1968-70 Dodge Charger: Who should get credit?

1970 Dodge Charger rear end

(EXPANDED FROM 9/16/2022)

We should start with a more impertinent question: What should — and shouldn’t — the creators of the 1968-70 Dodge Charger get credit for? Yes, this was an iconic design, but it was also flawed in ways that aren’t often discussed. The second-generation Charger was a routine example of Detroit groupthink.

What kicked off this line of questioning was Daniel Strohl’s (2019) feature story about Richard Sias. The former Chrysler designer played a major role in developing the 1968 Dodge Charger. Sais, who died in March, 2019 at the age of 80, reportedly left the auto industry out of frustration with his experience working on the dramatic redesign of Dodge’s mid-sized halo coupe.

The Charger’s double diamond-shape almost didn’t see the light of day, according to Strohl (2019). Dodge chief designer William Brownlie tried to squelch this design direction, which was based upon advanced concepts created by Sias.

1967 Dodge Charger

1968 Dodge Charger
Rarely has a reskinning resulted in such a radically different car. Even the taillights on the 1968 Charger (bottom image) had no resemblance to the 1967 model (top) or other contemporary Dodges (Old Car Brochures).

Richard M. Langworth and Jan P. Norbye (1985) summed up the 1968 Charger as “easily the most exciting Dodge of the decade.” Indeed, this generation of Charger has become so iconic in Chrysler history that it is hard to imagine it not having reached production.

1968 Charger was a great but hardly perfect design

Let’s flesh out why the Charger did not reach god-like perfection. The biggest reason why is that this was the most derivative Chrysler of the late-60s.

Also see ‘1970 Plymouth Barracuda should have been like an Australian Valiant Charger’

Here we have a who’s who of borrowed ideas such as the flying buttress C-pillars from General Motors’ mid-sized coupes, Chevrolet’s dual round taillights and the Ford Mustang’s high-mounted bumpers. In addition, the side crease hints at the second-generation Corvair and the recessed ovoid grille has some similarities to the 1966 Buick Riviera.

1966 Pontiac GTO

1966 Chevrolet Corvair

1965 Ford Mustang

1966 Buick Riviera
The Charger heavily borrowed styling elements from recent sporty coupe designs from GM and Ford (Old Car Brochures).

The only inventive aspect of the Charger’s design was the double diamond-shaped fenders. They gave the popular coke-bottle look a more muscular and futuristic twist.

The Charger was rather large — in the wrong places

Another Charger weakness was that it was too big. The 1968 models were the largest of any mid-sized coupe. As a case in point, the Pontiac GTO was a good seven inches shorter.

To make matters worse, the Charger’s extra length was in all the wrong places — at least according to the then-popular long-hood, short-deck design philosophy. The Charger’s big and flat rear deck looked like an aircraft carrier. This problem was accentuated by the recessed rear window. Even the optional bumble bee stripe couldn’t hide the long overhang.

The Charger was also too wide. For 1968 more than an inch was added to the car’s waist. This resulted in a more sharply angled turn under, but the fender shoulders looked overly plump. Time to hit the gym, dude.

1967-68 Dodge Charger and competition specifications

In fairness, even with the Charger’s extra size it still weighed less than a GTO. That was partly because Pontiac’s mid-sized halo car came with a bigger V8 as standard, but even a LeMans weighed 163 pounds more.

1968 Dodge Charger

1968 Dodge Coronet

1968 Plymouth Satellite
For 1968 Chrysler’s mid-sized B-body was widened by more than an inch, which could be seen most obviously — and unfortunately — in the Charger’s slab-sided shoulders (Old Car Brochures).

The basic shape would have been more appropriate on a compact. If the Charger had been put on Chrysler’s A-Body, it might have been much more successful — aesthetically and commercially — than Plymouth’s 1967-69 Barracuda.

Why didn’t William Brownlie get his way?

In light of the above-listed disadvantages, what mostly elevated the Charger’s styling to legendary status was the exceptional quality of its execution.

However, even if you don’t buy the above critique, Brownlie’s resistance to the double-diamond concept was at least somewhat understandable. According to fellow Dodge designer Diran Yazejian (2019), Brownlie was concerned that the proposal did not possess “any design evolution whatsoever from its predecessor” — including a fastback roofline.

