Close Menu
Car Candy Crush – Satisfy Your Sweet Tooth for Cars

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Toyota Tacoma Production Returning to Texas With $3.6 Billion San Antonio Expansion : Automotive Addicts

    July 8, 2026

    Zeekr kicks off pre-sales of 5-seat 9X to broaden flagship SUV’s appeal

    July 8, 2026

    Prehistoric Power in a Modern Off-Road Monster

    July 8, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Toyota Tacoma Production Returning to Texas With $3.6 Billion San Antonio Expansion : Automotive Addicts
    • Zeekr kicks off pre-sales of 5-seat 9X to broaden flagship SUV’s appeal
    • Prehistoric Power in a Modern Off-Road Monster
    • How To Drive A Brand-New Lucid Gravity In July 2026, And Pay No Interest
    • Kia’s next electric van looks even bigger in person [Video]
    • Meta will disable the camera on AI smart glasses if you tamper or cover the indicator light
    • Your Guide to Ram’s Supercharged SRT Pickups
    • Meta’s glasses will turn off the camera if you tamper with the privacy light
    Car Candy Crush – Satisfy Your Sweet Tooth for Cars
    Wednesday, July 8
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Car Reviews
    • Auto News
    • Maintenance
    • Electric Vehicles
    • Car Tech
    • Classic Cars
    • Buying Guide
    • More
      • Parts & Upgrades
    Car Candy Crush – Satisfy Your Sweet Tooth for Cars
    Home»Classic Cars»The One-Year-Only Dodge Performance Truck That Vanished Without A Trace
    Classic Cars

    The One-Year-Only Dodge Performance Truck That Vanished Without A Trace

    kirklandc008@gmail.comBy kirklandc008@gmail.comJune 27, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    The One-Year-Only Dodge Performance Truck That Vanished Without A Trace
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    If you hear Carroll Shelby’s name mentioned in performance circles, it’s likely to be associated with Ford. After all, in the minds of legions of fans, the world-famous tuner is synonymous with legends like the 427 Cobra and the GT350. But by the late 1980s, Shelby had moved on and was deep into a run of working on Dodge performance cars. His tuning arm was trying to prove that these little turbo-four-cylinder cars could be far quicker and more entertaining than their economy-car roots might suggest.

    During this period, Shelby also decided to breathe some life into a short-bed rear-wheel-drive Dodge truck. This experiment lasted only one model year and didn’t sell particularly well. Still, it might just have laid the foundation for the factory-backed performance pickups that would emerge soon after.

    Shelby’s Dodge Years Were Stranger Than Most People Remember

    1989 Shelby Dakota front quarterCars and Bids

    1989 Shelby Dakota Specifications

    Engine

    5.2-liter OHV 90-degree V8

    Transmission

    Four-speed automatic with overdrive

    Drivetrain

    Rear-wheel drive

    Power

    175 hp

    Torque

    270 lb-ft

    Shelby began a partnership with Chrysler in 1983 when his company produced the first Shelby Charger, which preceded a run of compact, turbocharged, front-wheel-drive machines. Chrysler needed some credibility, and Dodge wanted to inject some excitement into its range, so Shelby seemed like the perfect partner to weave some magic into the project.

    In the years that followed, the Omni GLH-S and the CSX would follow the same formula as the Shelby Charger, with a lightweight, (eventual) turbocharging, and front-wheel-drive weirdness. So, Shelby took his weirdness to the next level in a different category altogether with something older and simpler in 1989: the Shelby Dakota.

    The Shelby Dakota turned out to be a performance pickup truck with an engine far larger than most people expected to find under its hood. The donor Dakota was effectively a middleweight contender in the US truck wars and sold in reasonable numbers. However, Shelby had no intention of applying some simple modifications or a gaudy sticker package to a lifestyle pickup. Instead, he would go back to some of his rear-wheel-drive V8 roots and add an engine with plenty of character to this special Dakota. The result was not something you could easily compare to a muscle truck like the modern Ram TRX, but in 1989, it certainly wasn’t a modest proposition either.

