Chrysler Valiant 1971 News

My 1971 VG Valiant
Read the article
By David Burrell · 12 Feb 2012
When your computer spits the dummy Mark fixes it So what car would you expect this technology guru to drive every day? A 1971 VG Valiant four door sedan, that's what. But not any Valiant.This one is a base model, with a basic 215 cubic inch hemi six. It has a three speed automatic, a radio and is stopped by drum brakes. There is no power assistance of any kind.The VG is a genuine one family car. "It was my grandmother's car. She won it in an Art Union lottery. She only bought one ticket," explains Mark.So not only is the Valiant a bare bones basic piece of transport, it cost almost nothing. Mark continues the story: "My grandmother drove it for about 20 years and when she gave up driving at age 85 it was given to me".Nothing has been done to the Valiant during its forty years on the road, save for the usual servicing and replacement of worn parts. The motor and auto transmission are original. The interior is original, too. The front seat shows some signs of wear but the back seat gleams as if new.Although the body has a few rust spots, the paint work may be fading in a few places and the chrome a little tarnished, Mark's VG is a perfect example of classic car motoring in its purest form. Cheap, reliable transport that has been cared for but not pampered.And it is rare. How many stock standard VG Valiants with the smallest of the hemi sixes have you seen recently?Any automobile that has survived with its original motor intact, its interior in useable condition and the paint work still presentable renders it very desirable and collectible.In the USA and the UK there values of original cars are climbing at a faster rate than restored collectibles. They are considered to be irreplaceable time capsules. "Worn in, not worn out", is a sound bite starting to gain traction.(pic left: The 215 cubic inch 'hemi' engine.)VG HistoryReleased in March 1970 the VG Valiant was little changed from its VF predecessor, at least in the styling department. The VF was itself a mild facelift of the VE, which was an Australianised version of the 1966 American Dodge Dart.By contrast it was the engine which got all the attention. Gone was the reliable `slant' six, and in its place was a trio of `hemi' sixes.These motors allowed Chrysler to keep its bragging rights for having the most powerful six cylinder engines of the big three in Australia.To ensure we all were aware of the hemi , Chrysler brought a retired Stirling Moss out to Australia to front their comprehensive advertising campaign.VE, VF and VG Valiant's are very much underrated as classic cars.The two door hardtops have never reached the money levels of the Monaro, despite their Dodge Dart heritage and cool, clean looks. Consequently they represent great value for those looking for stylish and reliable classic cars. Buy now and avoid the rush. The distinctive concave rear window was an enduring design feature of the VE, VF and VG modelsDavid Burrell is editor of www.retroautos.com.au

My Chrysler Valiant Charger
Read the article
By Stuart Martin · 14 Apr 2011
The Lonsdale engine plant might be unrecognisable and Tonsley Park has little signage left, but there's plenty of examples of Chrysler's production history still running hard. The Chrysler Charger legend was born in 1971 and for years was the fastest-accelerating Australian-built car.
Tony and Karen Lennell have strong connections to the breed, with family working for the company at the time of the Charger's production. But it wasn't always Chryslers that sat in the Lennell garage - Holdens and later HSVs were under the the roof as well.
"I was a Holden man but had family ties to Chrysler here - Karen's dad was an engineer there, they've grown on me over the years so we decided to buy one," he says. The couple - under the pretence of a weekend away in Sydney - found what they were looking for just over a year ago at Australian Musclecar Sales in Sydney.
The couple's car is a pretty rare beast - a 1971 three-speed manual VH E37 Charger R/T, powered by the famous 265-cubic inch (about 4.3-litre) in-line "Hemi" six-cylinder engine. When it left the factory in 1971 priced at $3935 new, there was 248 horsepower on offer - 185kW and 415Nm - thanks to triple Weber carburettors.
It's one of only 135 R/Ts built and one of just 18 painted in the hot mustard colour - while Mr Lennell was coy about how much he paid for the car, pristine examples have sold for as much as $100,000. "We flew to Sydney for a weekend away, and I happened to just say that we were going to stop off and look at a car - four hours later we owned the car," he says.
The E37 has been returned to factory-spec after the long and expensive task of sourcing parts and getting the car to the right automotive people for the serious work. Friday nights have become known as shed night with work continuing into early hours of Saturday morning. "We got to work on researching the original parts and equipment, it needed a three-speed gearbox, Mark at Brighton Service Centre put that in for me - he sourced the gearbox for me."
