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It was indeed the '69 Dodge Charger that was used in Dukes ... Mind you, it replicates the looks of the real General Lee so well that you'll probably trick most people into thinking it's worth ...
The iconic "General Lee" vehicle up for auction features a 360ci V-8 crate motor, four-wheel disc brakes, Alpine sound system with trunk mounted sub-woofer, custom embroidered "Charger" floor mats ...
Well the auction finally closed at whopping $9,900,500! According to a report from CNN, that puts the ’69 Dodge Charger based General Lee just $1.1 million away from the $11 million paid for a ...
Many may remember the 1969 Dodge Charger as “The General Lee,” from the TV series “The Dukes of Hazzard.” It was painted orange with “01” painted on the front doors (and the now ...
because stunt driver James Smith is here to show us how you can build a serviceable replica of the infamous General Lee-liveried ’69 Charger on the bones of a Crown Victoria police interceptor.
Waldron created the original General Lee design, not George Barris ... This, combined with the public's demand for the '69 Charger, created such a shortage the producers had to use modified ...
Not all the cars used on the show were genuine '69 Chargers ... Some great models in the Dodge Charger family have been released over the years, but being the General Lee certainly wasn't an ...
According to Schneider, the damaged General Lee wasn't even a 1969 Charger but ... Unfortunately, alongside making the '69 Charger more desirable, the show also drove it to the brink of extinction.
Although an official reason wasn't given, it's pretty obvious it's due to the Confederate flag painted on the roof of the show's beloved 1969 Dodge Charger, named General Lee. The show originally ...
Them Duke boys ran out of luck over the weekend. Two people driving a 1969 Dodge Charger styled as the “General Lee” from the classic television series Dukes of Hazzard crashed it on Highway ...
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