    The Dakota Was The Right-Sized Truck For A Shelby Experiment

    1989 Shelby Dakota rear quarterCars and Bids

    Dodge positioned its first-generation Dakota as something smaller and easier for consumers to live with than a full-size Ram. The Dakota was slightly larger than many compact pickup competitors, and Shelby had some room to add significant power without really stretching the formula. Engineers started off with a two-wheel-drive, short-wheelbase Dakota Sport that already had some extra equipment versus the base model. This variant had some rear-drive character of its own and enough chassis capacity to take the kind of engine that Shelby proposed.

    Shelby ditched the standard 3.9-liter V6 engine, which made 125 hp. Instead, the tuner dug through the Chrysler parts department and found a 5.2-liter OHV V8 that used electronic dual-throat throttle-body injection. The V8 made 175 hp at 4,000 rpm and, notably, 270 lb-ft of torque at just 2,000 rpm. This torque gave the Shelby Dakota tremendous low-speed punch, while it weighed far less than a full-size truck and came in short-bed pickup form.

    Shelby had to make some modifications to fit the V8 properly. These included removing the stock engine-driven fan and replacing it with twin electric fans mounted ahead of the radiator.

    The Shelby Dakota Was More Than A V8 Swap

    1989 Shelby Dakota V8 engineCars and Bids

    Although the V8 engine made plenty of headlines, the entire package was also well-rounded. Buyers got a four-speed automatic transmission with overdrive, a high-stall torque converter, and an auxiliary cooler. A 3.90:1 limited-slip rear axle would make the most of the Dakota’s low-end torque and proved highly practical. Otherwise, with that amount of torque arriving at a very low RPM, the Dakota could easily have turned into a disco smoke machine instead of a usable performance truck.

    Shelby engineers also reworked the suspension with gas-charged shock absorbers, leaning on the heavy-duty Dakota Sport’s foundation. Up front, the suspension used upper and lower wishbones with coil springs and a stabilizer bar, and at the rear, you’d get semi-elliptical leaf springs with gas-charged shocks. The truck also had vented front disc brakes and rear drum brakes, plus rear anti-lock braking, and 15-inch Shelby hollow-spoke aluminum wheels with Goodyear P225/70R15 tires.

    On the outside, the choice was between exotic red or bright white paintwork, along with recognizable Shelby graphics. And from the front, the truck looked purposeful enough, with its larger air dam, fog lamps, black trim, fender extensions, and bed-mounted light bar. Inside, there was a Shelby signature leather-wrapped steering wheel, an upgraded tachometer and instrumentation, and special cloth seat inserts to round everything off. Each truck had a serialized Shelby nameplate.

    The Shelby Dakota Was Quick Enough To Make The Idea Work

    1989 Shelby Dakota interiorCars and Bids

    The Shelby Dakota was certainly not earth-shattering compared to modern-day performance trucks, but it was still relatively potent. For example, it would take 8.7 seconds to reach 60 mph, 16.5 seconds to reach the quarter-mile at 82 mph, and reach a top speed of 113 mph. These were acceptable figures for a sporty pickup at the end of the 1980s, especially for a vehicle that started as a practical Dodge truck. Behind the wheel, drivers would find usable, practical power across the range, making it lively enough in normal driving conditions rather than just testy at full throttle.

    Related

    How Shelby Tuned A Dull Hatch To Go Like Hell

    The Dodge Omni GLH became one of the most unlikely hot hatches from the ‘eighties. Why did it turn heads?

    Because of that ample rear-wheel torque, the Shelby Dakota had a very different personality than many of the turbocharged Shelby Dodges that preceded it. It also preceded larger, more powerful performance gains in the early 1990s. For example, the 1990 Chevrolet 454 SS was a full-size performance truck offering, and the GMC Syclone followed soon after with its turbocharged, all-wheel-drive pitch.

    Ford turned its F-150 into a factory street truck called the SVT Lightning, and Dodge would eventually return to the formula with its Ram SRT-10. Of course, there’s nothing to say that those manufacturers took inspiration from the Shelby Dakota. However, this particular vehicle was still a serious attempt to produce a factory-backed performance pickup ahead of its time.

