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I'll Lock Up
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- Sydney Australia
The car is actually a 1937 Cord 812 Westchester sedan; Cord offered two models, the 810 and the 812, which was supercharged and can be identified by the chrome exhausts on the side of the bonnet. The two model range comprised four different body styles; the Westchester and Beverley sedans, a four passenger convertible pheaton and a two passenger "Sportsman's" convertible. The Beverley sedan had a rear "bustleback" trunk, while the Westchester was a smooth fastback; otherwise, other than minor interior trim differences, the two models were virtually identical from the front bumper to the the rear wheels.
That is a mean looking car, isn't it? I was reading about them in a book on classic cars of the 50s. It says that the '59s were intended to be a slight facelift of the '58s, but when Chrysler's "Forward Look" stole the show in '57, GM went back to the drawing board. The '59 Buicks, as a result, had one of the lowest and sleekest body lines, and in my opinion, one of the angriest lol
That is a mean looking car, isn't it? I was reading about them in a book on classic cars of the 50s. It says that the '59s were intended to be a slight facelift of the '58s, but when Chrysler's "Forward Look" stole the show in '57, GM went back to the drawing board. The '59 Buicks, as a result, had one of the lowest and sleekest body lines, and in my opinion, one of the angriest lol
I once owned a 1958 4 door Olds, it was a very heavy car, had a nice ride but was a tank. It had the two tone cream and tan paint, cream and brown interior, electric everything, and a horn that would blow skirts up on the gals walking on the sidewalk!I've heard the same story. I believe in a Rodders Journal article on a '58 Impala. That essentially makes the '58s the last of the Harley Earl "longer, lower, wider" GM models, and perhaps the purest expression of his design philosophy.
-Dave
LOL, alright, but only because I think girls are cute when they pout.
Are you trying to upload them to the board? The board won't host photos, you have host them externally, like through Photobucket or Flickr.
Interesting that you skip directly from the prewar style of Hudson straight to the "Hash" Nash-based Hudsons. I'm a fan of the '55s myself, but we're in the minority. The '48 to '54 vehicles are also very cool, and probably the most collectible Hudsons since WWI.
-Dave
I once owned a 1958 4 door Olds, it was a very heavy car, had a nice ride but was a tank. It had the two tone cream and tan paint, cream and brown interior, electric everything, and a horn that would blow skirts up on the gals walking on the sidewalk!
Ahh, the '58 Olds. A car that marks the height of chrome use. God, I wish they still made 'em like that.
A certain Ford designer bought a used '58 Oldsmobile, rearranged the hood lettering to read "Slobmodel", and drove it to work as a reminder never to revisit the excesses of the late 1950s. The message was apparently effective, as we're only now once again getting cars with shiney trim.
Oh, and I've heard several references to the side trim on the '58 Olds being decorated with musical notes.
-Dave
Auto Trader magazine and eBay motors.I'm finding that it's really difficult to find some of these vintage cars. Usually when you want a used car, you just go down to the used car lot. Apparently when you add five or six decades to the "used" factor, it makes it a bit harder.
Any secrets to the car hunt? I'm thinking about getting that 46 Olds 98 that my dad had... or barring that, a replicar ($300 grand is beyond my means) of that 27 Auburn boattail speedster he had.