Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Dodge Charger is a model of automobile marketed by Dodge in various forms over eight generations since 1966. The first Charger was a show car in 1964. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] A 1965 Charger II concept car resembled the 1966 production version.
Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat Redeye: 2020–2023 6.2L supercharged Hellcat HO Hemi V8: 797 hp 3.6 seconds 10.8 seconds Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Redeye: 2021–2023 Dodge Challenger SRT Jailbreak: 2022 807 hp 3.6 seconds 11.0 seconds Dodge Charger SRT Jailbreak: 2022 3.6 seconds 11.0 seconds Dodge Challenger SRT Demon: 2017–2018 (Limited to ...
The Dodge Charger Pursuit AWD became available to law enforcement customers in the Spring of 2014 through Chrysler Group's Fleet Operations. [38] The 2014 Dodge Charger Pursuit AWD recorded the fastest lap time during Michigan State Police's 2014 Vehicle Evaluation Test (1:33.85), and fastest average lap time (1:34.75) at the Grattan Raceway. [38]
Grumman F6F Hellcat, the primary United States Navy aircraft carrier fighter in the second half of World War II; M18 Hellcat, a United States tank destroyer used in World War II. 12th Armored Division (United States), nicknamed the Hellcat Division (or Hellcats for short) Short Hellcat, a planned air-to-surface variant of the Seacat missile
A Dodge Power Giant with a gas turbine engine that was a part of the Chrysler gas turbine engine program. Dodge Charger 1964 A show car based on the Dodge Polara. Dodge Charger II 1965 A coupé previewing the first generation Dodge Charger. Dodge Deora: 1967 A heavily-customized Dodge A100 designed by Harry Bentley Bradley. Dodge Charger III: 1968
The exterior design was penned by Carl Cameron, who was also responsible for the exterior designs of the 1966 Dodge Charger. Cameron based the 1970 Challenger grille on an older sketch of a stillborn 1966 Charger prototype that was to have a turbine engine. The pony car segment was already declining by the time the Challenger arrived.
1978–1979: 6DR5 2.5 L 6G73 - Used in the Chrysler Sebring, Dodge Avenger, Chrysler Cirrus, and Dodge Stratus; 3.0 L 6G72 - Used in the Plymouth Acclaim/Dodge Spirit and 1987–2000 Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager, also Dodge Dynasty, Chrysler LeBaron, Chrysler TC, Chrysler New Yorker, Dodge Daytona, Dodge Stealth, Chrysler Sebring (Coupe), Dodge Stratus (Coupe), Dodge Shadow ES, and Plymouth ...
The Charger name, aside from the unrelated Dodge Ramcharger, would go on a more long-term hiatus until it was revived as a concept car in 1999 and eventually as a performance sedan in 2005; the nameplate had previously been on a brief hiatus from 1979 through 1981 after the Dodge Magnum replaced the original Dodge Charger (1966).