Plymouth's sporty Barracuda coupe got its start as a hasty response to Ford's Mustang, by slapping a slick glass fastback roofline on a two-door Valiant. In fact, it actually beat the original Pony Car to showroom floors, although that didn't stop the more stylish 'Stang from outselling it by better than five-to-one.
For 1967 the Barracuda got its own sheet metal, with graceful coke bottle lines.
It wasn't until the 1970 model year that it really came into its own, though. That marked the introduction of the E-body platform, shared with the new Challenger from Dodge.
The Plymouth E-body came in three flavors: The base Barracuda, the plusher Barracuda Gran Coupe, and the performance-oriented 'Cuda.
The base motor in the 'Cuda was the same 383 cubic inch big block as found in the Road Runner. With a 4-barrel carb, 9.5:1 compression, a hot cam, and dual exhausts, it turned premium gasoline into 335 SAE gross horsepower. You could take some weight off the nose by going with the 340 4-barrel small block, or opt for the 440 4-barrel, 440 Six-Pack, or 426 Hemi options, if you really liked buying tires frequently.
This 1970 'Cuda in the wild high impact color C7, "In Violet" (Dodge called the same color "Plum Crazy") was photographed in New Hampshire back in June of 2021 using a Canon EOS 5DS and an EF 24-105mm f/4L IS zoom lens.














