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WHY DIDINT ENGINEERS MAKE THE 68 A FASTBACK TO BEGIN WITH ??

Started by daytonalo, November 24, 2007, 12:38:40 AM

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daytonalo

As important as winning was back in the day , why didn't they just make it a fastback to begin with ? Do you think the car would have not sold as a fastback ??

A383Wing

Doubt it. The '67 did not sell because all the people in '66 & '67 complained that the rear seat passengers were getting sun-baked. Also, head room was at a minimum.....seats were uncomfortable. The public was tired of the fastback design....most thought it was ugly.

Bryan  (got 2 '66's and the funny looking purple pointy nosed Charger)

daytonalo

The sun thing maybe , but there is no headroom diiff from stck charger and Daytona .

A383Wing

Quote from: daytonalo on November 24, 2007, 12:49:13 AM
.......but there is no headroom diiff from stck charger and Daytona .

Go find a '66 or '67 and you sit in the rear seat for 15 minutes.....you will find they are uncomfortable as hell! You may be correct about the headroom, but the seats are basically sitting on the floor. I can sit in the Daytona's rear seat all day, not the first gen's ones.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled topic...........maybe someone should do a "photoshop" of a '68 - '70 with a first generstion roofline.....  :scratchchin:

Bryan 

Ghoste

As important as winning was, selling cars was more important and Chrysler styling was typically behind the rest of Detroit just a little bit all through the 60's.  The fastback Charger came out at a time when the fad was passing, the wide sail panel/ C pillar look of the 68 Charger had been done by General Motors two years earlier and their leap into the pony car market happened waay too late.
Doing the 68 as a fastback would have been great in hindsight from a stock car racing perspective but I think from a stying standpoint, they were just trying to catch a styling wave.  Luckily, they caught a good one.

daytonalo

I think your missing my point . After they realised that the recessed window is a a problem in the wind tunnel , if they would have known they would have had to out source the car and basically redesign the whole rear of car , they would have just made it without recessed window .


Larry

hemigeno

I would guess there were two reasons why:

#1 (and probably most important answer to your question) was that the cars were not designed by Engineers alone - the Styling department had as much say in how the car looked as anyone.  Aerodynamic function would have ranked really low in the mind of most styling guys, they worried about how it looked - and they apparently wanted to make a change from the fastback look of the GenI Chargers for whatever reason.  Read up on the history of the Daytona's development and you'll find that it took high-ranking Chrysler officers (Bob Rodger among them) to keep the Styling department from absolutely ruining the Daytona.  Styling hated it.  They did get to play around some with the Superbird - maybe that's why it wasn't quite as fast/aerodynamic as the Daytona?? 

#2 would probably be the rear visibility issue.  Look out the back window of an aero car and there is no way you'll see much of a car parked directly behind you while parallel parking.  They'd have had to use an all-glass rear plug to keep visibility the same as a regular Charger's, and it could be that they were trying to solve a rear passenger comfort issue as Brian alluded to.

I highly suspect that the angle of the rear glass was established first for driver visibility reasons, and the C-pillar sail panels were added by the styling department to set the car apart from the (other) boxier models.  The side profile is one of the best ever created (yeah, I'm biased I know).  Adding a plug to create a semi-fastback like the C500/Daytona was an unintended benefit of having the C-pillar sail panels in the first place.  How would they have made an aero plug for the Coronet body style?  Ugh... :eek2:

Good question, but the fault does not lie with the Engineers of the day.  When it came to the Aero program they only capitalized on what the rest of Chrysler gave them to work with.

:Twocents:

Troy

Quote from: daytonalo on November 24, 2007, 08:04:41 AM
I think your missing my point . After they realised that the recessed window is a a problem in the wind tunnel , if they would have known they would have had to out source the car and basically redesign the whole rear of car , they would have just made it without recessed window .


Larry
I disagree. Racing was a way to advertise and showcase the brand but the primary purpose of a car company is to sell cars. The marketing department had to predict what would sell and what was the best way to promote the brand. Not everyone cared about speedway racing and I would guess that the drag cars had as much advertising impact as NASCAR and they didn't need the aerodynamic packages. People bought cars based on style/price/utility just like today. Chrysler sold a heck of a lot more Coronets, Satellites, and Belvederes than Chargers simply because more car buyers had family needs and a budget. As for looks, the 68 Charger was a sales success in part because they went away from the fastback style. Meaning no offense to the 500 owners here but look at the reaction to the cars even now. It's either "why is there a funny window and a strange grill that Charger?" or "where's the wing and nose?". They just aren't as popular to the average person. I'd say the limited production does more to boost their value over a comparable R/T than the looks. If the Chrysler bean counters knew this in 68-69 there's no way they'd take that kind of hit to the bottom line. Remember also that when the Daytonas came out it was difficult to sell even the limited number that they had - primarily because of how they looked and the cost but probably due to the size as well. They only had to make enough to get it homologated and if they were sales flops then the net financial effect would be small. Chargers were already premium priced vehicles and it's a lot easier to add cost to the low production, ultra-high end models than to spread it across an entire line. Even today, car companies *can* make more fuel efficient cars but the additional $300-400 price increase would cost them too many sales. That translates to about $25-30 in the late '60s so there was a slim margin between being competitive on the show room floor and pricing cars right out of the market.