    1989 Shelby Dakota rearCars and Bids

    The Shelby Dakota disappeared almost as quickly as it arrived and never became an ongoing Dakota performance line. The Shelby Registry suggests a total production of 1,475 trucks, with 995 in red and the rest in white.

    It’s a level of rarity that gives the truck an unusual market position today. There are few of these trucks out there, but they’re not going to command the same values as a blue-chip Shelby Cobra or GT350. However, the Shelby Dakota is not a dramatically fast machine by modern-day standards. It’s not as obvious a contender as the later Ford F-150 Lightning or Dodge Ram SRT-10 either, but it’s still a genuine Shelby-linked Dodge performance model.

    Related

    Ram’s History In The Midsize Truck Segment

    Currently, Ram is without a mid-size truck in the US. However, it wasn’t always this way.

    Values reflect its middle-of-the-road status. You can probably pick up a Shelby Dakota at auction for perhaps $13,000 or $14,000, which is reasonable money compared to better-known Shelby vehicles. Those examples with unusual stories or low mileage can still attract stronger bidding, but there’s no sign that the market is reassessing its initial valuation.

    Buyers would find that the Shelby Dakota is perfectly understandable. It’s not overly complicated and is essentially a short-bed Dodge truck with a meaty V8 and a Shelby badge. The truck predated a niche that would eventually become valuable, but arrived too early for the party, and that’s probably why it disappeared so quickly.

    The 1989 Shelby Dakota was never going to be the fastest Shelby product or even the most advanced Shelby Dodge. But it was a rather obscure one-year-only experiment that took Carroll Shelby back to his roots and celebrated V8 prowess. The experiment took full advantage of the Dakota’s useful middleweight size before its maker shoehorned a 5.2-liter V8 under the hood. And while the result had a real Shelby identity, the market never fully understood what it was looking at. Instead, Shelby just sketched the outline of the performance pickup story with this Dakota, before stepping back to let the rest of the industry fill in the colors.

    Sources: Cars and Bids, Shelby Registry.

    Dodge OneYearOnly Performance Trace Truck vanished
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    kirklandc008@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    The Buick V8 Sleeper Sedan Enthusiasts Overlooked For Decades

    July 7, 2026

    The Best Honda Civic Years To Buy And Ones To Avoid In 2026

    July 7, 2026

    More Drivers Switch to Regular Gas, Toyota’s Texas Truck Plant, What If Land Rover Made a Sedan?

    July 7, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Our Picks
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Parts & Upgrades

    Toyota Tacoma Production Returning to Texas With $3.6 Billion San Antonio Expansion : Automotive Addicts

    By kirklandc008@gmail.comJuly 8, 20260

    Automotive Toyota is bringing most of its Tacoma production back to Texas, marking…

    Zeekr kicks off pre-sales of 5-seat 9X to broaden flagship SUV’s appeal

    July 8, 2026

    Prehistoric Power in a Modern Off-Road Monster

    July 8, 2026

    How To Drive A Brand-New Lucid Gravity In July 2026, And Pay No Interest

    July 8, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us

    Welcome to Car Candy Crush, where passion for cars meets creativity and style!
    We’re here to celebrate the beauty, power, and excitement of the automotive world — from classic rides to the latest high-tech supercars that make your heart race.

    Latest Post

    Toyota Tacoma Production Returning to Texas With $3.6 Billion San Antonio Expansion : Automotive Addicts

    July 8, 2026

    Zeekr kicks off pre-sales of 5-seat 9X to broaden flagship SUV’s appeal

    July 8, 2026

    Prehistoric Power in a Modern Off-Road Monster

    July 8, 2026
    Recent Posts
    • Toyota Tacoma Production Returning to Texas With $3.6 Billion San Antonio Expansion : Automotive Addicts
    • Zeekr kicks off pre-sales of 5-seat 9X to broaden flagship SUV’s appeal
    • Prehistoric Power in a Modern Off-Road Monster
    • How To Drive A Brand-New Lucid Gravity In July 2026, And Pay No Interest
    • Kia’s next electric van looks even bigger in person [Video]
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 CarCandyCrush. Designed by By Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.