A genuine 1969 Dodge Super Bee A12 with its original 440 Six-Pack and four-speed resurfaces, backed by full documentation.
American sports cars aren't what they used to be, that's for sure. A lot of nameplates are dead and buried with the Chevy Camaro and the Dodge Challenger, the latest to bite the dust without any ...
Overshadowed by the Plymouth Road Runner during its three-year production run, the Super Bee remains an underated beast from the golden era of muscle cars. After the Chrysler Corporation introduced ...
There's a popular misconception that prior to the 1964 Pontiac GTO, there were no powerful intermediate American cars, but that's simply not true. The reason why the GTO is credited with kicking off ...
I planned on greeting 2024 in my best Johnny Cash attire, mourning the end of the Dodge Charger and Challenger. The last HEMI V8 echoed throughout the Brampton Assembly Plant in Ontario, Canada, on ...
A man in Arkansas bought a Bright Red Six Pack Super Bee in late 1969. What happened from 1969 until 1990 is unclear. The story goes that at some point in the late '70s, the A12 owner allowed his son ...
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