their way over to the garage that housed
the Challenger. It was in poor shape, with a
broken torsion bar and paint/Bondo chunks
falling off of it, the result of some of the
previous owner’s horrific bodywork. “It was
a mess, to say the least,” Paul says.
But interestingly enough, Paul put a
new carburetor on the 383 Wedge, rigged
up a gas can, and got it to start right up.
“Game on,” Paul exclaimed. Though it
was pretty beat up, Paul started driving
the car around locally, showing the locals
that the “Russel-Mobile” was still alive
and kickin’!
This went on for the better part of two
years. Paul kept hitting the local shows
and cruise-ins. But soon he realized that
the car was slowly falling apart and getting
dangerous to drive. “The hole in the
driver’s floor kept getting bigger and bigger,
so I had to decide to either pass the car on
or fix it; I decided on the latter,” Paul says.
NO-REST RESTORATION
And so it began. Paul readied the car for
a complete restoration. He tore the Chal-
lenger down and started looking for a shop
that could bring this ride back to life.
“I had a hard time finding someone to
do the extensive metalwork. Many places
didn’t want the challenge that this Chal-
lenger was about to give them,” Paul says.
He then found Richie Giordano and Tommy
Sparks of G-Force Collision and had them
take a look to see if the car was even
fixable. “It’s not the worst I’ve seen, but
pretty close. It can be saved, “Richie said.
Without a hitch, the guys took on the holey
Mopar. “They rose to the occasion and
jumped right in,” Paul says.
Turns out the car needed full quarter-
panels, trunk floor, wheelwells, driver and
passenger floor panels, and lower rocker
panels. It also had rear-window damage
from the vinyl top. The fenders, inner fend-
ers, and doors also needed work. From
there, they sprayed the car in high-impact
Top Banana Yellow on the underside and
engine bay, and returned the roller back
to Paul so he could install the drivetrain. “I
thought about spraying the car the original
FF4 Light Green Metallic, but then my mom
and Joseph reminded me about why Russel
loved the car so much; it was that intense
yellow paint job,” Paul says. Overall, it was
a year and a half of work getting the metal-
and bodywork finished, but to Paul and his
brothers, it was well worth it.
Paul brewed up a plan for the power-
plant of this ride. He handed the parts
off to Tommy Sparks and let him do his
magic. It all started with Russel’s 383ci
Wedge block that was in the car when he
passed. It was then stroked to 431 ci with
the rotating assembly consisting of Eagle
crankshaft rods and Diamond pistons.
Next, Frankie Ford manhandled the Indy
aluminum heads, and the Wedge was
finished with a Howard’s solid-roller cam.
He backed it with a built 727 Torqueflite
with a reverse manual valvebody and a
Gear Vendors overdrive. A Dana 60 built
with 35-spline Strange axles and spool
gets the power to the pavement.
For suspension duties, a complete Cal-
Trac split monoleaf adjustable suspension
with adjustable shocks was mounted out
back. Up front, Slant 6 torsion bars were
added along with a strengthened K-mem-
ber and adjustable shocks. For stopping
power, vented and slotted disc brakes from
The Right Stuff were installed at the cor-
ners to get this beast to come to a halt. For
running gear, Paul chose steel wheels with
the Mopar dog-dish hubcaps for the street
(15x7 front, 15x8 rear). He wrapped them
in Mickey Thompson rubber 205/70R15
and 275/60/15, respectively. For the track,
Paul has a set of lightweight Centerline rims
for better e.t.’s.
Once the car was moving under its own
power, Paul sent the car back so the body
could be finished off. Once the bodywork
was finished to perfection, Tommy and
Richie finished spraying the high-impact
yellow onto its flanks. From there, the car
came back to Paul, where he finished
installing the interior, putting in the glass,
and installing the finishing trim. The interior
has an eight-point rollbar, Hurst Pistol Grip
Quarter Stick, lightweight Kirkey’s seats,
and an assortment of AutoMeter gauges in
the newly installed rallye dash, something it
didn’t come with originally.
Other features include fuel-system
modifications, such as installation of a
Mopar sumped fuel tank with a MagnaFuel
pump, which feeds the thirsty Holley 950
carburetor. An MSD digital 6al-2 supplies
the ignition system, a Power Master 140-
amp alternator supplies the power, and
a Griffin Radiator with a set of Spal fans
keeping everything cool.
Once completed, Paul was proud of what
they built. “It’s exactly as Russel wanted it:
a street/’strip car with plenty of power,” Paul
says. The Top Banana Yellow was a hit with
the crew as well, as it made this E-body
impossible to ignore wherever it went.
And since it was built to hit the quarter-mile,
it was only right that Paul christened it at
the ’strip after some time on the streets.
He even ran it at Hot Rod Drag Week in
2016–2017, pulling consistent high-10-sec-
ond runs every season.
However, issues popped up in 2017.
A thrown rod did major damage to the
Wedge, so Paul regrouped and went in
a different direction. “I had heard about
RUSSEL’S MUSCLE
64 moparmuscle.com