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The Squier Telecaster Custom II includes two Duncan Designed P-90 pickups instead of humbuckers. Both models have 22 fret maple necks and were originally offered in either yellow or black with 3 ply black-white-black scratch plates. Controls on both models consist of two tone and two volume controls with a three way toggle switch on the upper bout.
The flagship model was the Custom Royal. It came with the 350 in 3 (5.7 L) Ram Fire V8 with a standard two-barrel carburetor, but the optional four-barrel carburetor delivered 300 hp (224 kW). A feature of the Custom Royal was its bumper-mounted exhaust ports which were only available on the Royal and Coronet models as part of the D-500 options.
It was available on regular-cab/short-box and quad-cab/short-box pickups and include a custom overall paint from Mopar's Impact colors from the 1970s (this includes Hemi Orange, Plum Crazy Purple, Sublime Green, and Banana Yellow). 20" American Racing Motto chrome wheels, a new cowl "blacked-out" hood, and a specially trimmed leather 2-tone ...
This 1956 Mercury Turnpike Cruiser and van, a showcase on wheels using a Mercury truck to haul a Mercury concept car, is among 100 concept car images that Ford Motor Co. added to its online ...
The neck is one piece maple with a flatter 9.5-inch radius and larger 6105 frets. The headstock has the original design “Custom” logo mentioned before. The neck pickup is a custom wound wide-range humbucker. Alnico 2 magnets were used, which more closely resemble the sound of the CuNiFe magnets used in the original Seth Lover pickup.
The Dodge Custom is a full-size car which was produced by Dodge in the United States from 1946 to early 1949, and was also called the DeLuxe in a more basic trim package. . Dodge was very fluid with model nameplates and during the 1930s updated them yearly based on marketing objectives, while the actual vehicle was largely unchanged for what became known as the "Senior Dodge's" that were ...
The pickups had the "Power Wagon" badge on the fender. [10] The older design Power Wagon was marketed as the "Military Type" to distinguish it from the styled pickup versions. Later the "Military Type" was given the series number W-300M, and ultimately WM-300. The heavy-duty four-wheel-drive W-300 and W-500 trucks were marketed as "Power Giants".
The A100 is a range of compact vans and trucks manufactured and marketed from 1964 to 1970 by Chrysler Corporation under the Dodge marque in the United States and the Fargo marque in Canada. The A100 competed with the Ford Econoline , Chevrolet Van , Chevy Corvair Greenbrier , and the Volkswagen Type 2 .