Street Machine

STRAIGHT ARROW

MAX PHILLIPS HAD TO MAKE TWO CROSS-COUNTRY ROAD TRIPS TO BRING HIS ’74 DODGE DART BUILD TO FRUITION, BUT A 10-SECOND TIMESLIP MADE IT ALL WORTH IT

- STORY BORIS VISKOVIC PHOTOS JORDAN LEIST

A 10-second ’74 Dart made all Max Phillips’s cross-country road trips worthwhile

YOU could say Max Phillips jumped in at the deep end when, as a young bloke of just 20 years, he made the decision to fly across the country and buy a big block-powered, left-hand-drive US muscle car. “I had a VX Clubby as a P-plater and got sick of that,” Max says. “It was pretty expensive to modify, it made no power and it was slow, so I thought, ‘I’m getting rid of this and getting an older car and making it fast.’”

Enter this ’74 Dodge Dart, which Max tracked down via an internet forum, when they used to be a thing. “It was for sale a few months earlier, but I hadn’t sold my other car at the time, so I couldn’t buy it,” he says. “Lucky for me, the new owner sold it within a few months after doing some ‘improvemen­ts’. I bought it as quick as I could and used all the money I had as an apprentice to fly me and a mate, Mike Roycroft, over to NSW to go look at it.

“I couldn’t afford a rental car or accommodat­ion, so we just winged it on public transport and slept at the airport on the floor. Looking back, that was such a good trip and basically how the build has gone – just winging it and spending all my money.”

While the owner claimed the 440 in the car made 500hp, Max and Mike knew the guy might have been stretching the truth a little bit when it couldn’t even spin the tyres on gravel. But Max didn’t care; he’d already fallen in love with the car and it was heading west.

It took a few months before the car arrived in WA, and Max started putting his own touches on it shortly after, adding a 750 Holley, replacing the Mallory ignition with an MSD 6AL-2 (now upgraded to a 7AL-3), fitting a Magnafuel pump and regulator as well as an electric water pump. After those changes, it was time to have some fun.

“I took it to Gazzanats and Good Fryday and had a lot of fun, but I ended up breaking the front suspension and came to the realisatio­n that the car needed more power and had to handle a lot better,” Max says.

At this point Max decided to park the car up for a bit and put together a plan. He was now a tradesman and working FIFO, so it was time to get a bit more serious. “I ordered a new sheet-metal nine-inch, some 15x10 Pro Star rims and an engine plate. The diff ended up with 35-spline Moser axles, a full-spool Strange centre and 3.25 gears,” Max recalls. “I took the car up to Cronic Customs and they mini-tubbed it, built the diff to suit the new rims, installed some chassis connectors and mounted the engine to the new engine plate.”

With the back half of the car underway, it was time to start on the front. Max opted for a Reilly Motorsport­s Alterktion kit, which removes the torsion-bar suspension and replaces it with tubular A-arms, coil-over shocks and rack

MAX DECIDED THE 440 THE CAR CAME WITH JUST WOULDN’T CUT THE MUSTARD, SO HE BOUGHT ANOTHER 440 THAT HAD BEEN STROKED TO 500 CUBES

MAX PHILLIPS 1974 DODGE DART Paint: Chrysler Green Go

ENGINE

Type: 500ci Chrysler RB big-block

Inlet: Indy single-plane

Carb: 1050cfm Pro Systems

Nitrous: Nitrous Express 200-shot

Heads: Indy 440-1

Valves: 2.19in (in), 1.81in (ex)

Cam: Comp solid-roller

Pistons: CP forged

Crank: Eagle forged

Conrods: Crower forged

Radiator: Aluminium radiator, twin EL thermos

Exhaust: Custom 21/4in headers, twin 3.5in

exhaust

Ignition: MSD Pro Billet dizzy, MSD 7AL-3, MSD HVC2 coil

SHIFT

Gearbox: Paul Rogers Reid-case Powerglide with transbrake

Converter: Converter Services 4500rpm stall Diff: 9in, 3.25:1 gears, 35-spline Moser axles

BENEATH

Front: Reilly Motorsport­s Alterktion K-frame, coil-overs

Rear: AFCO shocks (r)

Steering: Reilly Motorsport­s rack-and-pinion

Brakes: Wilwood discs (f & r)

ROLLING STOCK

Weld S71 17x6 (f), Weld Pro Stars 15x10 (r)

Rubber: Continenta­l 175/55R17 (f), M/T ET Street 275/60R15

THANKS

and-pinion steering. The kit had the bonus of freeing up a lot of space in the engine bay, making fitting a big-block with a decent set of pipes a much easier propositio­n. He also went for Wilwood discs on all four corners – a massive improvemen­t over the drum brakes the car originally had!

One major change Max made that most people wouldn’t even notice is the smoothed and reshaped inner fenders. When Max bought the car, the engine bay had been chopped up to fit fenderwell headers, and he was never a fan of how it looked. The new sheet metal follows the factory shape fairly closely but deletes the shock mounts and helps free up more engine-bay real estate.

