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Flip-out! Why didn't the Aussie Chargers have roll-down rear windows?

Australian mopar fans might’ve noticed that the Aussie Chargers were not true pillarless cars like their Ford and Holden contemporaries - the Monaro and Falcon hardtop. There's no B pillar on a Charger - which means it is pillarless...but you can't wind the rear window down. Confused? It wasn’t an oversight - to find out the reason, read on...

Chrysler Australia had a lot of success selling Dodge Darts as Valiant VF and VG coupes in Oz from ‘69 through ‘71, so American management decided we had to have a replacement when the new, locally designed VH range was on the drawing board.

The Australians weren’t convinced, but were overruled – apparently the Americans knew more about Aussie automotive taste than the locals. So Chrysler went ahead and developed a huge hardtop coupe based on the VH sedan. Deciding there was no point doing things by halves – they gave it the longest boot on any Australian car ever made – before or since.

The massive CH Chrysler By Chrysler two door - rear windows wound down

The VH Regal, Regal 770 and top of the range CH Chrysler By Chrysler hardtops were released with much fanfare...and bombed, just as the Aussies feared.

Print ad for the VH R/T - note the rear windows have been removed!

The VH Charger stunned Australia with it’s rakish styling when released to a welcoming public in 1971

So there was at least one advantage to buying the huge and unloved VH/VJ/CH coupes – they had roll down rear windows. But really – apart from a bigger boot, that was the only advantage they offered over the Charger. Interior room was about the same, while performance and handling weren’t quite a match for the shorter, lighter Charger, and neither was fuel economy.

The VH Regal hardtop…with roll-down rear windows - an alternative to the Charger

The luxuriously equipped VJ Charger 770 - if only rear passengers could roll their windows down…

Aussies knew all that. So if you were in the market for a hip, sporty, locally made coupe that could double as family transport – you chose the Charger. If you wanted performance and economy - the Hemi 6 offered both. If you wanted more status - you could go for 318, 340 or 360 cubes. Unless of course your local Ford or Holden dealers could talk you into a HQ Monaro or XA Falcon coupe, but that’s another story...

The final Charger was the slow selling CL, released in 1976 with the last few sold in 1978. Vale the Aussie Charger.

 

About the author


Raph Tripp is a passionate classic car enthusiast and writer, and founder of TunnelRam.net. If you wish to publish this article in part or in whole, please credit Raph Tripp and tunnelram.net . This is an original Tunnel Ram production ©2020 Tunnel Ram. All images remain the property of the original copyright holders.