Tim, Once again I will address this dash one 4 door. In the recent posting on eBay last month, Mike did state that the dash one 2x4 was added by the previous owner, and he was unsure of the TorqueFlight being a factory installation. The following is from old e-mails about this car. I placed an e-mail on the FL list as a response another e-mail concerning this car in Cars And Parts. After that, Mike (current owner) e-mailed me. I gave him the history of the car from my firsthand knowledge. It is an original factory D500 with air, PS, PB, P seat, and PW. I think from the Las Vegas area. I saw it in 1985 and was given a ride to demonstrate the difference with a TorqueFlight and dual quads. The owner then in Las Vegas, Clarence, and our mutual friend Ray from LA, both said he put this equipment on the car. In fact, the dual quad set up was offered to me in 1982 by Ray (I saw it on his dinning room table), before it was sold to Clarence. (Stupid me, I didn't buy it because I didn't have a 56 Dodge yet!) Clarence didn't do it to clone a D500-1, but because he liked the added performance. I had even once provided a piece of stainless trim for it. A few years later, Clarence sold it to somebody in British Columbia, who restored it. That fellow sold it to somebody in Washington state. When he put it up for sale on the internet about a year ago (2000), a flurry of e-mails bounced around the ForwardLook list. I said to the FL list the same things then, and the Washington fellow e-mailed me. I told him the same story. If he failed to pass it on to Mike, he misrepresented the car, because he was informed. Clarence and Ray have both installed TorqueFlights in several retired CHP D500s back in the 60' and 70's. This may be part of the origin of the rumored 56 Dodge TorqueFlight cars in California. It is my guess that the factory never made a "true dash one" with an automatic tranny or a 4 door. I would assume that all dash ones were built as special purpose race only cars. The PowerFlight 2 speed automatic does not have the gear ratios and stall converter for good off the line race starts. And probably not enough durability for serious racing either, being only air cooled. The factory wouldn't want the slower auto cars slowing down the image that the manual trans dash one cars built up. They were the fastest factory cars ever built through 1956. There is little documentation of what parts went into a dash one, other than the dual quads, which are the only visible difference. They are not in the Parts Book. It is generally assumed that all factory dash ones were also equipped with Imperial brakes (wider drum, bigger bolt pattern, larger studs) and wheels (wider and stiffer), which were even bigger than the New Yorker 12 inch brakes many D500s came with. And maybe even stiffer springs than the normally stiffer springs of the standard D500. The dash one exhaust manifolds were also much better and unique to the dash one, having a 4 bolt flange to the exhaust pipe and larger ports. The cams were also bigger than the street D500s. Tim Dupont has the only factory built dash one I know of, and it is equipped with the Imperial brakes, unique manifolds, big cam, and manual trans. I've driven it. It's fast! Dave Homstad 56 Dodge D500 -----Original Message----- From: Forward Look Mopar Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of DupontTim@xxxxxxx Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2001 12:08 PM To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [FWDLK] Dash One Clone Concerns Greetings, First of all I would very much appreciate a chat with anyone who has information concerning the codes for the 56 Dodges used on their IBM cards (build sheets). Likewise if anyone wants help decoding their sheet I will give them all the help I can. My inquiry to Chrysler Historical Society on option codes netted next to nothing. Dennis Kennedy, a 56 Dodge expert, has many codes, however there were certain codes on my build sheet that are not known to him. I have asked the list previously and got no response at all, but some time has passed and maybe new information has surfaced. Well , once again I feel compelled to comment regarding the reported D500-1 owned by Mike Squires, I have not seen any proof to dispute the information that was gathered by list members in Titanic proportions (most well before Mike owned the car) and carrying truly overwhelming weight leading me to believe that beyond any reasonable doubt it is not in present form or past documentation a D500-1. While a very fine and beautiful car Mike is still representing and selling it as an authentic factory D500-1. Can anyone, please, uncover one piece of tangible evidence that will support his assertion. All I can say to this point is, Buyer Beware. What's amazing to me is that only a handful of list members have expressed there concerns over this. Ask yourself, would advertised sale of a persistently misrepresented C300, which was by all accounts incorrect and a probable clone, bring a minimal response from the members of the list? Should a misrepresented D500-1 clone be viewed differently? Please Help. Sincerely Tim Dupont
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