Superbird

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by NapalmHeart, Aug 24, 2007.

  1. NapalmHeart

    NapalmHeart Guest

    Hi,

    Is there a resident expert on the wing cars, specifically the Superbird? I
    recently had a coworker claim that all Superbirds were painted Petty blue.
    I know this isn't correct and would like to find a source for a listing of
    Superbird factory colors.

    Thanks,

    Ken
     
    NapalmHeart, Aug 24, 2007
    #1
  2. NapalmHeart

    Mike Y Guest

    I've seen a blue one, but I didn't think it was an original.

    I can tell you for a fact that they were available in Orange and White.
    I've been
    in a white one still on the dealer showroom, and I've been in an Orange one
    that was about a year old.
     
    Mike Y, Aug 24, 2007
    #2
  3. NapalmHeart

    aarcuda69062 Guest

    Chris Bailey, but I've never seen him post to usenet.
    http://aerowarriors.com/sss.html#Percentage
     
    aarcuda69062, Aug 24, 2007
    #3
  4. NapalmHeart

    Joe Guest

    Surely you won't need an expert to prove that wrong. That's just silly.
     
    Joe, Aug 24, 2007
    #4
  5. NapalmHeart

    QX Guest

    I don't see it listed, but I could swear a GI buddy I met while
    stationed at Maxwell AFB AL had one painted "Plum Crazy", sort of a
    medium purple. That would have been somewhere between 1969-1970.
    But then it was a long time ago.
     
    QX, Aug 24, 2007
    #5
  6. NapalmHeart

    Steve Guest

    Well, "Petty Blue" wasn't officially a mopar color anyway, so NONE of
    them left the factory that color :)

    But seriously, they were available in the same colors as all the other
    Mopar B-bodies of the day. I don't know if they actually built examples
    in ALL the colors (bronze? Doubtful.) but they certainly built them in
    B5 blue (correctly called "Medium Blue Fire Metallic," but often called
    "Petty" blue. However its really darker than Petty's trademark blue,
    which is closer to Chrysler B3 "Corporation" Blue) and many other colors
    as well. Since they were outrageous cars, they often got some of the
    "High Impact" muscle car colors like "Tor Red," "Vitamin C Orange,"
    "Lemon Twist," and "Limelight."

    For more on them, try http://wwnboa.org/
     
    Steve, Aug 24, 2007
    #6
  7. NapalmHeart

    hellshighway Guest

    Well gee, then by definition he's _NOT_ a 'resident expert' now is
    he??
     
    hellshighway, Aug 25, 2007
    #7
  8. NapalmHeart

    aarcuda69062 Guest

    The question was; "Is there a resident expert on the wing cars,
    specifically the Superbird"
    Nowhere was it specified that usenet involvement was a criteria
    or the sole criteria or even a partial criteria.

    And, well gee, just because -I- have never seen him post to
    usenet doesn't mean that he doesn't, it just means that -I-
    haven't seen it.
     
    aarcuda69062, Aug 25, 2007
    #8
  9. NapalmHeart

    Joe Pfeiffer Guest

    In context, "resident" would mean "usenet regular" to any reasonable
    person reading the post.
     
    Joe Pfeiffer, Aug 25, 2007
    #9
  10. NapalmHeart

    Larry Guest

    A local had a 1969 Charger Daytona in that color.

    Larry

    : On Thu, 23 Aug 2007 19:54:53 -0500, aarcuda69062
    : >
    : >http://aerowarriors.com/sss.html#Percentage
    :
    : I don't see it listed, but I could swear a GI buddy I met while
    : stationed at Maxwell AFB AL had one painted "Plum Crazy", sort of a
    : medium purple. That would have been somewhere between 1969-1970.
    : But then it was a long time ago.
     
    Larry, Aug 26, 2007
    #10
  11. NapalmHeart

    NapalmHeart Guest

    Thanks to all who replied. I've got the information that I need. I think
    it's really something that a limited production car that dealers had trouble
    selling almost 40 years ago can generate the response I got here and in the
    other NG I posted in. Are you listening Mother Mopar?

