 and drove it to my place for inspection. We stopped enroute and took picture of Charger and new owner.
After checking it out, fixing a few nits, daughter begins driving it regularly. We go to car shows together and such.
Nov16: alternator fails. Original alternator had been replaced in 1992 with functional but incorrect style (squareback). We have the paperwork for this and all maintenance/repairs done on the car from both owners. Since the Charger build date was the 50th week of 1968, began searching for cases approx 2 months before. I found a pair of cases dated 44th week of 1968 with correct PN 2875724. Rebuilt the alternator using an NOS stator and internals from a remanufactured unit, along with a correct dual pulley.
Aug 17: heater core failed with the typical soaking of the passenger carpet. Daughter and I set about to remove the original AC/heater core box. Unfortunately, the copper tube extension from the box to the firewall would not separate from the tubes internal to the box. The copper extension tube assembly enters the box on the passenger front, upper portion of the box, attaching with 4 exterior screws. The tube mates with internal tubes from the heater core/water valve and seals with o-rings between the tubes. We could not separate the tubes, they were basically fused together, likely from age. The box was damaged in our attempt to remove the extension tube, which was eventually cut so the box could be removed.
Fortunately, I had kept a complete 70B body AC/heater box core as a backup for a 70RR hardtop I once owned which had A/C. We decided to rebuild that and install in Charger as they are virtually identical.
It was at about this point that my daughter decided she wanted to pull the engine and repaint the engine bay. Given that the car had been repainted, with a new vinyl top, the original engine/bay was a bit of an eyesore, made more so by etching damage from battery acid. Original owner said this occurred while parked at an airport as someone attempted to steal the car. The engine had 50yrs of grime which, along with a few oil and trans leaks, made for puddles under the car when parked. So she decided to have the engine rebuilt while removed.
PS...should mention the engine had never been out of the car.
Sep17: Prior to removal fabricated a front dolly using some pieces left over from previous restos, seen in pic2 and pic4. The receiver attachment (pic4) is used so I can move the Charger around using my Kubota. Removed the engine/trans as unit from bottom using dolly I had fabbed for previous restos along with my 2 post 7K lift. Separated trans and mounted engine on custom pallet so could use my Kubota to lift into pickup bed, to then deliver to engine rebuilder.
Oct17: Delivered engine to machine shop, they estimated 8 weeks. In the meantime began removing engine bay components to restore and prep bay for paint. Some pix of the orig engine bay after engine removal. Most of this is vintage 1969.
The heater control valve was seized, to the point where the dash temperature cable had broken from trying to force the seized valve. We sent the valve to Jim Tucker (heatercontrolvalve.com) for resto.
We set about rebuilding the 70 AC/htr box. Removed the heater core, along with the bypass valve and checked for leaks. Did a pressure test and it leaked from the core, so we ordered a commonly advertised aftermarket unit. It was a nice piece and physically fit, however the tubes did not line up properly with the bypass valve and the copper fitting to the firewall.
We returned the aftermarket unit and shipped the OE core/bypass to Glen-ray. They discovered the bypass valve was also leaking. This presented a problem because they indicated there was really no one around rebuilding the bypass valves. They did supply a contact but he said he stopped rebuilding them several years back. After a few weeks of interweb research, located an A/C company in Texas who was selling what looked to be an identical, new bypass valve. After comparing dimensions with them, I had it shipped directly to Glen-ray so they could test the whole unit. They said it was identical to the OE piece (and asked for the source so they could use them in the future).
When the core arrived, we began the box rebuild using one of the resto kits which supplies weatherstrip and such. The evaporator section was cleaned and pressure tested. The evaporator drain tray was a bit eroded from the years so that was cleaned and coated with POR15.
Next up was a non-working 3 speed wiper motor. Since the Charger had rarely been out in the rain over the past 20yrs, no one knew when it broke. Took it apart and spotted nothing obvious. Choices now were to send it to someone for full resto or DIY. Being a retired electronics engr and infamous DIYer, I selected DIY. Ran the service manual troubleshooting checks, nada. Everything looked good but would not run.
