By: Matt King
Reprint from Hot Rod Magazine, March 2006
Photography: Planet R/Randy Lorentzen
Alan Kalter's
Chrysler C-300 is a Timeless Combination of '50s Style and Modern High Performance That
Redefines the Original Letter Car's Place in Musclecar History.

> Alan Kalter's
retina-burning Tango Red C-300 erupts like a time capsule from the dawn of the nuclear age, but under the cozy '50s
sheetmetal lurks the heart of a beast. |
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 he history of Chrysler's 300 series cars is a convoluted
one, with many starts and stops over the past half-century. It began in 1955 when the company dropped a dual-carbed 331ci
Hemithe most powerful production V-8 engine of its dayinto a two-door Chrysler Windsor along with the egg-crate
grille from the up-market Imperial and a few extra bits of brightwork trim. The result was a C-300, a luxury coupe with 300
hp. Arriving nearly a decade ahead of Pontiac's GTO, it was arguably the first American musclecar and unquestionably the
progenitor of current luxury sport sedans such as the Cadillac
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CTS-V, the BMW M5, and it's own namesake, the latest Chrysler 300C.
The original C-300 was a performance icon of its era, showcasing the abilities of the early
Hemi engines on the hard-packed sands of Daytona Beach. It was there in 1955 that a C-300 posted a 127.580-mph two-way average
in the flying mile, more than 7 mph faster that it nearest competitor. In the hands of pioneering NASCAR team owner Carl
Kiekafer, the C-300 went on to win the '55 NASCAR Grand National Championship, a feat repeated by its 300B sibling in 1956.
The C-300 and 300B were followed by the seminal 300C of
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> In case anyone's
horrified by the thought that Kalter "cut up" a rare survivor, the cutout for a second exhaust tip is only physical
alteration to the stock C-300 body.
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1957, which defined Chrysler styling in the late '50s with its swoopy, jet-age fins and optional 390hp, 392ci Hemi. The
letter-series 300s ran through the alphabet for the next eight years, skipping the letter I and concluding with the 300L in
1965. By the mid '60s, the 300's performance receded as Hemi and Six-Pack-powered Road Runners, Chargers, and Cudas took the
forefront. As the years went on, the 300 series gravitated more towards luxury than performance, with later non-letter series
iterations based on the whale-like proportions of Chrysler's fullsize sedans and powered by various pedestrian versions of the
RB-series big-block
> The all-aluminum 528ci
Indy Cylinder Heads Street Legend Hemi was originally ordered with a carburetor, but when it proved to be un-street friendly,
it was sent back to Indy to be converted to fuel injection using an ACCEL DFI system. |
Page Three
wedge engine. The 300 nameplate was mothballed in 1971 but made an unfortunate one-year reappearance in 1979 as a Cordoba
trim option. It lay dormant for another 20 years until it was resurrected in 1999 with the DaimlerChrysler LHS-based 300M.
This front-driver employed DaimlerChrysler's unique cab-forward architecture, but despite being named Motor Trend's 1999
Car of the Year, it did nothing to further the 200 series' reputation. Then in 2005, the 300 series returned gloriously to
its roots thanks to the automaker's merger with Diamler-Benz, reincarnating into the 5.7L Hemi-powered rear-wheel-drive
Chrysler 300C, a car that is truly a spiritual descendant of the original C-300, especially in its 425hp SRT-8 form.
As a gearhead growing up in Detroit, Alan Kalter followed all these developments with interest,
mostly through the pages of HOT ROD Magazine, which he began reading in the late '50s. The original C-300 captured his young
imagination, and being part of the age group on the leading edge of the musclecar generation, it held a strong appeal when
he decided a few years ago to build a hot rod. Now a high-powered Detroit advertising executive whose company has handled
big-name accounts as diverse as Mazda, BFGoodrich, and Quaker State, Kalter had the means to build a car with a near-limit-less
budget, but what he really wanted was something he could drive and enjoy regularly, not merely admire as it rotated on an
indoor platform.
Kalter credits his wife for helping him chose to build a C-300. While attending Detroit's
Woodward Dream Cruise a few years ago, the couple came upon a C-300 in Chrysler's display. She said, "This is the car
you should restore," Kalter recalls. Armed with permissions from the boss, he set out to find a suitable candidate.
Locating a pristine C-300 wasn't simple, as only 1,725 were built in 1955 and just a couple
hundred of them are believed to have survived.
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> A custom-fabbed
air-filter box mimics the styling of the C-300's original. |
The C-300 Kalter eventually found was owned by a collector in Palm Springs,
California, and had fewer than 30,000 original miles on the odometer. The recipient of a mid-level restoration in the late
'60s or early '70s, it had been featured in several musclecar books, and as clean, unmolested example but not a true survivor,
it was a good foundation for a project. According to Randy Clark of Hot Rods & Custom Stuff in Escondido, California,
which performed the restoration and modifications, when the former owner dropped the car off at his shop, Clark was under
strict orders from Kalter not to even hint at the possibility that any non-stock modifications might be in store. He was
instructed to say only that he had been hired to do a "pre-shipping" inspection. "Don't tell the guy we're
going to cut it up," Clark says Kalter told him.
Of course the plan was never really to cut it up and the result can hardly be called that, but
after putting a few shakedown miles on the C-300, Kalter says "the memories were better than the reality. It floated all
over the road. How was that car running [those speeds] at Daytona?" Although Kalter believes the C-300's styling holds
its own in 2005, modern performance standards had far surpassed its abilities. "Back in the '50s, these cars were known
as Beautiful Brutes. It was still beautiful in 2005, but I wanted to give it an '05 version of the
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brute." The plan he
worked out with Clark called for retaining an appearance as close as possible to stock but with performance that would live
up to the C-300's reputation.