    Ken
     
    NapalmHeart, Aug 26, 2007
    #11
  12. NapalmHeart

    Bill Putney Guest

    What's the lesson for Mother Mopar? I thought then that they looked
    silly. I still think they look silly. :)

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Aug 26, 2007
    #12
  13. NapalmHeart

    Steve Guest


    And more importantly to Ma Mopar, they were a money losing proposition :-(
     
    Steve, Aug 27, 2007
    #13
  14. NapalmHeart

    hellshighway Guest

    Not really, it all depends on how you look at it.
    I believe any car that was built solely for the purpose of
    homologation lost money
    on the showroom floor due to the small number made.
    But if you look at it from the perspective that by having the car able
    to compete and
    most importantly WIN it ended up bringing more people into the
    showroom who then
    bought a Charger or even a Valiant instead. Then it was not a losing
    proposition.
    "Win on Sunday Sell on Monday" as the adage goes.

    I've actually heard that Ford lost money on every Escort that was
    produced but
    made it up on the Tauruses and Lincolns when people come in looking
    and
    ended up being upsold to a better car with a healthier padded sticker.
     
    hellshighway, Aug 28, 2007
    #14
  15. NapalmHeart

    Sideshow Bob Guest

    Really. With the exception of the batwing and the cow catcher snout, the
    Superbird was essentially a Plymouth Satellite GTX and the Daytona a Dodge
    Charger R/T. I don't see how they were any more money losers that the models
    they were derived from.
     
    Sideshow Bob, Aug 28, 2007
    #15
  16. NapalmHeart

    NapalmHeart Guest

    Unfortunately true.
     
    NapalmHeart, Aug 28, 2007
    #16
  17. NapalmHeart

    Steve Guest

    Well, the "win on Sunday, sell on Monday" theory has been around a long
    time and may be true. But then its kinda hard to prove. What isn't hard
    to prove is that Superbirds sat unsold for months and even years, and
    were often sold at bargain prices or with their noses and wings bobbed
    to look like regular Roadrunners (which were a huge money MAKER, by the
    way).

    If the Superbird has any "lesson" for a manufacturer its that from time
    to time it is necessary to create a performance vehicle that generates a
    heritage and collector interest, even if it isn't a huge market success.
    Right now, Mopar has had a good run with the Viper, the Prowler is
    already collectible, and odds are that the PT cruiser will have a
    collector niche (although so many were built that it will be more like
    collecting a Mustang or Roadrunner than a Superbird or Prowler). But
    only the Viper has a race heritage. Of the American 3, I would say that
    GM has most completely forgotten that lesson. Who wants to collect a
    front-drive Malibu? The Corvette is the only collectible performance
    car they've built in a long, long time, although they had a chance with
    the GTO and blew it with lame styling.
     
    Steve, Aug 28, 2007
    #17
  18. NapalmHeart

    Steve Guest

    Sideshow Bob wrote:


    The Roadrunner (technically the Superbird was based on the Roadrunner,
    not the GTX) was a HUGE sales success. They couldn't build them fast
    enough, and they were cheap to build (and buy, and maintain), whereas
    the 'Birds didn't sell and a fender-bender would set you back the price
    of a new nose cone- which wasn't exactly sitting on most warehouse
    shelves. That's the difference. Same for the Charger vs the Daytona.
    And the Daytona was even more expensive to build because of the
    extensive, basically hand re-work of the Charger rear window.
     
    Steve, Aug 28, 2007
    #18
  19. NapalmHeart

    C-BODY Guest

    "Petty Blue" was a specific color of blue whose formula was locked in
    Petty Enterprises safe. It was NOT used on any production Chrysler
    product of that era--period. ONLY on Petty Enterprises race cars.

    As for factory-available colors, I believe that all factory B-body
    colors were available on the Superbirds. Only thing was that they ALL
    had black vinyl roofs, as I recall. You can go to the Winged Warriors
    website for possible verification of that fact and the color issue too.

    The Superbird was based on the normal Plymouth B-body platform, with the
    wing items (AND related inner supports under the quarter panels) and the
    front snout were basically bolt-on items. The front fenders were
    modified from production stock, though, other than the top "vents" on
    them (really for tire clearance with the lowered ride height they ran on
    the track).

    One thing you could NOT get on a Superbird was factory a/c. IF you see
    "a Superbird" with factory a/c option code on the data plate, it's not a
    real one. Some people did put add-on a/c on the 'Birds and Daytonas,
    but they didn't come from the factory (or the conversion company that
    did the Daytonas--Superbirds were done "in house") that way. Something
    about not enough air flow through the small front grille or something
    like that?

