Thunder Road Automotive Study II: 1968-69 Pontiac GTO vs. 1971-72 Dodge Charger 🌷

in #classiccars β€’ 4 years ago (edited)

Thunder Road Automotive Study II:

1968-69 Pontiac GTO vs. 1971-72 Dodge Charger

I've always loved these two cars from the Detroit Golden Era. Pontiac design was at it's zenith as were the talents of Chrysler's Dodge division.

The Dodge Charger had already had 2 successful versions already when in 1971 the new "fuselage" bodies which Chrysler first introduced in 1969 were applied to the Gen 3 Dodge Charger. It featured this gorgeously simple face which was clearly borrowed from the '68-'69 Pontiac Le Mans, notably the GTO Judge version.

Just as the '68-'69 GTO was offered with hidden headlights or standard open headlights so were the '71-'72 Dodge Chargers.

Here we have the 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge with horizontal split to the grille texture:
1969 GTO.jpg
source

Below is a 1971 Dodge Charger R/T with hidden headlights closed and a chrome wrap-around bumper with a horizontal split through the grille texture.
1971 DODGE CHARGER RT HIDDEN.jpg
source

Now we return to the 1969 GTO Judge (again with horizontal split to the grille texture) but with standard headlights:

... here again a '69 GTO Judge with closed hidden headlights:
1969 GTO CLOSED.png
source

Here is an example of a 1968 GTO with it's hidden headlights open and on (note the lack of a horizontal bar dividing the grill texture as well as the difference in the parking lights when campared to the 1969 pictured above):
1968 GTO hidden open.jpg
source

And just to show all possibilities below is a 1968 GTO with it's hidden headlights closed.

1968 GTO hidden.jpg

Now let's take a look at the 1971 Dodge Charger

Below is a '71 Dodge Charger Super Bee with standard headlights, blacked-out grille and color-keyed wrap-around bumper. This was not the Endura impact-resistant material like the GTO had but just a stylish painted bumper.
1971 SUPERBEE AA 1 A.jpg
source
1971 SUPERBEE AD 2 A.jpg
source

Occasionally you see a '71 Super Bee with hidden headlights but not often.. this one with chrome bumpers:
1971 SUPER BEE HIDDEN CHROM.png

source

This was the last year of the Super Bee option and the only time it was available a Charger model - although ironically both Charger and the original Super Bee were based upon the Dodge Coronet!

I did find a photo showing hidden headlights on '71 Charger R/T. With it's subtle horizontal divider it does remind us a bit of the '69 GTO.

1971 Charger RT colored hidden.jpg
source

Below is a '71 Charger R/T with hidden headlights and a chrome bumper instead of the body-keyed paint...
1971 Dodge Charger R T yellow.jpg
source

... and another with the hidden headlights in the open position:
1971 CHARGER RT hidden open chrome.jpg

The 1972 Charger dropped the Super Bee and the R/T offering the hidden headlights option with the SE (Special Edition) package. The look was similar to the '71 but the regular open headlight design was sufficiently different that I chose not the muddle the waters further by it's introduction here.

Appendix:

Here are a pair of 1968 GTOs for comparison:

The first with regular headlights (note the lack of the horizontal grille divider.. very clean and simple)
1968 GTO open.png

and second also with regular headlights but with the Endura bumper "deleted". Note that the standard Pontiac Le Mans grille has been blacked-out for the non-Endura GTO:
1968 GTO delete 1.png

🌷

SUPERBEE.png

Cruise Safely!

THUNDERROADFOOTER.jpg

Sort: Β 

very clarifying! i had been confused on the matter

nice presentation @mercapri302! i can tell that you're really into it!

Congratulations @mercapri302! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You received more than 10 upvotes. Your next target is to reach 50 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board And compare to others on the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

Support the HiveBuzz project. Vote for our proposal!