How much is a 1970 Dodge Super Bee worth?
Detailing
| Vehicle: | 1970 Dodge Super Bee |
|---|---|
| Number Produced: | 15,506 (1970), 1,268 (1970 440 Six Pack) |
| Original List Price: | $3,074 |
| SCM Valuation: | $32,900 (plus 15%–25% for 4-speed) |
| Tune Up Cost: | $300 (with Six Pack) |
What makes a Dodge Coronet a Super Bee?
The Super Bee was equipped with the 360 V8 engine and 300 hp, the three-speed Torque Flite automatic transmission (or the four-speed manual transmission), sports wide wheels, front spoiler, and a rear spoiler-style Trans Am with the Super Bee spelling (with an optional blind in the rear window).
How much horsepower does a 1970 Dodge Super Bee have?
335 horsepower
Engines and Performance Dodge sold the Super Bee with three different engines. The 383 cu-in big-block V8 was rated at 335 horsepower and 425 pound-feet of torque, while the 440 cu-in big block V8 could generate up to 390 horsepower and 490 pound-feet of torque.
What’s the difference between a Dodge Coronet and a Dodge Super Bee?
The 1968-1969 Dodge Coronet R/T and Super Bee engine contained various components taken off the 440 Magnum, including cylinder heads and hot camshaft. Instead of bucket seats, the Super Bee came with a vinyl bench, in an interior more reminiscent of a taxicab than a near-luxury traveler.
What’s the difference between a Super Bee a coronet?
Are Dodge Super Bees rare?
The Hemi-equipped Super Bee is obviously the rarest of them all, with fewer than 500 built over four model years. But 440-equipped cars are also scarce. Granted, Dodge made a few good thousands of them, but certain combinations were ordered in very small numbers back in the day.
What is the rarest Dodge Coronet?
The rarest is the Hemi-powered Coronet 440 convertible (440 was the trim level not the engine). Only six were built.
How rare are Dodge Super Bees?