Also see ‘Matt DeLorenzo’s Dodge book is a highly polished something’

Sias had allies among senior designers. Maybe they did a quiet end-run around Brownlie. Maybe it was serendipity. Either way, New York Times reporter Jerry Garrett (2004) noted that “only a timely intervention by Elwood Engel, Chrysler’s vice president for styling, saved it.”

1966 Dodge Charger

1968 Dodge Charger
One of the few visual cues carried over for 1968 was an ovoid grille with vertical bars and hidden headlights. Dodge product planning staff reportedly tried to cancel the latter to cut costs. Fortunately, they were kept (Old Car Brochures).

Stohl’s (2019) telling of the story is worth a read; it has some similarities to the revolt against Harley Earl’s proposed 1959 models while the General Motors’ design chief was on vacation (Severson, 2008).

Sias didn’t get credit for the Charger’s success

Despite the palace intrigue, the double diamond-shaped Charger ultimately made it into production and was a rousing success. Output jumped from under 16,000 units in 1967 to roughly 96,000 in 1968. From that point onward the Charger outsold the GTO, although it traded placed a number of times with Ford’s mid-sized, high-end performance cars.

1964-73 mid-sized sporty car production

Strohl drew upon Yazejian’s description of subsequent events in describing how Brownlie apparently did not recognize Sias for his leadership in the Charger’s design.

Strohl also noted that, “To this day, many references discussing the 1968 Dodge Charger either leave Sias out of the story or only make reference in passing to his original double-diamond design.”

1968 Pontiac GTO

1968 Ford Torino GT fastback
The Pontiac GTO and Ford Torino GT were the Charger’s closest competitors sales-wise even though their listed prices were lower. Pictured are 1968 models. Chrysler’s muscle cars were presumably quite profitable (Old Car Brochures).

Collectible Automobile has offered a case in point. A story about the 1968-70 Charger emphasized Brownlie’s role as head of the Dodge studio. Author Karl Pippart III and the editors of the magazine (2018) did not bring up Brownlie’s resistance to the double diamond-shaped concept. Sias was only mentioned in a quote pulled from a press release: “Hundreds of sketches were made of details but the design first sketched by Dick Sias and coordinated into a creative design by Brownlie went relatively unchanged.”

Hemmings commentators engage the debate

Strohl’s article resulted in an unusually robust debate in the comment section. Burton Bouwkamp (2019), who described himself as Dodge’s chief engineer and manager of product planning from 1964-68, stated that Sias “may have created the original design concept but I think the credit should go to Bill Brownlie who selected the design, refined it on a three dimensional clay model and proposed it to Management.”

Raffi (2019) countered that the overall team deserved credit but that “the fundamental visual characteristics of the design are all Richard Sias. Brownlie gets credit for one thing . . . angrily pulling the gas filler cap from the center of the rear tail light panel clay model under final development and pressing it into the upper rear fender flank stating ‘THAT’S where it goes.’”

1970 Dodge Charger
A top-mounted gas filler cap helped to differentiate the Charger from the 1966-67 GTO. Dodge’s bumble bee stripe visually shortened the long decks of its late-60s sporty coupes. This is a 1970 model.

In a 2015 interview with the Daily Inter Lake newspaper, Sias said that he led the design team that developed the Charger’s full-scale model. However, he also gave “most of the credit to his design team” and was not “one to dwell on the minutiae of style and design elements,” according to reporter Sam Wilson (2015).

Those don’t sound like the words of a glory hog. Commentator Raffi (2019) wrote that Sias “always took the time to help me (and) encourage my work” but was “sometimes grizzly to those who dismissed him.”

1970 Dodge Charger
The 1970 Charger’s facelift added a donut bumper but kept the bulges on the top of the fenders above the front wheels.

So then who should get credit?

The process of bringing a car design from conception to production is complicated enough that a simple, either/or answer may not be possible. However, Brownlie would appear to have been given too much credit relative to Sias if it is true that Engel overruled him and the final design was “relatively unchanged” from the first sketch.

1969 Dodge Charger ad
Dodge Charger ads could be sexist, particularly in 1969. Click on image to enlarge (Old Car Advertisements).

That said, commentator Greg B. (2019) quite rightly noted how upper-level managers “were always going to receive much of the credit or blame for design successes and failures.”