Mr Lennell said the floor, interior trim and the cabin have been returned to how the car was as it left the line at Tonsley Park 40 years ago. "The engine and diff have been given the once-over as well, the 3.23:1 LSD is back in there, it's got new original-spec extractors and the triple carburettors have been put back to rights by West Torrens Dyno Centre," he says.
Although registered on historic plates, the E37 isn't a molly-coddled museum piece - the Lennells drove it to Renmark for an award-winning appearance at a recent club event and more recently braved locusts and native fauna to enter the car in the Chrysler on The Murray event at Albury-Wodonga. "We were just at Chrysler On The Murray, where we won the best VH Charger .... we were one of more than 150 Chargers up there for the 40th anniversary," he says.
The couple received plenty of "Hey Charger" salutes on the trip to Albury-Wodonga. "Every time we stopped for fuel it took about half an hour to leave as people wanted to have a look at the car, it hardly used any oil and cruised at 100km/h all the way. "We were driving down the Hume with Leo Geoghegan's car next to us, E49s, E38s - they got a group shot of 150 of these cars together, it was fantastic."
The job is not done yet as the couple have plans to pull the engine out for another re-build - as well as a taking it back to its original colour - re-painting the engine bay and re-building the front suspension in preparation for next year.
"It was a fun drive and we're going to do it again next year - we're going to take it up to Bathurst next year and take it up The Mountain," he says.
About the Chrysler Valiant Charger
The Chrysler Valiant Charger is an icon of Australian motor vehicle manufacturing and the VH started it all. The company started manufacturing in 1971 and built 17,918 VH Chargers - at one stage accounting for half of the total Valiant production by Chrysler.
Overall, around 1300 were R/T models, and of these, but R/T E37 Performance models numbered only 135.
The R/T had a 3.23:1 differential (rather than the 2.92 standard in other Chargers), as well as a tachometer, oil pressure gauge, six-inch rims, a front anti-roll bar and a three-speed manual gearbox.
At the time the company claimed a stock E37 could complete a quarter-mile sprint in 15.7 seconds, but that number fell if the optional "six-pack" package was added, which put three two-barrel Weber carburettors on the straight-six engine and upped the power to 248hp (a 30hp increase) and 306 foot pounds.
The base-model car was priced from $2795 but the R/T was priced $3395 - now these cars can fetch anywhere between $60,000 and $110,000.
The R/T high performance pack came about from a desire to go motor racing, adding black stripes, a black radiator grille, driving lights, model-specific steel wheels, a sports instrumentation pack and a two-spoke aluminium steering wheel.

Classic car prices cooling off
Read the article
By Neil McDonald · 28 Aug 2009
The heat has well and truly come out of classic prices for hyper-expensive collectible cars with prices for the famous Ford Falcon GT-HO dropping in value up to 30 per cent over the past few months. The values are a far cry from 2006 and 2007 when speculators and collectors were paying stratospheric prices of up to $800,000 for Phase III versions of the Falcon GT-HO.Prices for other proven Bathurst pedigree cars like the Holden Torana XU1 and A9X, as well as the Valiant Charger E38 and E49, grew in value because of the Phase III phenomenon. But prices for some of Australia's most collectible muscle cars are cooling as investors keep their hands in their pockets because of the global financial crisis. The decline is not just restricted to the top-end cars either.Classic retailers say that some collector cars that several years ago would have fetched $200,000 are now worth $100,000 and the impact has been felt further down the price scale.But Mike Selby, owner-operator of the Sydney-based on-line company Australian Muscle Car Sales, says even though prices have softened, a mint condition Phase III Falcon GT-HO will still fetch between $500,000 and $600,000.He says even rarer versions may command more but it's a buyers' market. "We've just sold one very good Phase III for $550,000 and we've got one we're selling for $600,000," he says. "But lesser cars without logbooks and that are not perfect will struggle."Selby says a low mileage Falcon GT-HO Phase III in exceptional condition will still command big money, particularly because very few survive. "They only build about 300," he says."There are about 180 left and of those there are probably between 12 to 20 cars with less than 50,000km on the clock. Those cars will command really big dollars."Selby says there is a distinct reason why people opt for the famous Bathurst cars like the Torana XU1, A9X, various Falcon GTs and Valiant Chargers. "They are really buying what you can't buy ever again," he says. "They were cars you could buy at your local dealer, drive to Bathurst, and win a race. That is the mystic of that era. They were factory built race cars and that has not been done since."Selby does not believe that some of the newer cars like the Group A Holdens and Fairmont Ghia ESP models will command the same respect, or prices, among collectors. "They are certainly rare cars and interesting but the reason people were buying the GTs and XU1s is because they were something very special," he says. "I think that is an era that's gone."He says as with all cycles he believes the time is right for smart buyers to re-enter the market. "The market has come down a fair way, in line with what happened in the financial world," he says. "But I think it's flattened out now and holding steady," he says "I don't see anything going up yet but there's