Frank --
You may have owned more Furys than I, but I bet I'm one of the few guys around that bought a not only a '60 Fury
NEW in 1960 but also a '65 Sport Fury
NEW in 1964 as well as the '60 and '65 I have now. The '60 I drove off the dealer's lot back then did not have stainless steel factory skirts but I put Foxcraft units ($19.95) on it though the salesman told I could have factory ones in MOPAR boxes for about 30 bucks. Skirts were very popular in those days and I have no doubt the two pair that disappeared off my first '60 Fury probably ended up on a couple of other Plymmers (or Darts) that I probably encountered cruising around my home town.
On the other hand, my I special ordered my '65 Sport Fury because I wanted the 426-S engine package (365 horses, H/D suspension, and oversize brakes and tires), 4-speed, Sure-Grip, power brakes, tinted glass, and seat belts (notice:
NO radio or PS) in a Medium Red Metallic 2-dr H/T with matching interior. When I was working on the deal, I was cutting costs as much as possible and while
NO radio was an option, like it or no, skirts were standard equipment on Sport Furys. But by then they were not as cool as they were in 1960, so off they came, so note the photo below.
Incidently, that black '60 is really a beauty, but
ALL factory wheels came off the line as black. I love the red droptop, but as far as factory options or period correctness are concerned, wires are definitely out though some were still to be found in dealers' stockrooms. By then, no self-respecting MOPAR gearhead wanted them as they were hard to keep in true, required inner tubes, and could not take the torque of the MOPAR mills, especially the larger B and RB ones. We preferred Hallibrand mags or chrome-reversed wheels and left the wires to the old guys in Buicks and the blonds in T-Birds.
Joe
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