In 1961 Walker retired from Ford at age 65. When
Eugene Bordinat, not Engel, was chosen as his replacement, the well-connected Walker helped orchestrate Engel's move to Chrysler in November 1961. At Chrysler, Engel replaced chief stylist
Virgil Exner, who had designed the successful "
Forward Look" models of the latter 1950s. Exner was responsible for the era of large tail fins; Engel was credited with replacing fins with a slab-sided look, reminiscent of his Lincoln Continental design. Engel generally delegated the majority of work to his design teams; he then would fine-tune the clay models with his touches. Co-workers said he had an uncanny eye for the "commercial viability" of designs. Engel oversaw the design and development of the 1963
Turbine car, of which 55 were manufactured and 50 of them road tested until 1966. The two-door model was said to strongly resemble his original two-door design for the 1961 Thunderbird. Although most of Chrysler's legendary "Muscle Cars" were credited to specific designers, Engel oversaw, worked on, and approved all of them. ==Retirement and death==