That's one of the goals I settled on once I had decided that I wanted a charger. The main goal is to produce a charger that is just as loud and powerful as the original, but that runs better. The right sound is important.
Sound a priority? Well if you want the old charger sound your stuck with needing a big block since you can get a small block to sound good, but imo you can't get a small block to sound like a big block. If you want the best sounding combo imo you are going to need a 426 hemi which won't get much as far as mileage goes but the power and sound would be there. One down side though is a hemi will cost between 10-15,000 dollars from mopar and if you find a charger with a hemi it will add about that much to the cost.
It's hard for me to make more definite plans without actual specs for the car, and they're proving hard to find.
What do you mean by specs? Do you want the original power numbers or do you want the size of the wheel bearings? I'm sure you can find shop manuals from mopar, possibly even online for free.
I guess I need to test drive a charger to know what they're like. Judging from the weight and what you've said about the suspension I'd guess they handle somewhere in the range of mini-van to that of a silly cow?
It sounds to me like your more interested in the sound and looks more than the performance and handling. The stock suspension can be upgraded to handle better by adding bigger brakes, stabilizer bars, shocks, etc;.
I figured a smaller engine would be needed to achieve any noticeable fuel efficiency. Perhaps if I could get my hands on specs for the old engine, I could make improvements to that design, then scale it down. The question I have is, can a smaller engine still output the same power? There's no point to a weak muscle car...
Are you really wanting to build a foundry and cast your own "improved" blocks or am I mis-reading this part? If I understood correctly you will probably be better off starting a corporation and going public, then leading that corporation to the ends you seek. If you truly want to "build" a car and all its components you will need some large finacial backing. ICE have been being upgraded for a 100 years by some of the brightest minds in the world, I really doubt that much more efficiency can be squeezed out of them by subtle changes in design, however imo if you could change the materials of the engine so that friction was almost non-existent you could get more power out since less would be loss.
Yes, you can get similar power from smaller motors, its just harder and more expensive. I once had a shop teacher that said that you can get just about any power level out of any engine and the only things limiting you is your pocketbook and how long you want the engine to last. Look at top fuel dragsters, they put out thousands of horsepower but are very lucky to go more than a 1/4 mile without having to be rebuilt, and quite a few blow-up before they even go the 1/4 mile, whereas lots of stock motors only puts out @ 300 hp but will last for hundreds of thousands of miles.
Sounds like a plan. The go cart actually sounds kind of fun. I don't have the same open space to drive it as some do, living in a suburb and all. There's an old rotor tiller I could take the engine from to power it. I could probably get away with using the wheels from it. Maybe even mount the tiller on the go cart and use it to take out tailgaters!
If you want a fast one find a couple old chainsaw motors(2-stroke). If you want cheap and easy the tiller(4-stroke) will work fine.
By the way I was watching powerblock sunday last week on spike tv and they were building up an old cuda, it would be very similar to a charger and would help you to see what you have ahead of you. The show was Muscle Car and I think you can find the videos on spiketv.com. Saturday and sunday from like 9 in the morning till 11 I think spike has what they call powerblocktv which has 4 good shows(horsepower tv, extreme 4X4, trucks, and muscle car)if you have cable check it out.