New Under the Hood: 1970 Plymouth AAR ‘Cuda
The 1970 model year was perhaps the pinnacle of the muscle car movement. A lot of hot cars were around in those days, like the Pontiac GTO Judge or Chevelle SS 454. But we can’t forget the AAR ‘Cuda by Plymouth, which was a low-production hot rod built as a tribute to Plymouth’s success on the SCCA Trans Am circuit. Only 2,724 were assembled in a single model year (1970), including this one which is practically new on the mechanical side. Needing cosmetic work, this Mopar is in Irvington, Alabama, and is available here on Facebook Marketplace for $52,000 OBO. We appreciate this tip from Barn Finder Patrick S!
Plymouth built roughly 50,000 copies of its Barracuda pony car in 1970. Sales were up 50% due to an all-new E-body platform that was also at play with Dodge’s new Challenger. Only about 5% came as the AAR ‘Cuda patterned after Dan Gurney’s All-American Racers (hence the AAR designation) which had a 305 cubic inch V8 pushing out a whopping 440 hp. The street versions instead got the small-block 340, with some mods that included triple 2-barrel carburetors (aka Six-Pack). They were conservatively rated at 290 horses.
The interiors of the AAR ‘Cudas were pretty basic, but the exteriors were treated (sometimes) to Chrysler’s “Hi-Impact” paint colors, flat-black fiberglass hoods, strobe-stripes on the sides, and side-exit exhaust. The rear end was jacked up by two inches and different wheel widths were used fore and aft. 1,604 of them were produced in the Spring of 1970 with automatic transmissions (the rest got 4-speeds).
We’re told this ‘Cuda is a real-deal AAR with documentation like fender tags to back it up. But the engine is not original although the block is correct for the auto. The motor has been freshly rebuilt, and the tranny is new along with the brakes, front end, and wiring. The seller says it runs like a charm. The seats have been redone, but the door panels have not (and the photos show an older headliner while the seller says it’s new).
Some bodywork has been done to the car either by the seller or a previous owner. This includes both quarter panels, the trunk floor, and one floor pan. Some of the factory dark green paint is still present. The seller says you could drive the car the way it is or go ahead and send it to the paint shop. There weren’t many of these machines when new and even fewer now, and restored or super nice original AAR ‘Cudas tend to fetch some serious coin.
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Comments
Rarity or not, it doesn’t look like 52k+ car yet.
Somebody moved on it, cuz it’s gone.
agree……
Patrick, an almost perfect, meaning 2+ TA is a $90K car with the AAR equivalent over $100K. Check out Hagerty guide. While most classics have declined AARs and TAs just seem to be gaining in desireability and prices are holding up well. I suspect that price of $58K was a clone car, or the buyer got one screaming deal.
On this one, owner did get a replacement TA engine instead of just a vanilla 340. That will help it to get max value for a NOM AAR.
Yes indeed a little high asking price, but looks like a great project still for sure.
Just picture how stunning it would look if it was cosmetically fresh as well.
When you see a mint AAR Baracuda, they really are something.
The AAR & T/A engines were producing over 450 hp when Keith Black finished with them….the front & rear wheel sizes were the same (15 x 7)…..the tire sizes were different ….front E-60-15, rear G-60-15….I agree with the previous comments….price is too high….body & paint these days are super expensive……
Lot of great Mopars, but AAR may be the coolest of all time. No mention of the heads/rockers/valve covers, so the rare originals might be missing. Price might be high, but I doubt you’ll find a driver for less anytime soon.
Being a Mopar guy my whole life, this is not a 52k car. I don’t care, I just saw a 70 Challenger T/A sell for 58k it was almost perfect. This is a dreamers price. At 52k you have boat loads of cars available. 340+6 or not.
Mr. Buyer please don’t pay $52K. The market on these is already out of wack!
CHRYSLER PRODUCTS in 1970 were NOT the products of 1964 to 1969…..THEY JUST WEREN’T!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Tiffany Gomas has entered the room.