Somewhere along the way, Max decided the 440 the car came with just wouldn’t cut the mustard, so he bought another 440 that had been stroked to 500 cubes. However, once again, it was on the other side of the country. “I had issues with getting a company to ship it to WA,” he says. “They wanted to know 100 per cent that it didn’t have oil in it or it would be classed as dangerous goods. Plus the old owner had to have a forklift at their house to load it. It was all too much to deal with, so Mike and I loaded my F6 ute up with jerry cans of 98, put Sydney into Google Maps and drove to NSW and back in five days to go get it.”

By now it was 2018 and the car was starting to come together, but getting the engine bay painted really set the ball rolling. Marriner Smash Repairs did an awesome job blending the Green Go paint into the engine bay, which had previously been black, and it started to look like a different car. A lot more happened through 2019, with George Separovich from Blown Motorsport­s freshening up the engine and Glen from Nelg’s Ali Mods fabricatin­g a new fuel cell.

“It took until April 2020 to finally wire, plumb and assemble all of the parts back into the car, including a newly re-trimmed interior by Rob Sellen,” Max said. “It was a pretty big job doing all of it in my garage on jack stands, but it was worth it knowing that I built the majority of the car myself.”

While initial plans for the Dart were to use it as a burnout and events car, Max has been bitten pretty hard by the drag-racing bug and has decided that will be its main focus. He finally hit the track in November 2020 and went 10.80 straight off the trailer, with a PB on the night of 10.60@131mph.

Since then, Max has fitted a 200hp nitrous kit, and now has well over 700hp at the tyres. “Hopefully the nitrous brings the 60-foot times down and I can finally run a pass in the nines,” he says.

Sounds like a pretty solid plan.

MAX HAS FITTED A 200HP NITROUS KIT, AND NOW HAS WELL OVER 700HP AT THE TYRES

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 440 DART
DIFF HOUSING: A sheet-metal 9in with 3.25:1 gears and Moser 35-spline axles is kept off the ground by 15x10 Welds with 275 Mickey Thompson radials, which hook up just fine thanks to the Gazzard Brothers leaf spring and traction bar set-up
BOOT: The boot houses the nitrous bottle, Magnafuel pump and filter and the 31L fuel cell built by Nelg’s Ali Mods
ENGINE: The 440 RB big-block has been stroked to 500ci and features Indy heads and intake topped by a monster Pro Systems 1050 Dominator carb. The engine bay has been smoothed over and new inner guards were fashioned to delete the shock mounts and free up space
440 DART DIFF HOUSING: A sheet-metal 9in with 3.25:1 gears and Moser 35-spline axles is kept off the ground by 15x10 Welds with 275 Mickey Thompson radials, which hook up just fine thanks to the Gazzard Brothers leaf spring and traction bar set-up BOOT: The boot houses the nitrous bottle, Magnafuel pump and filter and the 31L fuel cell built by Nelg’s Ali Mods ENGINE: The 440 RB big-block has been stroked to 500ci and features Indy heads and intake topped by a monster Pro Systems 1050 Dominator carb. The engine bay has been smoothed over and new inner guards were fashioned to delete the shock mounts and free up space
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Rims:
My good mate Mike Roycroft; George Separovich at Blown Motorsport­s; Glen at Nelg’s Ali Mods; Terry at Shift Transmisso­ns; Adam at Cronic Customs; my other mates who helped whenever I needed it: Josh Herridge, Matt Haines, Josh Barron and the boys; whoever else I have forgotten
Rims: My good mate Mike Roycroft; George Separovich at Blown Motorsport­s; Glen at Nelg’s Ali Mods; Terry at Shift Transmisso­ns; Adam at Cronic Customs; my other mates who helped whenever I needed it: Josh Herridge, Matt Haines, Josh Barron and the boys; whoever else I have forgotten
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE: Although there’s a definite family resemblanc­e between the Dart and our local VF/VG Valiant coupes, the Yanks carried this body style through to 1976 with quite different front and rear end treatments. Max’s Dart already featured the classic Green Go paintjob and bumblebee stripe when he bought it some 10 years ago, but that’s about all that’s left of the car now
LEFT: Because 575hp at the tyres simply isn’t enough these days, a 200-shot Nitrous Express plate system was recently fitted. It runs a standalone fuel enrichment system using a Holley Black fuel pump and Holley reg with a custom four-litre front fuel cell running on QM23 race fuel
DASH: The standard gauge panel has been removed and a Holley digital dash installed, which gives Max plenty of display options
OPPOSITE PAGE: The torsion-bar front end was replaced early on with a Reilly Motorsport­s Alterktion K-frame. The 17x6 Weld S71 rims are the latest addition to the car
ABOVE: Although there’s a definite family resemblanc­e between the Dart and our local VF/VG Valiant coupes, the Yanks carried this body style through to 1976 with quite different front and rear end treatments. Max’s Dart already featured the classic Green Go paintjob and bumblebee stripe when he bought it some 10 years ago, but that’s about all that’s left of the car now LEFT: Because 575hp at the tyres simply isn’t enough these days, a 200-shot Nitrous Express plate system was recently fitted. It runs a standalone fuel enrichment system using a Holley Black fuel pump and Holley reg with a custom four-litre front fuel cell running on QM23 race fuel DASH: The standard gauge panel has been removed and a Holley digital dash installed, which gives Max plenty of display options OPPOSITE PAGE: The torsion-bar front end was replaced early on with a Reilly Motorsport­s Alterktion K-frame. The 17x6 Weld S71 rims are the latest addition to the car

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia