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Muscle-car Remakes Pump Up Prices

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Old 06-14-2004, 02:56 PM
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Default Muscle-car Remakes Pump Up Prices

Muscle-car remakes pump up prices


By Earle Eldridge / USA TODAY


The Hemi is back. The Pontiac GTO is back. There is talk of bringing back the Dodge Charger. As automakers dip into their nostalgic goody bag to sell new versions of classic muscle cars, sale prices of the original models are skyrocketing.

Though auction sales of 1960s and early-1970s muscle cars have been booming for a couple of years, the recent buzz generated by advertising for new versions has pushed prices for the older ones even higher. Auction prices for restored Detroit muscle cars have grown anywhere from 4% to 50% in the past year, according to Sports Car Market magazine's 2004 price guide.

What haven't climbed are auction prices for classic European sports cars. (Photo gallery: Cars go retro)

Prices for cars such as Porsche 911 Targa, Ferrari 365 GT4 and Mercedes 450 SL have been flat or even fallen.


Hemi-mania hits auctions Particularly prized among the American muscle cars: rare Hemi-powered models, which are hitting new highs.

A 1971 Hemi-powered Plymouth Barracuda convertible — one of only seven built — recently sold for $1.5 million.

The new models "only drive more people into the market for the originals," says Richard Lentinello, editor in chief of Hemmings Muscle Machines magazine.

On the other hand, Detroit automakers are smartly trying to capitalize on the surge in classic car sales that has been going on at least two years, he says. "Those names — GTO, Hemi, Charger — have magic," he says.

Helping push the prices: Those who remember the original muscle cars are at the peak of their earning power, says Thomas duPont, publisher of duPont Registry, a buyers' guide to luxury and exotic cars.

In the 1960s and early 1970s, Detroit automakers pumped out dozens of muscle-car models, some merely souped-up versions of family cars ready for the drag strip.

American muscle cars of that era were often lightweight vehicles with big V-8 engines packed with enough horsepower to burn rubber in an attention-grabbing scene at stoplights.

Dodge and Plymouth 426 Hemi-powered cars such as Plymouth Roadrunner, Dodge Charger and Dodge Challenger were popular on racetracks and weekend drag strips across the nation during that time.

Hemi refers to the hemispherical shape of the engine's combustion chamber. Chrysler says that helps it crank out more power with less weight than comparable V-8s.

In 2002, Chrysler Group introduced a new version of the Hemi V-8 engine on the 2003 Dodge Ram pickup. Recently, Dodge has run entertaining television commercials promoting the new Hemi.

The Hemi now is also available on the 2005 Dodge Magnum RT sports wagon and Chrysler 300C sedan. And Dodge plans to build a Hemi-powered sedan next year likely to be called Charger, according to Automotive News.

All of that has given the older Hemis a shot of recognition. "Everybody knows about Hemi cars right now," says Colin Comer, owner of Classic Auto in Milwaukee.

Beyond that, Comer says, sales of Camaros and Mustangs and Dodge and Plymouth performance cars from the 1960s and early '70s have soared at his store the past two years.

"Some people are dismayed because they are getting priced out of the market," he says.

In March, Fred Smith of Rochester, Mich., paid $77,000 at an RM Auction in Florida for a rare 1966 Plymouth Belvedere I HP2 Hemi.

It's one of the first Hemi-powered muscle cars, so early in production that Plymouth put an HP2 emblem on the fender because Chrysler had not fully developed the Hemi logo.

When new, the 1966 Belvedere had a base price of $2,700, and the Hemi was a $1,105 option. The base price plus Hemi option would equal about $21,600 in today's dollars.

Smith's car had been restored and carefully pampered by its previous owners and has only about 4,000 miles on it.

Smith, a semi-retired CEO of a machine tooling company he founded, has about a dozen classic cars. Through the years, he has owned at least six Hemi-powered cars.

"There was another Hemi that came up during the auction," Smith says. "If I wasn't in the bathroom at the time, I would have bought it, too."
 


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