This philosophy aligns with that of Michael Lamm and Dave Holls in their book, A Century of Automotive Style. They write that “full credit has to go to the person in overall charge because, theoretically at least, it’s his judgement that counts. If the design succeeds, he’s a hero. If it fails, he’s out of a job. He’s the person responsible. And that’s the stark, total answer” (1996, p. 207).

If we’re going by this standard, then Engel plausibly should have been given more credit for the Charger than Brownlie since he intervened.

The attack of the bean counters

Bouwkamp’s (2019) discussion of his own role with the Charger illustrates the back and forth between departments involved in the project. Bouwkamp wrote that he and Brownlie decided the Charger would have a recessed rear window. This was a compromise between Brownlie’s desire for a fastback and Bouwkamp’s concern about the added cost of an exposed cargo area.

As previously discussed, the flying buttress C-pillars were aesthetically debatable. Just as importantly, the first-generation Charger’s versatile cargo area was a unique competitive advantage that might have proven increasingly valuable after the freshness of the redesign wore off.

1967 Dodge Charger interior

1970 Dodge Charger interior
The second-generation Charger dropped its most unique and practical feature: fold-down back seats and a pass-through from the trunk into the passenger compartment that allowed carrying large items.

The limited-production 500 model introduced in 1969 has an odd, cobbled-together look, but it vaguely hints at how a partial fastback could have filled out the deck — and avoided copying GM.

Bouwkamp’s opposition to the fastback is a potential example of the penny-wise, pound-foolish thinking that increasingly dominated Chrysler — and contributed to its financial collapse a decade later.

1969 Ford Cobra

1969 Pontiac GTO
The Charger’s chiseled look was more aggressive than Ford’s and the opposite of GM’s soft and understated curves.

The Charger sold well despite relatively high prices

What’s ironic about internal debates over the Charger’s production costs is that the nameplate sold quite well despite being fairly high priced compared to other mid-sized sporty cars.

In 1969 the list price for a base Charger was almost $200 higher than a Pontiac GTO hardtop even though the Dodge’s standard engine was a six. Meanwhile, the Charger’s new SE model listed for $3,860 — almost $700 more than a GTO with the Judge package.

1966-69 Dodge Charger and competitors prices

A more apples-to-apples comparison might be the Charger R/T and Torino GT Cobra, which was Ford’s top-end performance car. The R/T listed for $3,592, which was almost $400 more than the Cobra.

The Charger’s higher prices were in alignment with the rest of Chrysler’s mid-sized cars, whose high-end performance models tended to be a notch above the competition. The Charger R/T hardtop was priced $150 higher than the Coronet R/T and $176 more than a Plymouth GTX.

1968 Plymouth Barracuda notchback coupe

1968 Plymouth Barracuda fastback
The double diamond-shaped Charger could have been a much more successful pony car than the 1967-69 Barracuda — particularly compared to the hunchbacked coupe pictured in the top image (Old Car Brochures).

What if Brownlie had been more successful?

Let’s return to a central plot line of this story — Brownlie’s management of the Charger’s redesign. I can understand if he had felt stung by Engel overriding him on Sias’s proposal. However, the above-discussed comments paint the picture of a manager who might have benefitted from additional leadership training.

Also see ‘1969-71 Chrysler: An Exner idea fumbled again’

That said, Brownlie deserves credit for advocating that the fastback should have been kept — albeit with a more tapered and subdued look. He was also correct in seeking to better connect the 1968 Charger’s design language with that of the previous generation. Rejecting the dual round taillights would have been a good start. This would have also reduced the “copycat” quality of the Charger’s styling.

1968 Ford Mustang
The 1967-69 Barracuda’s styling lacked the Mustang’s long cowl and short deck (pictured is a 1968 model). However, the Plymouth was arguably the better match for those who needed more back-seat and cargo room (Old Car Brochures).

Meanwhile, Brownlie could have achieved true greatness if he had kept the Charger from getting too big. Not increasing the Charger’s width and chopping the rear overhang at least a half foot would have helped. Best of all, imagine if he succeeded in turning the Charger into a pony car.

Then again, never mind . . .

Okay, a compact Charger wasn’t going to happen given Chrysler’s religious devotion to bigger, glitzier and more powerful cars during the tenure of CEO Lynn Townsend. So let’s settle for the 1968-70 Charger integrating the best features of the first generation models and the double-diamond concept.