Ordered a "resto" kit from Kim (passion4mopars.com) which allowed me to <carefully> replace all the wire/winding insulation with new stuff. Put it back together and no run. Swapped the armature with one from a working 3 speed motor. Still no run. Replaced the 4 stator windings and, presto, now working! Weird problem with one of the windings that didn't show up during testing. Finished off with a spray paint process to simulate the yellow zinc barrel appearance.
The brakes had been one of the 'nits', they worked ok but needed a pump or two when stopping. Bench tested the orig MC and it seemed to check OK. Put it back on, same issue. Bought the Cardone reman booster (54-73501). Although the bolt patterns line up OK (both front and rear), the Cardone oval case opening in the front (pic1) was different than the OE round opening (pic2) and wouldn't work with the OE hub filter (pic3). So decided to take the OE booster apart, clean, and check the diaphragm, etc., then reuse with similar paint treatment as wiper motor barrel. Booster bench test was good, so bought an aftermarket MC. That solved the brake problem. The aftermarket MC is a different style than the OE unit, but we'll leave it for now. At some point the daughter may have someone rebuild the OE MC to regain the stock appearance.
With the engine bay components finished, it was time to tackle the engine bay itself. As previously noted, the damage from the battery acid spill needed special attention. Using a Simple Green solution, we cleaned, cleaned some more, cleaned even more, to remove the nearly 50yrs of memories from the engine bay and underside of the hood.
It's noteworthy that, at this point, I realized how MASSIVE the hood is on these Chargers. Decided to leave the hood in place and carefully tape the already painted top/sides of the hood and fenders.
For the acid damaged area, both on the fender and hood, and surface rust areas I used some rustoleum self etching primer.
We had the paperwork from the repaint done by the previous owner. There was no paint code/type listed, so we contacted the body shop. Unfortunately they had changed management and the records for this work were not available. There was no way to know if they used the OE formula or even what brand was used. So it was paint match time.
I used a side marker light housing as the sample and a local paint shop who specialized in classic cars matched it for me, a single stage urethane. It turned out really well in the end, but much anxiety was involved.
Suspension. As the K member, steering box, and LCAs were sitting on the engine dolly it was time to clean and inspect everything. Records from the 2nd owner indicated the front suspension was "rebuilt" in 2015. There were polyurethane bushings on the stabilizer links and new grease cups on the tie rod ends, otherwise it didn't appear to me that anything else was done.
This was confirmed when I began to disassemble the front suspension. The left side strut rod front threads were badly damaged (camping trip encounter?), to the point where it was impossible to remove the nut. So I had to cut the rod to remove it. So now I needed a strut rod. Why not buy some news ones?...so we ordered some HD ones from Mancini. They arrived and did not fit. They are longer than OE and the shoulder at the LCA end is too wide to fit into the LCA slot (pic1). Fortunately the parts bin came through again as I had a couple extra B body strut rods laying about. The bushings on neither strut rod had been changed, ever.
When I began removing the LCAs, the left side pivot shaft nut and pivot shaft spun in the LCA housing, suggesting the bushing was toast. At this point we decided to order Moog parts (my preferred) to do a proper front suspension rebuild. Cleaned up and did my simulated cosmoline paint job on the LCAs.
Front grille was removed as part of the engine extraction. Took the opportunity to disassemble, clean, paint some of the internal metal supports. Then reassemble using a repro vacuum harness and front lights electrical harness.
In pic1 below note the blue wires running adjacent to the light harness. Interesting story about these. The original owner was on a return trip at night from Disneyland in late 70s with his date and suddenly lost the headlights. He pulled over and found the front light harness melted a bit, apparently a short condition. He had the blue wires in the trunk, so used them to bypass the headlight harness. They remained on duty until I replaced them with the repro harness.
As I've done with all my mopars, I took this opportunity to do the ISO relay upgrade for the headlights, essentially channeling power directly from the battery to the headlight circuit via high power relay controlled by the OE dash headlight switch. This avoids running headlight current through the firewall 50yr old bulkhead connector.
Engine finished in 3rd week of Dec17. Pic1 shows engine as received from shop. They had dyno'd the engine for break-in. You probably noticed the valve covers are switched. Seems a bit odd from a mopar racer/rebuilder.?. Also note the Firecore RTR (Ready to Run) dizzy (story about this in a later episode). Mate it with 727, back on K member/dolly, to reinstall in Charger.