Yes, you are absolutely correct: R/T stands for Road and Track. (I'll go
in on this bet if ya want..I need some more cash for the truck goodies
anyway) ;)
Back in the "Muscle Car era" (60's for most of them) Dodge used the R/T
acronym to designate that the car is capable of being on the "Road" and
"Track". (Charger R/T is a prime example of this.) That's the easiest and
quickest way to explain this...most of us Mopar fans know this anyway so
there's no way to debate it. It's a loosing battle for anyone who says
otherwise.
- Bernd
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ryan Stewart" <firebird@kymtnnet.org>
To: <dakota-truck@buffnet.net>
Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2000 12:04 PM
Subject: DML: Re: What R/T really means
> Grr! Is it a 4.7? Anyhow, no, I'm pretty damn sure it stands for Road and
> Track. I'd bet a few hundred bucks on it, then we could call Dodge and
see,
> wanna make it a bet? :-)
>
> -Ryan
> 99 DA RC R/T
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Jun 20 2003 - 11:52:37 EDT