With enough give and take Sias might have even stuck around a little bit longer. Presumably Chrysler could have used his talent in the difficult years ahead.

NOTES:

This story was first posted June 1, 2019, expanded on Feb. 5, 2021 and updated on Sept. 16, 2022 and Dec. 29, 2023. Production figures, prices and dimensions came from the auto editors of Consumer Guide (2006), Gunnell (2002), the Automobile Catalog (2021) and the Classic Car Database (2021).

Share your reactions to this post with a comment below or a note to the editor.


RE:SOURCES

ADVERTISING & BROCHURES:

  • oldcaradvertising.com: Dodge Charger (1969)
  • oldcarbrochures.org: Buick Riviera (1966); Chevrolet Corvair (1966); Dodge Charger (1966, 1967, 1968); Dodge Coronet (1968); Ford Torino GT (1968); Ford Mustang (1965, 1968); Pontiac GTO (1968)

8 Comments

  1. Very interesting article. I learned some things about the Charger, and Chrysler Corporation of the time in general. Can’t say I agree with the comments about the fastback style being an improvement over the flying buttresses. I personally did not like the Charger 500 when it was introduced because of the shape of the rear window.

    • I agree with you about the Charger 500. It was a cobbled-together, low-cost design. The goal was better aerodynamics rather than good styling. I should have clarified — and did in this expanded version of the story — that the 500 hints at how a fuller fastback could have better filled out the rear deck.

      One approach that might have worked: A C-pillar with a subtle arc and slightly inset rear window vaguely akin to the 1968 AMC Javelin. That would have required reshaping the rear-quarter windows.

  2. All styling trends are shared, borrowed, or copied. The ‘68 Charger, no matter where the styling cues originated from, is a supremely handsome car. It looks lithe and trim compared to the “overinflated balloon” GM intermediates, which I disliked when they were new. Still do. This is when Bill Mitchell has lost his touch, and was starting to slip into bizarre styling.

  3. I don’t know what could have been different than what happened. The Dodge Charger from 1968-74 was a success. I myself have owned three . A 74, a 72 and a 69 ( which I still own).The Charger in every single year dwarfed the numbers of the Challenger which didn’t even have B or RB power for its final three years. I can think of few other cars that were as well balanced and attractive as the Charger between these years

  4. I think that in the scheme of things, the 1968 Dodge Charger and the 1968 Plymouth Road Runner were easily the most exciting cars to come out of Detroit into the showroom floor. None of the G.M. intermediates made a positive impression with one exception, the 1968 G.T.O. If I had not been going to school and was out in the job market, I would have found a way to spend the extra money to buy the Road Runner or the Charger in 1968. The cars just looked right in the showrooms and on the road. G.M. did not get their intermediates “right” until they squared-up the Oldsmobile Cutlass sedans in 1970-1972. The G.M. intermediates were fixed for the 1969 Grand Prix and the 1970 Monte Carlo, but the Chargers and the Plymouths were right on the money. I preferred the Charger’s rear-end treatment in 1969 and 1970, but Chrysler at least got the overall styling right between 1968 and 1970, in my opinion. Too bad everything at Chrysler was heading in the wrong direction in terms of build quality and marketing confusion in the minds of most American consumers.

    The argument about the 1969 Charger 500 and the 1970 Superbird were race car anomalies, as only rabid MoPar racers cared. The other observation I would make about the true fastback roofs, were if the fastback were true magic, then the 1967-1970 Barracudas should have sold like hotcakes, but did not. I have to agree that the Brazilian Charger and the Australian Valiant Charger looked better than the Barracudas in the U.S. But I wonder if American drivers would have given up their intermediates for them. The problem is beauty is in the eye of the beholder and what is not discussed is what compromises in terms of the mechanical package a thinner overall width would have made in the intermediate Dodge and Plymouth unit-bodies. Both the Dodge and the Plymouth intermediates could be fitted with big engines and wide tires !

    • James, the 1967-69 Plymouth Barracuda fastback consistently outsold the notchback (I do a data dive on fastbacks here). One could argue that this was primarily because it looked less awkward than the notchback, but the fastback also had the most versatile packaging of any pony car (e.g., it was roomier than the Mustang fastback).

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