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The original Cuda was a bit before me, but I always heard they were unreliable. No one ever explained why. For the 2000z, they were always broken down, but so were the other honda-powered vehicles.
I don't know about the original Cuda, but I had a 65 Valiant, which is what the first Barracuda was based on. (Actually the first was 64. A friend actually has a line on one.)
The Valiant was one of the most solid cars I have ever driven, but it was a hand-me-down from my mom. It got sold with under 100K on the odo.
I did have a 73 Barracuda and then a 71 Barracuda. The build quality was, in a word, poor.
The 73 actually had 2x4s between the seat tracks and the floor. I thought that someone had added them, to raise the seat, but when I tried to remove them, the seat studs were way too long, so I have to believe they were "as-built".
Other than that, it was typical early 70s Mopar quality. (The trunk lid actually
rang when you slammed it.)
Unfortunately, it had NO options. No power anything. No air. It was a bare-bones 318/automatic car. Which led to the 71 Barracuda...
The 71 was fairly well appointed. Had a 318, 3 speed in the floor, PS, A/C, Rally gauges, Magnum 500 wheels, hounds tooth upholstery, and a console-mounted cassette player/recorder. It was also a crap can. It was already in the process of being reclaimed by Mother Nature, by the time I bought it, in 1977 or so. It always had a vibration in the driveline, like the driveshaft was out of balance. It had the mother of all clutches in it. It almost took two feet to press the pedal.
Last time I saw it was about a year after I had sold it. It was off the side of the road, near my house. Had skidded off during one of our uncommon snow storms.
(I added the wing and the "twin trucker" CB antennas.)
