1966 DODGE POLARA

413ci V8RWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$41,019 maintenance + known platform issues
~$8,204/yr · 680¢/mile equivalent · $37,703 maintenance + $2,616 expected platform issues
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318ci V8
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360ci V8
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383ci V8
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1966 Dodge Polara is a solid full-size Mopar with robust mechanicals, but age-related issues dominate. Most surviving examples have 60,000-150,000 original miles, and problems center on wear items that are 50+ years old rather than design flaws.

Timing Chain Stretch and Wear (All V8s)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi (or age-related regardless of miles)
Symptoms: rattling noise from front of engine on cold start that quiets when warm, rough idle and poor performance, backfiring through carburetor, difficulty starting when hot, retarded ignition timing that won't stay adjusted
Fix: Replace timing chain, gears, and tensioner. On these early V8s, requires removing radiator, harmonic balancer, and timing cover. Budget 4-6 hours labor depending on engine bay condition and seized bolts. Often find worn cam gear teeth and stretched chain guides. Smart to replace fuel pump eccentric and oil slinger while you're in there.
Estimated cost: $600-1,200

Carburetor Issues (Carter AFB and Holley 2-barrels)

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: hard starting especially when cold, stalling at idle or when coming to stops, black smoke and fuel smell from running rich, hesitation on acceleration, fuel leaking from carb base or accelerator pump
Fix: These 50+ year old carbs have dried gaskets, worn throttle shafts, and deteriorated accelerator pump diaphragms. Rebuild kits run $40-80 but expect 3-5 hours for proper disassembly, cleaning, and calibration. Many owners opt for Edelbrock replacement ($350-450) which bolts on and eliminates future headaches. Original Carter AFBs are rebuildable but finding someone who knows them is harder now.
Estimated cost: $350-900

Front Torsion Bar Bushing and Lower Control Arm Wear

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-100,000 mi (accelerated by rust belt climates)
Symptoms: clunking over bumps from front end, wandering steering and vague on-center feel, uneven tire wear on inside edges, front end sits lower than it used to, squeaking when turning at low speeds
Fix: Torsion bar sockets in the lower control arms wear out, and the pivot bushings dry-rot. Requires pressing out old bushings and installing new ones—specialized tools needed. Figure 6-8 hours for both sides including alignment. Afterall, these are original 1960s rubber parts. Often find rusted adjustment bolts that need cutting off.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400

Drum Brake Master Cylinder Failure

Occasional · high severity
Symptoms: brake pedal slowly sinks to floor when stopped, loss of braking power requiring pumping pedal, brake fluid leaking from master cylinder at firewall, soft spongy pedal that doesn't firm up with bleeding
Fix: Single-reservoir master cylinders from this era fail internally, allowing fluid past worn seals. Replacement takes 2-3 hours including bleeding entire system. Many techs upgrade to dual-reservoir master from later model for safety—requires minor bracket modification. Original-style single available but expect another failure in 5-10 years.
Estimated cost: $300-600

Fuel Tank Rust and Sending Unit Failure

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: fuel gauge reads empty or full regardless of actual level, fuel gauge bounces erratically, rusty fuel smell when filling up, clogged fuel filter every few months, fuel starvation and stumbling despite gauge showing fuel
Fix: Original gas tanks rust from inside out after decades, contaminating fuel system. Sending unit cork floats disintegrate or float arm corrodes. Tank removal requires 3-4 hours—easier with lift. Options: boil-out and seal existing tank ($150-250 from specialist) or replacement reproduction tank ($300-400 plus 4 hours install). New sending units run $80-150.
Estimated cost: $450-900

Push-Button TorqueFlite Transmission Cable and Linkage Issues

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: push buttons don't engage gears consistently, must push button multiple times to get response, transmission stuck in one gear and buttons do nothing, wrong gear engages (push D, get R), cable visible hanging loose under dash
Fix: The push-button shift cables stretch, fray, or break at attachment points. External linkage at transmission wears and comes out of adjustment. Cable replacement requires dash work and running new cable to transmission—5-6 hours if you can find the correct cable ($200-300 reproduction). Often the issue is simpler adjustment at transmission linkage (1 hour). These systems are unique to 1955-64 models but many '66 Polaras still have them.
Estimated cost: $150-800

Heater Core Leakage

Occasional · low severity
Symptoms: sweet coolant smell in cabin especially when heater runs, passenger floor soaking wet with coolant, windshield fogging with oily film, coolant level dropping with no external leaks visible, wet carpet under passenger dash
Fix: Original heater cores corrode through after 50+ years. On '66 Polara, heater box is behind glove box—requires dash disassembly for access. Budget 6-8 hours labor for experienced tech, 10+ for first-timer. Reproduction cores available $100-150. While in there, replace all heater hoses and flush heater box. This is a patience job with rusted screws and brittle plastic.
Estimated cost: $700-1,300
Owner tips
  • Change oil every 3,000 miles with high-zinc ZDDP oil (1,200+ ppm) to protect flat-tappet camshafts—modern oils don't have enough
  • Run fuel stabilizer year-round and keep tank at least half full to minimize internal rust
  • Check torsion bar adjustment annually—these cars sag with age and ride height affects alignment
  • Flush cooling system and replace hoses every 3-4 years—original-style hoses dry-rot even if they look okay externally
  • Keep spare points, condenser, and rotor in the glovebox—these can fail suddenly and parts stores don't stock them anymore
Solid buy for someone who accepts 1960s-era maintenance needs—mechanically simple and parts available, but expect to address 50-year-old wear items immediately.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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