Tiger Motel Art Print

  Shop Now Tiger Motel Art Print Natural white, matte, ultra smooth background 100% cotton, acid and lignin-free archival paper Custom trimmed with border for framing; 1" for x-small and small, 2" for all larger sizes Every order is custom made just for you All sizes listed are overall paper dimensions including the white border Exact sizing may vary slightly due to printing process, we advise waiting to buy frames until the prints arrive. Product Note: Color variations between on-site previews, your screen and printed artwork may occur.

1969 Dodge Coronet R/T and Super Bee


I’m listing both versions of the ’69 Coronet muscle car here, because they are both very similar (and very cool), but each one has its own unique advantages. The R/T option designation was available on several Dodge models starting back in 1967, and signified “road/track” performance. In 1969,
many Mopar fans opted for the slightly less expensive Coronet Super Bee (boasting its unique logo in the rear-end bumble-bee striping).

This was Dodge’s equivalent to the Plymouth Roadrunner, and as such, was equally minus many luxury features, making it lighter in weight as compared to the R/T. Super Bees are also much more common, especially those equipped with the base 383 cid (over 24,000 units sold), which was not even available in the R/T. A few Super Bees came with either the bigger 440 six-pack or the 426 twin-four Hemi. The R/T was only offered with the 440 Magnum or the Hemi. These burners routinely ran the quarter-mile in the mid-13s. As for the R/T being the rarer of the two models, about 6,800 R/Ts were produced in 1969, 400 of which were the R/T convertible (all Super Bees were hardtops). Ten of those rag-top R/Ts had the Hemi, and only four of those left the factory with the four-speed tranny.


Comments