I'm making assumptions here... Chrysler chose the best production car for racing. They didn't design a race car and then try to make it streetable. I don't have the rules memorized but I'm sure there were size/weight/body style requirements so that would have pared the options down. If this were the case, then the Charger was already the best of the bunch on the track. Only *after* the car was chosen did the race engineers get to test and tweak it. Therefore, the 68 Charger had to exist first for them to realize that the back window was a problem on the super speedways.

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

Troy

Dangit, I spent all that time writing that mess and Gene beat me by 45 seconds (with better information).

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

hemigeno

Another point to consider...

It was only during the wind tunnel testing for the Daytona program that they discovered a Semi-fastback profile was actually better than a full-fastback profile.  The 66-67 cars had a huge problem with being too aero-slick on the back end, making the cars way too loose.  If the rear lip spoiler hadn't been allowed, there's no way David Pearson would have won the Championship in '66.  Cotton Owens had said that the '66 cars were so light on the back end (due to no downforce) that if they hit a decent sized bump on the straightways the back tires would break loose and spin.  They had a really difficult time negotiating the corners.

Could be that the Engineers did not realize that going to the other extreme like the notchback would actually create lift putting them back in the same (too-loose) boat.  In other words, even if the Engineers could have overruled the Styling department, would they have foreseen the aero liability present with the notchback?  The '68 Charger was Chrysler's first notchback so they probably didn't have any practical experience with the high-speed characteristics of the car.  It sure wouldn't have made much different at street/highway speeds.

It wasn't too long after the '68 Charger hit the track that they started envisioning ways to make it better.  The Charger500 was developed LONG before the '69 model year, and they made such a big deal about it from a publicity standpoint that Ford/Mercury had ample opportunity to prepare their own Aero answer in the Talladegas and Cyclones Spoilers.

:shruggy:

hemigeno

Quote from: Troy on November 24, 2007, 10:50:21 AM
Dangit, I spent all that time writing that mess and Gene beat me by 45 seconds (with better information).

Troy


:D

Good points all around though... :2thumbs:

learical1

Quote from: Ghoste on November 24, 2007, 01:14:41 AM
As important as winning was, selling cars was more important and Chrysler styling was typically behind the rest of Detroit just a little bit all through the 60's.  The fastback Charger came out at a time when the fad was passing, the wide sail panel/ C pillar look of the 68 Charger had been done by General Motors two years earlier and their leap into the pony car market happened waay too late.
Doing the 68 as a fastback would have been great in hindsight from a stock car racing perspective but I think from a stying standpoint, they were just trying to catch a styling wave.  Luckily, they caught a good one.

I don't know about this.  68-69 Torinos and Cyclones were available as a true fastback or a notchback, and I believe they sold fairly well as the fastback.  :scratchchin:  Now the flatback 71-73 mustang is a whole 'nuther matter.  :hah:
Bruce

Ghoste

A very good point.  Perhaps the overall styling of the 66-67 Chrysler line was a little behind.  There are a LOT of Fords around where I live and I would undoubtedly have to agree that the fastbacks hold a numbers edge over the formal roof cars.  I wonder, and purely speculation 40 years out here, if the limited choices for Ford fans in 68-69 would have much to do with it?  If you weren't a Mustang fan, the intermediate choice was pretty limited and the fastback looks a lot more aggresive than the other.
Hmm, good point Learical, I think I would have to concede to you on that one.

69_500

I was going to say that the actual first of the fast back 2 gen Chargers was designed well before the rest of the 69 model. But with the popularity of the 68 Charger in sales terms, there was absolutely no reason to change the rear window for the rest of the production cars. When you think back look at the sheer increase in sales numbers from a 67 to a 68 Charger. I think its something along the lines of 10 times as many units sold. If its selling that good, no reason at all to make drastic changes to the back end of the car.

pettybird

No one's mentioned the stupid short trunk lid.  None of you have loaded anything into the trunk?