definitely more interest now than there was before even if cars are taking longer to sell." Specialist classic seller Paul Sabine of the Brooklands Classic Car dealership in suburban Melbourne echoes Selby's view of the classic slide. Brooklands specialises in rare European vehicles and Sabine says he avoids Australian muscle cars because of the over-inflated prices."Some of the later-model Europeans like Porsches, Ferraris and Mercedes-Benz have dropped off a bit," he says. However, he says demand is still strong for low-mileage early model Europeans and finding early examples is getting harder. Demand is outstripping supply but prices for these cars haven't dropped much," he says.Sabine says one segment that has experienced substantial price plunges of up to 30 per cent are the "middle American cars". "The garden-variety Mustangs, Thunderbirds, Camaros... there are just too many out there now," he says.He says the market is awash with imported left-hand drive daily drivers with people hoping to restore them and sell them for profit. "The bottom line is that the restoration costs still keep climbing," he says. "While parts are available for Mustangs the labour costs still haven't dropped. Why would you spend $60,000 doing up a Mustang that's going to be worth $40,000 and you've also paid $15,000 or $20,000 for it?"Apart from road-registered classics, original race cars are also still commanding top prices. "There are very few around," Sabine says. The national auctions manager for classic auction house Shannons in Melbourne, Christophe Boribon, says although the Bathurst cars have dropped in value, prices for some of the European cars being auctioned have remained buoyant.But Boribon admits that even values of some of the Shannons collectibles have dropped about 10 per cent since the global financial crisis. "But unlike the muscle cars, the European cars are in a less speculative area," he says. "We sell passion and hobbie cars, we don't sell the A to B cars."Selby says the market still has some way to go before it is fully recovered. "What you'll find is that once confidence returns to real estate and sharemarket, things will pick up," he says. "The stock that is there isn't moving really quickly but it is moving." He says the only people who have survived the shakeout unscathed are seriously rich collectors who have been able to hang on to their cars. "There have not been any firesales," he says. Tomorrow's highly collectible car could be sitting in your garage. If one of the original Australian muscle cars from the 1960s or 1970s are out of reach some later model cars have collector potential. And you might already be driving around in them.Early examples of the humble Ford Fairlane, Valiant Pacer and Safari wagons and various Falcons from the early 1960s like the XK and XL are becoming more desirable. Prices can start from as low as $10,000, rising up to $30,000 low-mileage mint condition locally built Aussie cars.Even the humble Holden Torana sedan and hatch are now considered collectible with growing interest in original Torana SL and SS hatchback with its "hatchback hutch" portable tent from 1976 to 1978. Very few were made and carsguide has heard of one country NSW collector who found one in mint condition, including the tent, for $15,000.Some of the older Subarus, Mazdas and Hondas are even worth a look. Early Honda Civics are relatively cheap but if you're after the S600 or S800 sportscars - if you can find them - expect to pay top dollar. The same goes for some of the older rotary-engined Mazdas. Some of the first MX5 sportscars are now considered collectible too. Early examples of Subaru's Liberty GT, if they aren't bastardised with big wheels, garish interior gauges and oversized exhausts, plus the quirky looking SVX also have collector potential.European cars like the Saab's 900 series hatch, particularly the Aero models from the early 1990s, have strong reputations and the Pininfarina-designed Peugeot 406 coupe is something of a sleeper. Cars like the Morris Minor Traveller, Ford Capri RS3100, Datsun 240Z and 260Z and Volvo 1800ES are out there but are becoming harder to find. Various older Mercedes-Benzes, like the 1970s 280SE and the 280SL Pagoda are popular but the Pagoda is rare today and commands big prices.If all else fails early versions of the Citroen DS, Mini Cooper, Alfa Romeo GTV, MG and Triumph, some Jaguars, the BMW 2002ti and 6 Series and early E39 3 Series iS models. Shannons' Christophe Boribon reckons later model limited-edition cars like the Mitsubishi Evo, the original R32 GTR Skylines, Toyota MR2, original two-door Subaru STis and the Mazda RX7 Series 8 have potential as tomorrow's classics.Further up the scale Boribon says the Audi RS4 wagon, BMW M3 CSL and even the Mercedes-Benz AMG65 SL Black Series are likely to become more desirable as the years pass. "It really comes down to whether they're limited edition models though," he says. "It's the same for Ferraris and Lamborghinis; they have to be limited edition models."Boribon, Selby and Sabine agree that a car's rarity and its condition are paramount for true collectors. "An original condition car, whatever it is, will fetch a good price," Sabine says. There are few specifics about what will, or won't, become a collectible, he says. If very few examples of a particular model exist and its in original condition, it can be more desirable, he says."But if you absolutely like the car you're looking at then I'd say buy it," he says. "Life is an experience. "The one tip is to buy the best car you can afford, whatever it is." However, he has a word of warning for those expecting their classics to drive like a 2009 model. "They often don't have power steering, handle particularly well or have the creature comforts you get today," he says.

