Mopar Muscle – October 2019

(Barré) #1
put a wing on it, and that has an origi-

nal Dana rear, don’t cut it up, don’t mess
the car up. He slid the title over and then

pulled it back and asked what color I was
going to paint the car? What kind of wheels

I was going to put on it?”
What Armando inherited was a car that

had been beat on for many years and then
used as a shed. Along the way, the B7 blue
paint had faded and an F3 Frost Green

fender, hood, and grille from another car
were hung. The body had been sprayed

with red primer and the rust holes in the
usual locations often found on dormant

older Mopars were visible. His ambitious
plan was to do the work on it himself. “I

wanted to make it custom,” he explains.
“I didn’t want to take it too far that if

something happened and I had to sell it,

the new owner couldn’t restore it back to
stock.” The other thing that was crystal

clear was Jimmy’s request to keep the car
unmolested. That really helped Armando

shape his vision for what he wanted to
build. Plans don’t often fall in place as

expected, and that was certainly the case
with his attempt to do the rebuild himself.

He was running against time because
Jimmy’s health had deteriorated. He states,

“I knew that he was ill and I wanted to
have it built so that he could have one last

ride in it, or at least drive it again.” That
sense of urgency prompted him to take the

car to Bent Metal Customs in Lansdale,
Pennsylvania. His initial discussions with

shop owner Justin Bruner involved just the
bodywork. The time factor quickly crept

in, and the desire to have Jimmy drive the

car were heavy on his mind, so he decided
they should just do all the work on the GTX

to move the goal forward. His discussions
with Justin revolved around keeping the

Plymouth’s body stock but giving it a
modern look. He wanted to be able to

drive it, so the upgrades were focused on
comfort, safety, and reliability. On the list

was an upgrade to disc brakes at all four
corners, suspension, a leather interior, air

conditioning, fuel injection, power steering,
and improved HID lighting.

Rebuilding the GTX kicked off with
a mediablasted bare shell as the start-

ing point, which led to some sheetmetal
replacement. For that, Justin cracked open

the AMD catalog and ordered new door-
skins, a hood, right fender, inner and outer

wheelhouses, trunk floor, interior floorpan,

FAMILY HEIRLOOM


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