1969 Plymouth Road Runner LA Times Grand Prix Pace Car GreenLight 1:64
1969 Plymouth Road Runner 1968 LA Times Grand Prix Pace Car, GreenLight 1:64 GreenLight | 1:64 Scale | 30273 The 1969 Plymouth Road Runner became one of the defining muscle...
1969 Plymouth Road Runner 1968 LA Times Grand Prix Pace Car, GreenLight 1:64
GreenLight | 1:64 Scale | 30273
The 1969 Plymouth Road Runner became one of the defining muscle cars of the late 1960s thanks to its stripped-down performance formula, aggressive styling, and big-block power options. Built to deliver serious speed without luxury-car pricing, the Road Runner quickly earned a reputation as one of Mopar’s most iconic street machines.
This GreenLight release recreates the special LA Times Grand Prix pace car appearance used at Riverside International Raceway during the 1968 Los Angeles Times Grand Prix event. Finished in bright orange with black hood graphics and official pace car lettering, the model reflects the bold promotional styling common during the golden era of American road racing.
GreenLight captures the clean body lines, hood treatment, chrome trim, and muscular proportions of the 1969 Road Runner while pairing it with event-specific graphics and exclusive packaging. The Riverside Raceway connection gives this release extra appeal for collectors interested in historic California racing events and vintage pace cars.
- Official GreenLight LA Times Grand Prix pace car release
- 1969 Plymouth Road Runner with Riverside Raceway graphics
- Bright orange body with black performance hood treatment
- 1968 Los Angeles Times Grand Prix commemorative packaging
- 1:64 scale diecast collectible model car
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Common Collector Questions and Answers
What was the Los Angeles Times Grand Prix?
The Los Angeles Times Grand Prix was a major sports car racing event held at Riverside International Raceway in California and became one of the best-known road racing weekends in American motorsports during the 1960s and 1970s.
Why is Riverside International Raceway important?
Riverside was one of America’s most legendary road courses, hosting NASCAR, Can-Am, Trans-Am, IndyCar, and endurance racing before the track closed in 1989.
Why is the Road Runner considered a true muscle car icon?
Unlike many premium muscle cars of the era, the Road Runner focused on affordable high performance with minimal luxury features, making big horsepower accessible to younger buyers and street racers.