    If you want to see a full gamut of Superbirds, attending the Mopar
    Nationals (the 2nd weekend in August, every year) will "get you there".
    Factory correct, not over-restored as we might like to see them, but
    completely factory-correct in all respects for the Concours level
    judging they do there.

    The Winged Warriors usually had a yearly meet too, I believe.

    I have seen the Build Instructions for the Superbirds. I was also
    involved in a complete "bare body to completion" restoration of a
    friend's Superbird in 1999-2001. He took it to Mopar Nats (at IRP that
    year) and it won First Place in its class, getting a victory lap down
    the race track and back. THAT WAS NEAT!

    I always liked the Daytonas better, but the 'Birds were a "cleaner
    build". The nosecone and such was hung inside the car as it went
    through the paint booth, so it got the same paint as the rest of the
    car.

    The reason that all Superbirds had vinyl roofs was to cover up the
    additional body work for the rear window "plug" for the different shape
    it has compared to stock B-body Plymouths. Some of that body work was
    pretty rough, as I recall when the cars were still new and running
    around like regular cars.

    So, take one B-body Plymough 2-door hardtop, add one aerodynamic
    nosecone to the front, some modified front fenders, the wing and inner
    supports to the rear quarter panels and you haven't really raised the
    build labor for the vehicle over what it would be otherwise, nor
    probably the cost. Where any additional cost might have come in would
    be in the additional items related to the rear window (different glass
    plus the other items to fit it to the car). They probably had to have a
    separate sub-assembly line to make that happen. A few unique vinyl top
    mouldings and probably a little more vinyl top fabric would round things
    out for additional costs and such.

    Many people were somewhat put-off by the additional length of the front
    end. In the "gas crunch" days, some unsold Superbirds had normal front
    ends put on them by dealers just to move the cars off the lots. They
    were definitely a novelty item . . . with big motors that people
    suspected would guzzle fuel more than they wanted them too back then.

    In reality, the Chrysler Engineering papers for the cars noted they had
    the lowest coefficient of drag of any car built for regular production
    at that time, and rival many vehicles of modern times too. The "rub"
    came with the 440 and 426 HEMI motors and performance rear axle ratios,
    plus basic weight that approached 4000lbs.

    There is an excellent book on the Winged Cars, which has been out for
    several years. It talks about the testing they did at the proving
    grounds' oval track. How that a regular NASCAR car on that body had a
    shockwave that nearly blew down the small timing shack, but with the
    nosecone and wings, the 'Birds were both stable, much faster (over
    200mph), drove with much less "drama", and blasted past the timing shack
    with little more than a breeze. All of that unusual body work "worked"
    and worked well.

    As for the Daytonas, they were assembled at the assembly plant as a
    normal car, but with special instructions to be shipped to the
    contractor to do the conversion to a Daytona. Therefore, for those cars
    to be restored accurately, they should have about three layers of
    primer, overspray, and undercoating on the undercarriage. The paint on
    the nosecone would usually be acrylic lacquer rather than acrylic enamel
    as was on the rest of the car (from the factory). If those extra
    details are not there (reproduced accurately), it's a points deduction
    in the judging.

    I suspect that if anybody lost money on Superbirds, it was the dealer
    who had one on the lot (after the feeding frenzy had diminshed). The
    factory had their costs covered in the price of the car, so they didn't
    lose anything. With the additional items, they might not have made as
    much on the Superbird as a normal B-body Plymouth, but they should have
    still covered their costs to make it happen.

    I suspect the costs of research and development of the aerodynamic
    package would have been costed-out to the NASCAR racing budget as that's
    what drove that whole situation back then.

    So, check out the Winged Warriors website, the Wing Car Book, and such.

    Now, what we need to do is to get the youngsters who add those "wings"
    on the back of their imports to stop calling the result "wing
    cars"!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Enjoy!

    C-BODY
     
    C-BODY, Aug 30, 2007
    #19
  20. NapalmHeart

    Greg Guest

    I remember seeing an interview with Richard Petty, where he mentions that
    the original "Petty Blue" was actually house paint, that they used to paint
    the cars.

    ---Greg---
     
    Greg, Sep 2, 2007
    #20
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