Daydreaming is common among car enthusiasts. For all that we do with our vehicles, we’re always thinking far ahead. When we get the time, when we get the money, we’ll go ahead and get that dream car and turn it into the ride we’ve always wanted to build. The problem is that if you dream too long, you’ll watch years go by before you ever turn a wrench. Sometimes, it takes extraordinary circumstances to snap you out of it and remind you that life is for living today.
Enter Yevhen. He’s a gearhead through and through, and he’s spent the better part of this year putting together a Dodge Challenger with a slick retro vibe. It’s been more challenging for him than you might expect. He’s been building the car as his country struggles against foreign invaders inside its own borders.
“War time is not a good time to buy cars,” Yevhen tells me from his home in Ukraine. “On the other hand, you have to do something not to lose the sense of life.”
A mechanic by trade, Yevhen runs his own shop. “Besides my family, cars are the sense of my life,” he says. ” I service, maintain, repair and wrap cars. I paint them, I write about them, I build them, I raced them and hold the events, I talk about them with my friends and… I love them.” It was that passion that led him to the Challenger. “When I saw this barge with a manual transmission and a Hemi, I couldn’t resist,” he tells me. “War makes our decisions faster, cause you clearly understand that you may not have another chance to make your dream come true.” It’s a dramatic statement, but not an untrue one. “Daily rocket attacks make you realize that every day can be your last day,” he explains.
Drive around the US, and you’ll see tacky modern muscle cars everywhere you go. Anyone can go to Autozone and buy a bunch of fake chrome trim and badges and ruin a modern Challenger, Camaro, or Mustang. But somehow, Yevhen managed to make his retro tribute work, and work well. You might expect that he’d spent years working on American muscle, growing familiar with the aesthetic and values. And yet!
“I’ve never seen any American classic in person,” he says. “But being a journalist also with a couple of my own historical blogs and groups, I know something about cars.” He paid fine attention to detail on his build, which helped him achieve a factory-like appearance. “I try to represent as many features of a 1971 R/T on my modern boat, while avoiding breaking the borders of common sense,” he explains. If a badge or a detail wasn’t on the real thing, he won’t slap it on his car. “My car should become a tribute to the OG Challenger, and [become] kind of a blast from the past for me personally,” he says.
Perhaps the classiest mod is in the interior. Yevhen had a gorgeous woodgrain finish applied to all the dash pieces. It’s a beautiful throwback to the 1970s, the era of veneer. He achieved this by having the parts hydrodipped. It’s a process where the plastic pieces are lowered into a liquid bath with woodgrain-patterned pigment floating on top. In this case, the dark woodgrain effect pairs perfectly with the rest of the black interior. It’s custom, and it looks good, which is more than we can say of most modified interiors we see.
Externally, he’s given the Challenger a set of American Racing VN501 wheels, wrapped in Petlas Explero rubber. For the proper vintage look, he shaved the sidewalls and threw on ’71-style tire lettering which looks the business. A set of Eibach Pro-Kit lowering springs helps set the stance. Exhaust-wise, he switched the factory X-pipe for an H-pipe setup, threw on Flowmaster mufflers, and deleted the resonators for a throatier tone. There’s also a lovely Hellcat-style air catcher up front for a properly mean look.
The rest of it comes down to decals, badging, and detail pieces. It might sound trivial, but getting all this right is why the car looks so well put together. He’s got the ’71 style emblems in the appropriate spots on the body, a chrome fuel door, and Pentastar badges on the fenders. He’s also got amber fog light covers that he modified from Harley Davidson turn signals, headlight bezels, and a high-quality R/T vinyl on the side of the body. Other nice touches include the hood pins, the imitation vinyl top, and the Go-Wing on the rear trunk lid.
Throw a couple of these pieces on wrong, and it’d look like a mess. It doesn’t take much chrome trim or vinyl to turn a stock car into a laughing stock. But Yevhen did the job right, and the results speak for themselves.
His story is perhaps a lesson for any car fan that is feeling disconnected from their passion. Obviously, feeding and clothing yourself comes first in life, as does shelter and all the rest. Nevertheless, sometimes you have go after something if it’s important to you. None of us know how much time we have left, and we most often regret the things we didn’t do.
Yevhen saw his opportunity and went for it. He’s built himself an American beast on his own terms. The car is a credit to him and his craft, and it stands as a shining example for us all.
Bottom line? Don’t wait to start living. Get after it now.
Image credits: Yevhen Kovalchuk
As Challenger owner, I approve. This build is amazing! He’s pulled all the retro touches without making it look ridiculous like so many others I see.
Thank you! In my opinion any mod has to have a “background” and each tiny detail matters, hence can either save or ruin the whole plan.
Don’t forget to add some chrome trim around the wheel housings! 🙂
And around side markers along with door handles. Then add 71 style quarter vents, and that’s it.
And around side markers and taillights’ red sections along with door handles. Then add faux 1971 style quarter panel vents, and that’s it.
As Challenger owner, I approve. This build is amazing! He’s pulled all the retro touches without making it look ridiculous like so many others I see.
Thank you! In my opinion any mod has to have a “background” and each tiny detail matters, hence can either save or ruin the whole plan.
Don’t forget to add some chrome trim around the wheel housings! 🙂
And around side markers along with door handles. Then add 71 style quarter vents, and that’s it.
And around side markers and taillights’ red sections along with door handles. Then add faux 1971 style quarter panel vents, and that’s it.
This build is spectacular, and more so for being built under such difficult circumstances. Huge respect for the owner.
Thank you!
This build is spectacular, and more so for being built under such difficult circumstances. Huge respect for the owner.
Thank you!
This is so awesome, especially the tributes to the classic Challenger
Mopar or no car
The whole car was initially made as a tribute. I just went slightly further.
Oh yeah, even better!
This is so awesome, especially the tributes to the classic Challenger
Mopar or no car
The whole car was initially made as a tribute. I just went slightly further.
Oh yeah, even better!
I love the Pentastar badges. I’m surprised by how much I like the wood grain interior. Way to go, Yevhen!
Thank you! Trying to my best.
I love the Pentastar badges. I’m surprised by how much I like the wood grain interior. Way to go, Yevhen!
Thank you! Trying to my best.
Wow, some of the best bang for the buck I’ve ever seen with a project car.
Plus, simple and refined is my preference.
I’m on a budget, so that was the goal))
Wow, some of the best bang for the buck I’ve ever seen with a project car.
Plus, simple and refined is my preference.
I’m on a budget, so that was the goal))
Funny this comes up now. I just arrived in Ukraine Sunday and already seen 3 challengers.
Guess all of them were V6 widebodies with Demon badges on Hellcat hoods and HUGE wheels spacers ????
Funny this comes up now. I just arrived in Ukraine Sunday and already seen 3 challengers.
Guess all of them were V6 widebodies with Demon badges on Hellcat hoods and HUGE wheels spacers ????
This just looks incredible. And to think that it was built in a country that’s been in a constant state of war for the last 27 months… that’s damned impressive.
Thanks! It still a matter of craziness, not courage.
This just looks incredible. And to think that it was built in a country that’s been in a constant state of war for the last 27 months… that’s damned impressive.
Thanks! It still a matter of craziness, not courage.