Although purists might cringe at the thought of pulling apart an original C-300, dropping in
a 720hp all-aluminum Hemi with a 727 TorqueFlite and a Gear Vendors overdrive, and then grafting on the front suspension from
a Chevy Caprice, the reality is that Clark and Kalter's creation is unerringly faithful to the original. The only noticeable
external modifications are cutouts in the rear bumper for dual 3-inch exhaust tips and the replacement of the original 15-inch
wire wheels with 17-inch replicas. Beyond that, the rest of the car, including the luxurious interior, was restored to high
concours standards. Under the hood it's a different story. The original plan was to upgrade the engine, drivetrain, and
suspension but leave the rest of the car untouched.
To provide improved handling and absorb the abuses of the car's 5,000-pound curb weight, Clark
looked beyond the usual street-rod suspension systems, most of which are based on the Mustang II front suspension, a system
not exactly known for either great handling or weight capacity. Clark instead wanted to use a traditional worm-gear steering
box and centerlink arrangement, which he felt was better
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suited to a heavy car than a delicated street-rod rack-and-pinion. His quest for a good-handling big-car suspension led him
to the front clip from a '95 Chevy Caprice, a platform that is well-known for its durability under millions of taxicabs and
police cruisers. To fit the Caprice guts under the C-300's sheetmetal, Clark cut the stock suspension off the Chrysler's frame,
narrowed the Caprice clip by removing a couple of inches from the center of the main crossmember, and grafted it back onto the
300's framerails.
Kalter briefly considered a Viper V-10 swap but opted to maintain the car's Hemi-powered
lineage, since that engine "has defined Chrysler performance even through to today." A carbureted 528ci all-aluminum
Hemi crate engine was ordered from Indy Cylinder Heads and installed by the time Kalter came out from Detriot to drive the
upgraded C-300 for a second time. He put about 100 miles on it and came back with three requests: "fuel-inject it, tear it
apart, and paint it red," Clark recalls. "[The carbed engine] was just a monster and too rough leaving stoplights,"
Clark says. "We should have gone with fuel injection to begin with."
So began a concours-grade frame-off restoration that required purchasing two parts cars just to
acquire several unobtainium trim pieces, a new
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windshield, and replacements for a few other unusuable items. The engine was set
back to Indy to be converted to EFI, and the body was stripped and repainted its original Tango Red. "We got to build that
car the way you want to build a car," Clark says of the process that involved assembling the components, working out the
bugs, tearing it apart, and reassembling it from scratch. "We don't get to do that very often. But the result is that this
will be a great car for years to come." Maybe even the greatest Chrysler 300 ever.
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> Top: The
plush leather-covered bench seats are recontoured for more comfort and seatbelts have been added, but the C-300's interior is
otherwise stock appearing with a few modern upgrades, including power windows sourced from a vintage Imperial.
> Above: The 17-inch Wheel Vintiques Nostalgia Wire wheels (right) are near-exact
duplicates of the original 15-inch wheels (left), adding to the concours-correct effect. The wide whites are from the Whitewall
Candy Store.
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POWERTRAIN
Engine: The 528ci Street Legend Hemi was ordered from Indy Cylinder Heads. It includes
an aluminum Indy Maxx block with a 4,500-inch bore, an Eagle forged-steel 4.150-stroke crank, H-beam rods, Wiseco 10.25:1
pistons, Indy Legend CNC-ported heads that flow 440 cfm, and a Comp mechanical Street Roller cam with 0.660/0.636-inch lift
and 268/264 degrees duration at 050. It breathes through an ACCEL-modified intake manifold and custom 2 1/8-inch headers and
is controlled by ACCEL Gen 7 DFI.
Power: Indy rates the Street Legend crate engine at 720 hp and 640 lb-ft.
Transmission: A TCI Street Fighter 727 TorqueFlite with a 3.600-stall converter is mated
to a Gear Vendors overdrive unit.
Rearend: A Currie 9-inch housing holds 3.70:1 gears with a Traction-Lock differential
and 31-spline Currie axles.
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CHASSIS
Suspension: The '95 Impala front clip is upgraded with 1-inch drop spindles, QA1
adjustable shocks, Energy Suspension bushings, and a 1 1/8-inch antisway bar along with a Detroit Speed & Engineering
steering box mated to a modified stock column. The rear parallel leaf-spring suspension is upgraded with 2-inch-drop Eaton
Detroit springs and Competition Engineering Slide-a-Link traction bars.
Brakes: There are 13-inch Stainless Steel Brakes discs on the front and 12-inch discs on
the rear.
Wheels: The 17-inch wheels from Wheel Vintiques duplicate the original 15-inch Chrysler
wire spokers.
Tires: Finding wide-white radials in 17-inch sizes is tough according to Randy Clark.
Eventually he discovered Whitewall Candy Store, which supplied the P225/60r17 wide whites.
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STYLE
Body: It's all stock with the exception of a slight modification to the rear bumper to
clear the dual exhaust tips.
Interior: The interior is so completely stock that only the most knowledgeable C-300
expert would notice the slightly recontoured bench seats designed to hug the occupants a bit more snugly than the stock cushions,
upgraded gauges, a modified shift gate, and the Alpine CD changer hidden in the glovebox. The only other interior modification
is the adaptation of Chrysler Imperial Power-window mechanisms to work with the stock manual window cranks.
Paint: It's PPG '55 Chrysler Tango Red by Hot Rods & Custom Stuff.
> Top: A '95 Impala front frame stub was mated to the
stock '55 Chrysler chassis to give the car less spooky handling. > Middle: The Indy
Cylinder Heads 528ci crate Hemi makes 720 hp. That should suffice.
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> The C-300 moments
before body met chassis. |
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