Aero426

Styling controlled the design portion of things.   There was little to no input from the circuit racing side towards what they put on the street for '68.

wingfan

The sail panels with recessed back glass just look better than with flush glass.  A similar design was used on the 1966-67 GTO.  Styling sells cars.  I doubt that "Win on Sunday, sell on Monday" ever sold that many.  Just my $.02

Magnumcharger

Quote from: wingfan on November 24, 2007, 03:57:28 PM
The sail panels with recessed back glass just look better than with flush glass.  A similar design was used on the 1966-67 GTO. 

Also used on all 66-67 two door hardtop 'A' body Chevrolet ,Oldsmobile and Buicks.
1968 Plymouth Barracuda Formula S 340 convertible
1968 Dodge Charger R/T 426 Hemi 4 speed
1968 Plymouth Barracuda S/S clone 426 Hemi auto
1969 Dodge Deora pickup clone 318 auto
1971 Dodge Charger R/T 440 auto
1972 Dodge C600 318 4 speed ramp truck
1972 Dodge C800 413 5 speed
1979 Chrysler 300 T-top 360 auto
2001 Dodge RAM Sport Offroad 360 auto
2010 Dodge Challenger R/T 6 speed
2014 RAM Laramie 5.7 Hemi 8 speed

Ghoste

Quote from: pettybird on November 24, 2007, 01:52:16 PM
No one's mentioned the stupid short trunk lid.  None of you have loaded anything into the trunk?

That applies somewhat to the 1st gens as well.  We have the fold down rear seats and the folding trunk divider to give us a huge storage area back there but the actual trunk opening is more like a slot.  Better than the 500 and Daytona but not as large an openeing as something like a 69 GTX.
The original Chargers were great for the drive-in though.  :D

69_500

The hole on a Daytona is horrible for putting anything of size in. The 500 is a little better, you can swing stuff in, towards the sides but those wing braces stop that idea on a Daytona. That and you lose floor space for a second jack.

FJMG

The tunnel port entry to the trunk on the aero cars is probably why some owners put plywood on the roof and wing, NOT to carry plywood but to create a platform to carry the luggage that wouldn't fit in the trunk! a flip-down rear seat would have made it real easy to remove the spare tire wing nut!

daytonalo

Wonder if anyone ever carried a Latter on a wing car ??? I'm sure it has been done !

Troy

Quote from: daytonalo on November 24, 2007, 08:05:29 PM
Wonder if anyone ever carried a Latter on a wing car ??? I'm sure it has been done !
I thought I'd seen one like that. Ok, I found the story:
"I also added a trailer hitch and used it for hauling-including 28' 10" steel bar-joists on the roof and wing!"
http://wwnboa.org/specfeatbh.htm

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

Red Ram

Quote from: pettybird on November 24, 2007, 01:52:16 PM
No one's mentioned the stupid short trunk lid.  None of you have loaded anything into the trunk?

Have you seen the trunk opening on a 87 Monte Aerocoupe?      :o
"In search of truth...some pointy boots and a few snack-crackers"

Magnumcharger

Those were very cool cars. That and the Pontiac 2+2.
Built for the exact same reason as all of the 60's aerocars.
1968 Plymouth Barracuda Formula S 340 convertible
1968 Dodge Charger R/T 426 Hemi 4 speed
1968 Plymouth Barracuda S/S clone 426 Hemi auto
1969 Dodge Deora pickup clone 318 auto
1971 Dodge Charger R/T 440 auto
1972 Dodge C600 318 4 speed ramp truck
1972 Dodge C800 413 5 speed
1979 Chrysler 300 T-top 360 auto
2001 Dodge RAM Sport Offroad 360 auto
2010 Dodge Challenger R/T 6 speed
2014 RAM Laramie 5.7 Hemi 8 speed

69_500

What exactly is a "latter"? I'm sure you mean a Ladder. I don't think I've seen anyone lay a ladder on their car and go anywhere like that. I have seem ladders laying on the roofs of Daytona's though when in the garage. Put a sheet of plywood from the roof to the wing and it makes for a huge shelf to store things on in a garage.

Mike DC

I've always been amazed that Mopar decided to push the C500/Daytona's fastback window plugs past the level of the trunklid. 

It seems like they could have just done the new C500 rear window glass right up flush with the top edge of the trunklid much more easily.  It would have given the cars most of the fastback's benefits while still avoiding most of the headaches.    And it would have looked MUCH closer to a stock 2nd-gen.  You'd still have been left with a sliver of "tunned-back" appearance to the rear window area, and the overall sillohoutte of the car would not have been altered. 


daytonalo

You have a point ! Just one more fact why they went into Bankruptcy

pettybird

Rick Edwards took the passenger seat out of his 'bird to accommodate a large potted tree.  He said the pot was larger than the seat, and he drove slowly home with the foliage flapping in the breeze.


I bought a Dart GTS hood at a swap meet and had to carry it home ratchet-strapped to the roof of the 'bird...I don't recall ladders, though.  I bought a used, autographed tire from Petty Enterprises at this year's WW/NBOA meet and didn't really have room for it.  I got teased a LOT that I should unbolt the wing and slide the tire on, like a rack.  Mom saved the day be deciding we could use a new cooler when we got home, so throwing that away freed up enough space for luggage, three people, the tire, two NASCAR wheels, a chunk of Ryan Newman's fender, fluids/parts/tools/spare/full size floor jack and all the diecasts and trinkets I took down there to get signed.



It's funny what you do when a car is just a car to you.

Ghoste

Quote from: Mike DC (formerly miked) on November 24, 2007, 10:32:59 PM
I've always been amazed that Mopar decided to push the C500/Daytona's fastback window plugs past the level of the trunklid. 

It seems like they could have just done the new C500 rear window glass right up flush with the top edge of the trunklid much more easily.  It would have given the cars most of the fastback's benefits while still avoiding most of the headaches.    And it would have looked MUCH closer to a stock 2nd-gen.  You'd still have been left with a sliver of "tunned-back" appearance to the rear window area, and the overall sillohoutte of the car would not have been altered. 



I think, and I'm only guessing, that it was because they didn't want to make a small difference.  The backlight was a problem and the rear of the car had been the problem on the 1st gens as well.  They wanted it to be right aerodynamically and easy just didn't fit into the picture.  Except for the grille that was to evolve into the nosecone, the idea was to stop compromising and start winning races.

Mike DC

That occurs to me too, but it doesn't explain why the Plymouth 'Birds got away without hacking into their trunklids.  (And the Plumouths would have been even less "fast-backed" than my proposed Charger situation.)  With the 'Birds, the engineers were told that they couldn't hack into the decklid hole.  The homologation number had quadrupled from 500 to almost 2000 cars, and they had to start worrying about actually selling the 'Birds unlike the Charger Daytonas. 

They say the 'Birds weren't quite as fast as the Daytonas, and I'm sure the rear window would have been a big part of the issue.  But it's not like the Superbirds were SLOW or anything.  It seems like they would have stomped the Fords well enough with just the less-severe fastback window idea on a Charger.  I have to imagine that surely they tried it with clay models during all their wind-tunnel testing sessions on the original C500. 



Either way it's the front end of those cars that was the major aeordynamic deal-breaker in the big picture.  For most race cars, a decent rear window won't really make you faster but a bad one will slow you down.  A rear window has to be particularly bad to warrant the kind of major-league aerodynamic attention that the Chargers got. 

   

Ghoste

But, with the 'birds, the stylists were allowed to have their say whereas the Daytona was all down to the scientists.  And, they did modify the Superbirds slightly.  As you say, the homologation number may have affected it too.

BROCK

As I understand it Chrysler aerodynamisists studied differing backlight angles to arrive at 22 degrees.
Isn't the back glass the same on all 2nd gen Chargers?  If so, maybe it was the quicker fix.  They
sure seemed more intent on quick solutions for getting the right parts for the shape out as quickly
as posible. 

=============================================
Let your music be in transit to the world

kab69440

Quote from: Mike DC (formerly miked) on November 24, 2007, 10:32:59 PM
I've always been amazed that Mopar decided to push the C500/Daytona's fastback window plugs past the level of the trunklid. 

It seems like they could have just done the new C500 rear window glass right up flush with the top edge of the trunklid much more easily.  It would have given the cars most of the fastback's benefits while still avoiding most of the headaches.    And it would have looked MUCH closer to a stock 2nd-gen.  You'd still have been left with a sliver of "tunned-back" appearance to the rear window area, and the overall sillohoutte of the car would not have been altered. 




That's a great idea! If someone did a plug that way it would probably look like this...   








                                                                                                                                       
Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not;  a sense of humor to console him for what he is.      Francis Bacon

WANT TO BUY:
Looking for a CD by  'The Sub-Mersians'  entitled "Raw Love Songs From My Garage To Your Bedroom"

Also, any of the various surf-revival compilation albums this band has contributed to.
Thank you,    Kenny

Jesus drove a Honda. He wasn't proud of it, though...
John 12: 49     "...for I did not speak of my own Accord."

JimShine

Imagine how tall the wing would need to be for that lid to clear!

Mike DC

Yowsa!  Good point Jim. 

Probably time to give up on the QP mounting and just fasten the wing onto the trunklid itself. 


I'm sure the wing wouldn't be as strong on the street cars that way, but it wouldn't have mattered very much.  NASCAR wouldn't have cared if the wing struts were reinforced on the racing Daytonas as long as the difference didn't look too obvious.  The wings could have been mounted right at the edge of the trunklid/QP edge, and then the NASCAR versions could have had the wings attached to the QPs while the street-cars could have had the wings raising up with the trunklids. 

 

kab69440

I believe I remember someone posting a pic of a plug-less Daytona clone and the stock trunklid open underneath the wing with an inch or so to spare.
Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not;  a sense of humor to console him for what he is.      Francis Bacon

WANT TO BUY:
Looking for a CD by  'The Sub-Mersians'  entitled "Raw Love Songs From My Garage To Your Bedroom"

Also, any of the various surf-revival compilation albums this band has contributed to.
Thank you,    Kenny

Jesus drove a Honda. He wasn't proud of it, though...
John 12: 49     "...for I did not speak of my own Accord."

Ghoste

Big Bill France was a lot fussier about the cars being the same as what was on the street back then and given his nervousness about the whole Ford vs Chrysler show getting out of hand I'm not so sure that he would have allowed a different rear spoiler on the race cars than the street cars.  I guess it's a moot point anyway since we're guessing with hindsight.
And Kab, you're right, someone did post a pic like that.

A383Wing

Quote from: kab69440 on November 26, 2007, 03:44:06 AM
I believe I remember someone posting a pic of a plug-less Daytona clone and the stock trunklid open underneath the wing with an inch or so to spare.

That's what our car has, no plug, stock trunk lid, stock location for wing placement, and less than an inch clearance when trunk lid opens past wing. I can get a picture tomorrow if anyone needs it.

Bryan
 

kab69440

Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not;  a sense of humor to console him for what he is.      Francis Bacon

WANT TO BUY:
Looking for a CD by  'The Sub-Mersians'  entitled "Raw Love Songs From My Garage To Your Bedroom"

Also, any of the various surf-revival compilation albums this band has contributed to.
Thank you,    Kenny

Jesus drove a Honda. He wasn't proud of it, though...
John 12: 49     "...for I did not speak of my own Accord."

Mike DC

It wouldn't have to be a visibly different wing on the outside of the car.  Just different bracing under the trunklid would do the job.

   

Magnumcharger

I was contemplating this very thing earlier today.
1968 Plymouth Barracuda Formula S 340 convertible
1968 Dodge Charger R/T 426 Hemi 4 speed
1968 Plymouth Barracuda S/S clone 426 Hemi auto
1969 Dodge Deora pickup clone 318 auto
1971 Dodge Charger R/T 440 auto
1972 Dodge C600 318 4 speed ramp truck
1972 Dodge C800 413 5 speed
1979 Chrysler 300 T-top 360 auto
2001 Dodge RAM Sport Offroad 360 auto
2010 Dodge Challenger R/T 6 speed
2014 RAM Laramie 5.7 Hemi 8 speed

Ghoste

It certainly would improve rear visibility wouldn't it.

daytonalo


hemigeno

[Moderator Voice]

Some of you might notice that a couple of replies were deleted from this thread.  No need to rehash what was in those replies, but there is a reason they're gone and it isn't because Larry said anything he shouldn't have.

[/Moderator Voice]

Carry on...


Highbanked Hauler

It used to take 4 years to get a car from the drawing board to production in that era. Chrysler was already committed to the 68 body when the 66 was on the track the same way Ford was when the 70 came out. :shruggy:
69 Charger 500, original owner  
68 Charger former parts car in process of rebuilding
92 Cummins Turbo Diesel
04 PT Cruiser

Magnumcharger

Quote from: daytonalo on November 27, 2007, 11:53:13 PM
What is that backlite from ????

Microsoft Paint program....and my overly fertile mind.... :lol:
1968 Plymouth Barracuda Formula S 340 convertible
1968 Dodge Charger R/T 426 Hemi 4 speed
1968 Plymouth Barracuda S/S clone 426 Hemi auto
1969 Dodge Deora pickup clone 318 auto
1971 Dodge Charger R/T 440 auto
1972 Dodge C600 318 4 speed ramp truck
1972 Dodge C800 413 5 speed
1979 Chrysler 300 T-top 360 auto
2001 Dodge RAM Sport Offroad 360 auto
2010 Dodge Challenger R/T 6 speed
2014 RAM Laramie 5.7 Hemi 8 speed

moparstuart

GO SELL CRAZY SOMEWHERE ELSE WE ARE ALL STOCKED UP HERE