All models with the exception of the wagons rode on the 121.5 in (3,086 mm) wheelbase shared with the Dodge Monaco. This generation was available as a 2-door coupe, 2-door hardtop, 4-door sedan, 4-door hardtop, and 4-door station wagon. Top-of-the-line Gran Fury Brougham models were treated to a new grille and new single-unit headlight design all Gran Furys would receive this for 1976.
Because the C-body Fury had been redesigned for 1974, the 1975 Gran Fury received few changes besides its new name. As a result, the previous full-sized C-body Fury became known as the Gran Fury. In 1975, the mid-size B-body Plymouth Satellite was restyled and renamed Plymouth Fury. The Gran Coupe and Gran Sedan models continued in 1973.įull-size C-body 1977 Plymouth Gran Fury 4-door Sedanįull-size C-body Plymouth Fury (for 1974) It moved to the two-door hardtop body for 1971, when a "Fury Gran Coupe" hardtop sedan was also available, renamed "Fury Gran Sedan" for 1972. The Fury Gran Coupe model was introduced in 1970 as a highly trimmed pillared coupe.
#Freeway fury 6 series
At the end of 2001, the Plymouth nameplate had been discontinued, but in 2005, Chrysler's 300 and Dodge Magnum, as well as the 2006 Charger and 2008 Challenger, brought full-sized V6 and V8 powered rear- (and all-wheel-drive) sedans back to their lineup, thereby leaving Fiat Chrysler Automobiles as the only American manufacturer of full-sized V8/RWD passenger sedans.īefore 1975, the top line models in Plymouth's Fury series were known as the "Fury Gran Coupe" and "Fury Gran Sedan". In 2013, GM announced the end of Zeta platform manufacturing in Australia by 2017. Plymouth did not have another rear-wheel drive car until the 1997 Prowler roadster.Īfter Chevrolet ended production of its full-sized Caprice sedan in 1996, Ford continued production of its V8 powered rear-wheel drive Panther platform models through September 2011. By the time Chrysler ended M-body production in December 1988 (1989 model year), they were Chrysler's last remaining rear-wheel drive cars, with a V8 and carburetor, a configuration used since the mid-1950s. The nameplate would be used on successive downsizings, first in 1980, and again in 1982, through what would originally have been intermediate and compact classes in the early 1970s, all with conventional rear-wheel drive layouts. The Plymouth Gran Fury is a full-sized automobile that was manufactured by Plymouth from 1975 to 1989. Kenosha, Wisconsin, United States (late 1986–Dec 23, 1988).Detroit, Michigan, United States (Lynch Road Plant) (1979–1981).