Used 1970 Plymouth Superbird for sale in BEASLEY, TX
$220,000
Vehicle Details
1970 Year | 0 mi. Mileage | $220,000 Price |
Plymouth Make | Plymouth Model | BEASLEY, Texas Location |
Car Body Type | B5 Blue Exterior Color | Excellent Exterior Condition |
Fully Restored Known Vehicle Damages | Fully Restored Restoration History | Original Engine History |
Manual Transmission | Rear-wheel drive Drive Train | Yes Power Steering |
Yes Power Brakes | Vinyl Interior Type | White Interior Color |
Yes Bucket Seats | Yes AM Radio | Vinyl Seat Material |
Yes Stroked |
Vehicle Description
1970 Plymouth Superbird V-Code 4-speed For Sale Rare Combination B5 Blue White Bucket Seat Interior 4-Speed in a Console V-Code 6BBL (6-Pack in Dodge Speak) Tic-Toc-Tach 0 Miles since HemiTyme Restorations performed it’s Rotisserie Restoration A few modifications from stock – all of which are reversible I bought the car in 2003 and immediately dropped off with Ken Pressley at Hemityme Restorations. Ken (now retired) restored nothing but show winning Winged cars. At the time I also had a Petty Blue Superbird and a Green Daytona in line at Ken’s shop. There were a total 5 Superbirds ahead of this car for restoration, and I knew then it would be close to ten years before I got it back. I liked this better than the Petty Blue V-Code 4-speed, so I decided I’d sell the Petty Blue and make this my driver. So I took a couple of liberties with this car to make it the fastest factory stock looking (to the average person — not you experts out there) Superbird. The original block was precision machined. The factory heads ported. The factory intake gasket match. The rotating billet stroker to 493CI. TTI Ceramic coated headers route exhaust gasses to 2.5″ factory appearing exhaust. The Radiator is aluminum painted black to fool the average eye. The clutch system is McLeod. All of this can be restored back to stock should you desire. When the car was finished (better than ten years later), Ken took it for long ride to find and repair anything missed, detailed the car and I picked up to take back home to Texas. When home I drained the gas and put in a bubble — as my life had changed over the previous decade and I was no longer interested in having the car as a driver. About four months ago I had someone claiming to be interested in buying — so I put in a couple of gallons of gas with stabilizer in the tank, changed the oil, rebuilt the front carb that leaked when I started. The prospective buyer liked the car — but not enough for us to come close to my price. As such I put back in the bubble and take out once a month to start — then back in. Now I’m at the point in my life (mid-sixties) where I want to make life a little more simpler, and I’m selling most of my 31 car/truck/motorcycle collection. I feel certain that this car is the nicest Superbird available — and that the investment market on this car will skyrocket in the next recession as a hedge against cask and the stock market. Sadly, I’ll need to part company to this car and many others before then.