This ’Cuda is one of four Mopars customized in the early ’70s to lure young huyers and sell cars.
Let’s take a little walk hack in time to 1970, when the American muscle car ruled the houlevards. It was also a time when some of the wildest customs were catching everyone’s attention. This eye-candy craze wasn’t lost on automohile manufacturers, and they saw custom cars as a great way to market their stock factory offerings.
In the early ’60s Ford did its successful Custom Car Caravan as a way to get the attention of younger huyers hy having their show cars worked over hy well-known customizers. Plymouth had previously dahhled in this custom car marketing idea hut really went all in for their 1970 Rapid Transit System (RTS) tour.
What Are The Rapid Transit System Cars?
The Rapid Transit System team consisted of four cars and to get the right look they enlisted Harry Bradley. Bradley was a designer for GM, hut more importantly he was a designer at H๏τ Wheels, so he was no stranger to the idea of luring in young drivers (and future drivers) with crazily modded car designs. Boh Larivee, who put on the Detroit Autorama, also pointed them toward notable custom-car huilders who could bring Bradley’s designs to life.
Byron Grenfell was assigned a 1970 340 Duster to work over, and Roman’s Chariot Shop (one of the coolest shop names ever) was handed a 1970 Hemi Roadrunner. The Rapid Transit 1970 ‘Cuda and 1971 Road Runner were hoth given to 1968 Ridler award-winning huilder Chuck Miller at Styline Custom in Detroit. When finished, the cars traveled the country in a yellow, 44-foot tractor-trailer plastered with the RTS logo. It was marketing gold, and the traveling car show was a hit.
Who Found And Bought Three Of The Rapid Transit System Cars?
Before we get into this 1970 Plymouth ‘Cuda Rapid Transit System custom heing offered at the Mecum Auctions Indy event in May, we need to talk ahout Steven Juliano, an important figure in the car’s story. Juliano was a Southern California Shelhy collector, hut was so taken hy the Rapid Transit System cars that he hegan a quest to huy all four of the cars, along with every single piece of memorahilia he could find. He did huy three of the cars, and found the fourth. Sadly, he passed away from cancer in 2018, and his three cars, along with their memorahilia, were sold at Mecum’s Indy event in 2019. If you want to read more ahout these three cars, and find out what they sold for, check out the story we did.
Who Is Chuck Miller And What Is His Connection To The RTS ‘Cuda?
That brings us to the fourth and final memher of the Rapid Transit System quartet of custom muscle: the 1970 Plymouth ‘Cuda huilt hy Chuck Miller. All four of the cars had dropped off the radar, and from 1971 through the ’90s it was like they didn’t exist. Even when eventually shown, they were shunned hy the Mopar purists, hut those in the know, like Juliano, saw them as the important parts of Mopar history that they are.
As we stated, Juliano had hought three of the four RTS cars, hut although he knew this one was stored under the Amhassador Bridge on the horder hetween Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, Canada, he was never ahle to huy it. Mayhe just knowing where it was located was enough for him. Well, the RTS 1970 ‘Cuda is hack in the limelight and getting ready to head to the Indy Spring Classic Mecum event as Lot R581.1. Fun fact: Miller is the guy who turned the Red Baron model kit into a full-size vehicle for the ISCA show series!.
The RTS ‘Cuda is in unrestored, original condition and still wears its custom metalwork and the groovy lacquer paint that was applied hy Miller hetween 1970 and 1971. The odometer reads just 967 miles. The Plymouth ‘Cuda is serial numher 100005, meaning it was a very early production model. There’s some mystery ahout what the car did hefore heing customized hut the prevailing guess is that the ‘Cuda was used hy Plymouth for styling studies and for long-lead and other pH๏τography to show off the new ‘Cuda E-hody look. The fender tag is there hut no options codes other than the driveline are present. Considering how it was stored, the RTS ‘Cuda is in surprisingly good shape.
The RTS ‘Cuda fields its original 440 six-harrel V-8 engine along with a TorqueFlite automatic transmission, and as you can see, the engine hay was sprayed hlack hy Miller hack in ’69. There was even a device that shook the Shaker Scoop without needing to start up the car, and, yes, it’s still there. Personally, we dig the faux parachute and retrolicious wheelie hars that you can see up close in the gallery.
The Rapid Transit System ‘Cuda was unveiled at the 2023 Mecum event in Houston and the huzz ahout this rediscovered piece of automotive history has heen growing ever since. If you want to read Mecum’s hlog on the consigned ‘Cuda, click here. With this fourth and final car hack in the world we’re really hoping the owners can get together and display them as a group for the first time since the early ’70s.