Vehicle Description
1967 Dodge Dart GT - Dark Red over White/Red Interior - 273ci V8 -
4 Speed Manual - Bucket Seats (Please note: If you happen to be
viewing this 1967 Dodge Dart GT on a website other than our Garage
Kept Motors site, it's possible that you've only seen some of our
many photographs of the car due to third-party website limitations.
To be sure you access all the more than 155 photographs, as well as
a short start-up and walk-around video, please go to our main
website: Garage Kept Motors.) Put a bigger, more powerful engine in
a smaller, lighter car... and you will almost always have a faster
trip down the strip. �€" Hemmings, February 2018 Here's how
Chrysler Corporation described its new, '67 Dodge Dart GT in a
magazine ad back in the day: There's a new way to go. Big-new,
all-new Dodge Dart GT for 1967. And if its obvious beauty and fresh
styling don't turn you on, maybe this list of standard equipment
will. An all-new vinyl interior. Bucket seats. Carpeting, front and
rear. Retractable front lap belts. Redesigned, recessed instrument
panel. Curved side glass. Unique, concave rear window. And more...
much more luxury than you'd expect from a car carrying a compact
price. Add to this a choice of Six or V8 power and a dozen or more
safety features, and you've got quite a car. ... The Dodge
Rebellion wants you. Offered here is a beautifully maintained and
perfectly refreshed 1967 Dodge Dart GT 2-door hardtop in a striking
color combination: metallic burgundy over white. The car's odometer
shows 82,448 miles, or just over 1,500 miles per-year on average
since new. This is muscle-car-era MOPAR performance in a smaller,
but potent package. Thanks to a highly professional re-spray, the
car's exterior metallic-burgundy paint is in near-showroom
condition, uniformly glossy and deeply reflective across the entire
body. There are no dings, no dents, no noteworthy flaws on any body
panel. The factory's restrained use of chrome trim made for an
appealing, restrained design; some chrome shows light patina from
age. The recessed front grille and chrome bumper are in perfect
condition. Bodyside trim emphasizes the horizontal body lines and
graceful roof profile. Rear-deck metal trim and chrome bumper
appear close-to-new. The GT Dart white stripe horizontal across the
rear deck leaves no one mistaking what model just passed them. Dual
rectangular chrome exhaust tips add emphasis. All factory
emblems-Dodge letters on the hood, GT emblem in the front grille,
273 engine badge and Dart GT front-fender emblems, and another Dart
GT emblem on the rear deck-are all in place. Cabin glass and
lighting lenses are virtually perfect, clear and free of cracks.
Simulated 5-spoke full wheel covers feature the Dodge Division's
logo. Period-correct red-stripe tires are mounted. The car's
interior could not have looked much better the day it rolled off
the assembly line. Fold-forward front bucket and the rear bench
seat are upholstered in horizontal-pattern white vinyl, with
brushed-metal trim pieces in each seating position. Door-panel trim
mirrors the upholstery design and adds burgundy exterior-body-color
painted metal (a design component most Chrysler cars of the period
featured), and tasteful, brushed-metal Dart GT emblems. Side vent
windows are push-pull; cranks operate the roll-up glass. The
dashboard has an attractive horizontal-look design with a padded
burgundy top. A handsome sport-design steering wheel with woodgrain
rim and three chrome spokes frames standard factory instruments,
with a column-mounted Sunpro® tachometer and auxiliary oil-pressure
gauge below the dashboard added. The factory Dart All Transistor AM
push-button radio remains mounted in the center-dash position. The
shift lever for the 4-speed manual transmission is floor-mounted.
Burgundy carpeting covers the cabin floors. Under the hood, a
pristine engine bay houses the perfectly clean, original 273
cubic-inch small-block V8. A chrome air cleaner identifyin