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MOPAR MARK

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 09 8:20 pm
by Cannonball
HEY MARKIE BOY, YOU KEPT THIS BLOODY SECRET ,
YOUR OLD MATE COLIN MULLAN HAS THE SWEETEST MOPAR IN THE COUNTRY, TALKIN ABOUT HIS MONTEVERDI 375, WHAT A BEAUTIFUL CAR, IT IS FEATURED IN CLASSIC AND SPORTSCAR WHICH I AM SAT HERE READING AS I NURSE A Bananarama! BACK AFTER A HEAVY SQUAT WENT WRONG :oops: :roll:
IT LOOKS A CREDIT TO HIM, AND THATS THE SORT OFF CAR THAT SHOULD BE WORTH OUTLANDISH MONEY NOT THE BLOODY CHRYSLER HEMI CARS, :P :P :P :P :P
THINK ABOUT 25-40 K WOULD NET YOU ONE,

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 09 8:33 pm
by Anonymous
Dunc have you thought about turning caps lock off.


:P :P :P

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 09 8:42 pm
by bananaskin
strokerblue72 wrote:Dunc have you thought about turning caps lock off.


:P :P :P

At least you can read his post ;) :lol:

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 09 8:55 pm
by Cannonball
bananaskin wrote:
strokerblue72 wrote:Dunc have you thought about turning caps lock off.


:P :P :P

At least you can read his post ;) :lol:

:D :D :D :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :P :P

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 09 9:47 pm
by Gringo
Dunc, you in the right club? :lol:
It's not often I hear you say anything good about Mopars... :roll: ;)

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 09 9:59 pm
by Cannonball
gotta stir it up mark,

i love mopars, DOWN THE QUARTER MILE, ;)

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 9:35 am
by mopar_mark
Hi Dunc,
I'm sure I have mentioned about Colins Monte before, I will have to look out for the mag in the newsagent.
Has he put the original motor back in now, as he used to have an old 318 in it for smoking around
He has also got a beautifull Italian riviera boat (All Wood) which he has been restoring.
Always thought it would make a nice photo seeing the Monte towing the boat on route to the Riviera.

Re: MOPAR MARK

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 9:47 am
by db
[quote="Cannonball"]AFTER A HEAVY SQUAT WENT WRONG :oops: :roll:
quote]

Now how am i gonna get rid of that image ... :flush:

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 11:16 am
by AllKiller
:lol: :lol:

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 12:05 pm
by Cannonball
dont take the slash on the squat front lad,s i am in agony sat here no work for me i fear never done my back as bad as this before, n lou aint happy she,s gonna have to put all the work in tonite :D

hey mark yes the pic off the engine is a 318 it baffled me because it mentions the car has an original type 440 fitted apparently they had a 512 in it yrs ago, they used the car as a pool car sort off when they had the brooklyn heavy n london heavy cars, its a good read matey, i missed out on a montiverdi about 3-4 yrs ago 10 clap i was told about it to late or it would have been mine,
woulda built a stout 500 cube mtr six pack n run it at the nats that would have been somethin

any off you guys could you perhaps find pics off a monti and share them with the other members ???????????

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 12:11 pm
by Stu
What year, Dunc?

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 12:20 pm
by Cannonball
what a stunner stu, any yr up to 74,
i love em

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 12:24 pm
by Stu
This one's gorgeous. =P~ :thumbright:

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 12:28 pm
by Stu
"The Monteverdi 375-Series was in abberation in many ways. Although Switzerland stands proudly independent amidst Italy, France, and Germany, it has never developed a strong native motor industry. Observers were thus quite surprised in 1967 when Binningen-based businessman Peter Monteverdi announced that he would not only build a car in Switzerland but that it would take on the world’s premier high-performance makes.
Monteverdi 375
The two-seat 375S was the first effort of Swiss motor magnate Peter Monteverdi.

Monteverdi was a successful, well-established motor trader, having been the Swiss BMW importer and manufacturer of the MBM single-seat racers. Predictably, he took the simplest and most practical route to his new GTs, designing the chassis himself but looking to the Italians for styling help and to Detroit for drivetrains.

The first Monteverdi was a two-seat semi-fastback coupe dubbed the Monteverdi 375S, built on a separate tubular-steel chassis with coil-spring front suspension and De Dion rear. The latter, of course, isn’t the best solution for fast-car handling, as it’s halfway between a live rear axle and a fully independent setup. But Monteverdi, with neither time nor money for his own irs, decided that what was good for Aston Martin was good enough for him.
Monteverdi 375, Rear
The stylish Monteverdi 375 boasted design by Italy
and under-the-hood muscle from Detroit.

Monteverdi also had his own ideas about styling, but wisely enlisted Pietro Frua to refine them. The result looked like a slightly sleeker rendition of two Frua-designed contemporaries, the AC 428 and Maserati’s Mistral (see entries). Bodyshells were supplied by Fissore in Italy.

The Ferrari-esque model designation referred to the SAE gross horsepower of the standard 440-cubic-inch Chrysler V-8 (re-rated by the mid-Seventies to 305 bhp SAE net). For a not-so-few dollars more, you could order a “High Speed” model powered by the famed 426-cid hemi with 450 bhp (SAE gross). Either could be teamed with Chrysler 4-speed manual or 3-speed TorqueFlite automatic transmission. The latter would end up being fitted to most of the relatively few 375s built during the series’ 10-year lifespan.

Soon after announcement, the Monteverdi 375S was joined by a companion 2 + 2 called 375L, followed in 1969 by a two-place cabriolet, logically designated 375C. All rode a 105.5-inch wheelbase. The chassis was stretched to no less than 125 inches between wheel centers for a large, heavy four/five-seat sedan, the 375 Limousine.

Then in the spring of ‘75, the Cabriolet was put on a 98-inch wheelbase and given a restyled front to become the Palm Beach Spider. Chassis and mechanical specifications were otherwise the same for all models, and largely unchanged during the entire production run. Styling was typical late-Sixties Italian supercar: rather angular contours, glassy greenhouse with slim pillars, shapely tails, and broad eggcrate grilles with quad headlamps.
Monteverdi 375, Interior
The interior of the Monteverdi 375S was functional up-front, but the
backseat was "just for show," due to the car's long wheelbase.

As the Chrysler engines were designed to motivate heavyweight New Yorkers and Imperials, they returned somewhat better performance in the lighter Monteverdis. The 440 could see all but the Limousine to over 150 mph, competitive with most Maseratis if not the magnificent Ferrari Daytona. The hemi-engine cars were faster still, as quick as most any Ferrari or Lamborghini save the mid-engine Berlinetta Boxer and Miura.

Though reliable figures are hard to come by, it’s doubtful Monteverdi production exceeded 50 cars in any one year, and was probably much lower in most. Sales were confined mainly to Europe, as there was no U.S. marketing effort, and prices were towering for these largely handbuilt machines.

In retrospect, the lack of U.S. sales seems odd, as the use of Chrysler drivetrains would have made meeting federal emissions regulations a lot easier for Monteverdi than most other exoticar builders. Perhaps the whole thing was nothing more than a hobby for Mr. Monteverdi.

Regardless, by 1977, perhaps a little earlier, the Monteverdi 375-Series was gone and Peter Monteverdi had turned to selling plushed-up, slightly restyled Dodge Aspen sedans, called Sierra, through his handful of European dealers. He later applied a similar “boutique” treatment to the four-wheel-drive Range Rover."

Nicked from "How stuff works" :thumbright: :read2:

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 09 1:54 pm
by db
An orange Monteverdi Hai was my favourite Matchbox car 8-)