1971 Dodge Charger Super Bee in FJ6 Go Green
Features Include:
• Opening doors, trunk, and hood
• Accurate interior and chassis
• Steerable front wheels
• Detailed 383 Magnum big-block V8 engine
The “Super Bee” name comes from the "B” body designation used for mid-sized cars from Chrysler. Interestingly, the Super Bee logo design was picked from a contest winner’s entry based on the Dodge "Scat Pack" medallion. The 1971 Dodge Charger Super Bee was a direct competitor to the Plymouth Road Runner. It was created as a budget muscle car with low cost and high performance. The 1971 model had a totally new body style, with ventless side windows, concealed windshield wipers, a split front-bumper design, a semi-fastback roof, power bulge hood (blacked out), V6X black sport stripes, and Bee decals. In 1971, it was available in four engine sizes— the 340, 383, 440, & the massive 426 HEMI. 1971 was the twilight for the true ground-pounding street machines since all their most powerful engines were dropped by Chrysler in 1972.
Adult collectible designed for use by persons 14 years of age and older.