Since a Canadian Dodge is basically a Plymouth body with Dodge front sheet metal (a.k.a. Plodge), it is a couple of inches shorter in the wheelbase and slightly lighter than a US Dodge of the same body style. If they were able to get away with using the US Dodge D500 engine or a Fury engine, it should be slightly faster than a D500 or a Fury. A 2 door sedan is lighter than a Fury hard top by about 200 pounds. Or maybe the car's sponsors were Canadian. Dave Homstad 56 Dodge D500 -----Original Message----- From: Forward Look Mopar Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Jan & Roger van Hoy Sent: Saturday, March 18, 2006 1:19 PM To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [FWDLK] 1956 NASCAR The June issue of Collectible Automobile has a nice article about the August 1956 race at Road America, Wisconsin. Some of the cars are Canadian Plodges, some are American Dodges. [A Plodge was driven by Buck Baker ; I see one, possibly two more.] What was the largest engine available in the 1956 Canadian Dodge? 303? What model would the two door coupes be in the race? In addition to the possible weight advantage, what other reasons were there for running Canadian? --Roger van Hoy, Washougal, WA, '55 DeSoto, '58 DeSoto, '42 DeSoto, '56 Plymouth, '66 Plymouth, '41 Dodge ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1 ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1
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