Next top models
Read the article
By Paul Gover · 22 May 2009
Actually, it's not a toy because it's an exact scale replica of one of the most memorable cars of my childhood.It's the Ford 'Super Falcon' raced by Ian 'Pete' Geoghegan in the early 1970s.The original raced towards the end of a golden era in the Australian touring car championship, running up against Allan Moffat's Coca-Cola Mustang, Norm Beechey's Monaro and Bob Jane's brutal Chevrolet Camaro.I have 1:18th scale replicas of those cars as part of my car collection.The difference in the Super Falcon is the amount of detail in the latest product from Classic Carlectables which, together with Biante, is tapping a rich vein of Australian motoring history. Both brands do a lot of work on current V8 Supercars, but more and more people are turning to everything from Classic's replica of Allan Moffat's 1978 Bathurst Falcon to the 1971 Valiant Charger.The cars look great, and more as I remember them than the way they look in 2009, and the detail work is incredible on everything from dashboards and seats to engines and suspensions. They are way, way, way down the road from anything in the Hot Wheels lineup.A model from Classic Carlectables is not cheap, and you have to go to their website or a specialist shop, but they are well worth the investment.

Record prices and buyer interest
Read the article
By CarsGuide team · 07 Nov 2006
Driving the auction fever were record prices achieved for a pair of classic Australian muscle cars of the 1960s and '70s.A genuine one-owner Bathurst race specification 1967 Holden Monaro GTS 327 was sold for an Australian record $220,000, accompanied by cheers from a crowd of more than a thousand people.The auctioneers, Shannons, had expected a price between $100,000 and $130,000."Australian muscle cars of the early Bathurst era have been the hottest segment of the classic car market over the last year or two, but the extent to which the result exceeded our expectations just shows the passion these cars arouse," said Shannons' national auction manager Christophe Boribon."The auction showed there is continuing strong demand for muscle cars, particularly amongst baby boomers, and the market shows no sign of weakening."Minutes later, a painstakingly restored one-owner 1971 Valiant Charger R/T E38 "Bathurst" coupe, which had been expected to attract a price between $70-100,000, sold for an Australian record $128,000.The car will go into a private Victorian collection, much to the relief of the man who had owned it since new, 69-year-old Charles Edwards of Hay in western New South Wales."It's sad to see it sold. I would have liked to have seen it passed in, but I know it's going to a good home," said Mr Edwards.The former owner says the credit for the record price should go to David Norris from West Wyalong who spent nine years returning the car to showroom condition.Another immaculately restored lot, a 1963 150cc Vespa scooter, sold for $8,300 - more than $2,000 above predictions.A 1940s children's pedal car sold for $5,500 - roughly double the expected price.Two antique petrol bowsers - from the 1940s and '50s - were both bought by the same bidder for prices as much as 50 per cent above predictions.The chief executive of the Australian International Motor Show, Peter Sturrock, said the auction results were paralleled by strong orders for new cars at the motor show."Automotive brands exhibiting at the show are extremely happy with the quality and quantity of sales interest the motor show has generated," said Mr Sturrock."The message from this year's Australian International Motor Show is that consumer confidence remains very high.""Regardless of rising interest rates the collectable motor vehicle market is still going very strong," said Mr Boribon.
CLASSIC CARS
Read the article
By CarsGuide team · 13 Jul 2005
Amid the glamour of new models, star cars from the past add variety and a sense of history to the Motor Show.Always a favourite with the crowds, the 2006 Shannons Insurance and Auctions display highlighted the growing popularity amongst collectors of Aussie muscle cars from the 1960s and ’70s.According to Shannons, cashed-up Baby Boomers are driving muscle cars to record prices at auction. Several such cars, including an original one-owner 1971 Valiant Charger E38, were offered at Shannons’ traditional motor show auction – held on the last afternoon of the Show.Shannons 2007 Auction Items