This story first appeared in the March/April 2025 issue of Hagerty Drivers Club magazine. Join the club to receive our ...
Auto racing is about much more than speed. Find out how racing technology made its way into production vehicles, improving ...
But maybe a bit too much, mon dieu! We love curveballs, and the Chrysler Turbine Car is exactly that. The Turbine Car was on the cusp of being a normal production run model for Chrysler ...
While some of Chrysler's concept cars made it to the mainstream, or at least influenced other popular designs, these models ...
The idea of stuffing a turbine in a car wasn’t new. Chrysler began toying around with the technology in 1953 and famously released the aptly-named, Ghia-designed Turbine coupe a decade later. Across ...
The public's reception towards the Dodge Charger EV has been nothing but cold. Could it have been hotter branded as a Chrysler?
Town & Country came standard with the ubiquitous 383-cubic-inch V8, but Chrysler also offered a 440 TNT mill with 365 ...
Chrysler sold nearly 3,000 300Ls in 1965, but only 12 units were ordered with both the convertible top and the four-speed ...
The darling Chrysler 300 was left almost entirely unchanged for decades, until the brand eventually pulled the plug. Now's ...
More unlikely competitor vehicles included a surprisingly fast, British-entered Rover P5B saloon (with period air ...