![]() | 1 of 12 BBL automatic Cuda convertibles produced in 1971. Documented with the original broadcast sheet. Extensive restoration completed with original and NOS parts. Believed to be 21,026 miles. 440 BBL engine. Dual exhaust with chrome tips. D32 Heavy duty automatic transmission. A34 Super Track Pak with 4.10 gears. Power brakes. FE5 Bright Red with Black convertible top. |
![]() | The multi-carbureted Mopar E-body convertibles of the early 1970s are among the most highly desired muscle cars. Under the scalloped hood is the 440 6-BBL engine with a 385 HP rating. |
![]() | Final-year 1971 Cuda convertibles are well established among enthusiasts as the ultimate muscle car. While the 7 Hemi Cuda convertibles stand at the apex as the most valuable engine-option for 1971, the 17 Cuda convertibles built with the V-code 440 6-BBL engine command great respect. This example made $1.1m. |
![]() | The 1970 Plymouth Barracuda and Cuda were selling well in that year with 50,617 cars sold. Buyers went missing in 1971, when Chrysler sold just 16,159 units. Of those, 108 were Hemi Cuda coupes and 11 were Hemi Cuda convertibles. Only two of the convertibles were sold with 4-speeds. This blue car is one of the them. In 2014 it became the most expensive Mopar ever sold at auction when it made $3.5m. |
![]() | The car was restored in 2000. Once owned by Broom Hilda cartoonist Russell Meyers, it was sold to its next owner for $250,000. It was later confiscated in a drug raid and subsequently sold at auction for $405,000. |
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1953 Ferrari 625 Targa Florio










