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Fast & Furious Cars: 1970 Plymouth Road Runner

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    The surviving reproduction of Hammer started life as a regular Road Runner with a 383 and four-speed. Note the pillar on this car. | September 15, 2009

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Fast & Furious Cars: 1970 Plymouth Road Runner

The Plymouth From Tokyo Drift

    2 Ratings

    Anyone trying to keep the timeline and pink slips of the Fast & Furious universe straight will have their head explode with this car. OK, now try and keep up.

    At the very end of the third Fast & Furious movie (Tokyo Drift), Dominic Toretto shows up in "Hammer," the well-known 1970 Plymouth Road Runner built by Steve Strope's Pure Vision Design in Simi Valley, California. In the few lines of dialogue Toretto speaks, he explains he got the car from his friend "Han," who had been killed earlier in the movie.

    So for the fourth film, Hammer had to come back. And miraculously, so does Han. But Hammer isn't owned by Han or Dom in this movie. Instead it's owned by Letty (Michelle Rodriguez). If you want to figure it all out, go ahead. Or, better yet, stop asking questions and enjoy the film.

    In Tokyo Drift the real, exquisitely detailed, perfectly painted, hugely valuable Hammer was used as Dom's ride. However, since Hammer was going to be, well, hammered, in Fast & Furious, the production car department decided to build replicas. And the "real" Hammer doesn't actually appear in the fourth film at all.

    The picture car department built three Hammer clones using two 1970 Plymouth Satellites and one actual Road Runner. Unlike the original Hammer, which is a pillarless hardtop, the three replicas were based on two-doors with pillars. To hide the pillars, they were simply painted black.

    Both Satellites were totaled during production. The real Road Runner — running a 383 with a four-speed — was saved and is in storage. After all, who knows what time traveling is in store for Fast & Furious 5?

    As Portrayed Specifications*

    Engine
    Type: Chrysler 440-cubic-inch V8
    Intake: Edelbrock
    Carburetor: Holley
    Ignition: Mopar
    Fuel: Sunoco Racing Fuel
    Lubricant: Castrol

    Drivetrain
    Transmission: Four-speed
    Clutch: McLeod
    Shifter: Chrysler pistol grip
    Driveshaft: Chrysler original equipment
    Headers: Hooker
    Fuel System: Holley

    Suspension
    Springs: Chrysler original equipment
    Shocks: Chrysler original equipment

    Wheels
    Type: Raceline
    Front size: 18-by-8 inches
    Rear size: 18-by-10 inches

    Tires
    Type: Continental
    Front size: 245/45R18
    Rear size: 285/50R18

    Interior
    Seats: Chrysler original equipment
    Belts: Chrysler original equipment
    Cage: Matt Sweeney
    Door panels: Chrysler original equipment
    Wheel: Chrysler original equipment
    Gauges: Chrysler original equipment

    Exterior
    No modifications

    Paint/Graphics
    Paint: Picture Car Shop

    * "As Portrayed" specifications indicate the state of the car as portrayed in the film. No single car was necessarily built to these specifications by the picture car department. But all the cars built to portray a vehicle in the film were constructed to appear as if so equipped.

    See all the cars from Fast & Furious

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