1955 Chrysler C-300

Carrying a horsepower rating that matched its name, the Chrysler C-300 arrived in 1955 as the most powerful production car available in America, a claim backed immediately by a convincing run of results in NASCAR competition.

Styling came from Virgil Exner’s “Forward Look” program, which Chrysler marketed across its entire 1955 lineup as “The $100 Million Look.”

The C-300 used the New Yorker two-door hardtop body, adopted a modified grille design inspired by the Chrysler Special show car, and stripped away much of the chrome ornamentation found on lesser models. The result was a cleaner, more purposeful coupe than the standard production hierarchy suggested.

Under the hood sat the 331-cubic-inch FirePower Hemi V-8, fitted with dual Carter WCFB four-barrel carburetors, a performance camshaft, solid lifters, and dual exhaust (bringing output to 300 horsepower at 5,200 rpm and 345 lb-ft of torque).

Power fed through a two-speed PowerFlite automatic transmission, with a three-speed manual available in limited numbers. Suspension tuning was noticeably firmer than other Chrysler products of the period, making the car genuinely competitive at NASCAR events straight from the showroom.

Production reached 1,725 units, positioning the C-300 as both a luxury car and a credible racing homologation exercise within a single package.


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