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33

Curbside Classic: 1982 DeLorean – Avoiding The Distractions

(first posted 3/1/2019)     An admission:  At first I was really pumped to have found a DeLorean parked at the curb – and on a cold December night, no less.  Yet after some initial thought this pumped feeling transitioned into something that looked and felt like it may have originated from within the realm of ambivalence.

For a brand that produced just under 8,600 cars from 1981 to 1983, it isn’t difficult to find a DeLorean on static display; however, seeing one on the street is obviously an irregular occurrence.  We’ve covered DeLorean related topics before (linked below); perhaps that was part of my ambivalent mindset.

After this initial ambivalence subsided, my thoughts on this DeLorean have ran the gamut since I began compiling them in late December.  Like the ball on a roulette wheel, these multiple ideas seem to have finally settled into a reasonably happy resting place.

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32

Curbside Classic: 1985-87 Holden RB Gemini/1985-89 Chevrolet Spectrum/Isuzu I-Mark – The Stars Didn’t Align

holden rb gemini 6

(first posted 5/3/2016)          The 1973 GM T-Car was a genuine world car, sold on 5 continents under the Opel, Vauxhall, Isuzu and Holden brands, among others. But while it wasn’t the last “world car” platform from General Motors, the T-Car variants were not universally replaced by a second generation of the platform. Instead, Opel and Vauxhall went their separate ways. A new, front-wheel-drive platform known as the R-Body underpinned the T-Car’s Isuzu, Chevrolet and Holden-badged successors. Read the rest of this entry »

49

British Deadly Sins (A Touch Of Class, Part 1) – A Blue-Blooded Sin Called Invicta Black Prince

(first posted 3/5/2019)           Greetings, fellow CCurbivores, and welcome to this third salvo of British Deadly Sins. The pickings are rich, in this land of entrepreneurial inventiveness and eccentricity, mixed with rigid conservatism and class conflict. Over the next three days, we will focus on three rather different automakers: the aristocratic Invicta, the middle-class Standard and the blue-collar Reliant. So let’s kick things off at the top of the heap and examine the most modern post-war luxury car you’ve never heard of, the Invicta Black Prince.

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23

Vintage Dealers: Lincoln-Mercury Dealers 1950s-1960s

Trinity Lincoln Mercury, Inc.

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20

1964 Chevelle 300 2-Door Station Wagon: It Should Have Been Called Nomad – Why Did They Build These Anyway?

The 1955 – 1957 Chevy Nomad was a bold exercise to build the first sports wagon, and it quickly became iconic. Station wagons were the hot new trend (along with sports cars) in the 1950s, and Chevy took it to the next level with the very sporty 2-door Nomad, which started out as a 1954 Motorama dream car with a Corvette front end.

Two-door station wagons had been fairly popular in the 1950s, but had mostly disappeared by 1961, the Falcon hanging on through 1965. They were clearly a dead end, as was the case with large two-door sedans. So why did Chevrolet buck the trend and introduce a two-door Chevelle station wagon in 1964? And why was it only offered as the lowest end trim level, and not with more rake in the tailgate and rear window, and call it Nomad?

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6

1962–1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Jetfire – How Powerful (And How Fast) Was This Early Turbocharged Car?

B&W photo from the September 1962, showing a front view of a 1962 Oldsmobile Jetfire accelerating; there's a red filter over the left third of the image

Back in the spring of 1963, GM’s now-defunct Oldsmobile division introduced a new version of its F-85 compact sedan called Jetfire, which added a turbocharger to its lightweight aluminum V-8 engine. Offered only in 1962 and 1963, Jetfire was the second turbocharged production car in the world, arriving mere weeks after the turbocharged Chevrolet Corvair Monza, and it claimed an impressive output of 215 hp — one horsepower per cubic inch of displacement.

However, this was an SAE gross rating, which didn’t reflect how much power the engine actually produced as installed in the car. How much power did the Jetfire really produce, and how fast could it go? The answers are more complicated than you might think.

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8

My 2009 VW CC: A Hooker, A Conversion Van & A Ditch

Image from Drive.com

So Long Jaaag

Our 2004 Jaguar XJ8 was starting to exhibit its true nature and began breaking down with increasing frequency. Despite several “Ford” stampings on parts, the costs were decidedly Jaguar. So I decided to engage in one of my favorite pass-times; negotiating the price on another car.

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143

Obscure Rebadges From Around the World

Lonsdale ad 3

(first posted 1/29/2014)     Those who follow the auto industry know of all the lazily rebadged cars used to fill different manufacturers’ model line-ups. The derisive term “badge engineering” was coined for cars like the Suzuki Swift and Geo Metro; the same car, but with a different badge on the grille, steering wheel and maybe some minor trim differences.
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60

An Illustrated History Of Automotive Aerodynamics: Part 3 (1960 – 2012)

Mercedes Bionic (2005) Cd: 0.19

(first posted 1/30/2012)             For most of the fifties, sixties and into the early seventies, automotive aerodynamicists were mostly non-existent, or hiding in their dust-collecting wind tunnels. The original promise and enthusiasm of aerodynamics was discarded as just another style fad, and gave way to less functional styling gimmicks tacked unto ever larger and squarer bricks. But the energy crisis of 1974 suddenly put the lost science in the spotlight again. And although a trough of historically low oil prices temporarily put them on the back burner, as boxy SUVs crashed through the air, it appears safe to say that the slippery science has finally found its permanent place in the forefront of automotive design. Read the rest of this entry »

16

Curbside Classic: 1968 Oldsmobile 4-4-2 — A Hot Number

The Pontiac GTO generally gets bragging rights as the first of its kind: the classic intermediate-sized Detroit muscle car. The GTO first appeared in 1964, and pretty much defined the category. But the Olds 4-4-2 also first saw the light of day in ’64, as a special performance package available on the F-85. The main differences between them: 59 cubic inches, 15 horsepower and healthy dollop of marketing savvy. The last one made all the difference: the Goat outsold the 4-4-2 by over ten to one in ’64. Chalk it up to John Z. DeLorean and the Mad Men.

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32

CC In Scale: Model Cars In Purple – Purple Mania

The inspiration for this feature came from Paul’s story a few days back about the AI-generated images in a certain repro parts company’s website. From the comments, I’m sure we all had a good laugh at that. Aside from mostly looking inexcusably fake, what I noticed straight away was the glorious colour they were all illustrated in. Purple.

It’s not my favourite colour, but I rather like purple. Even if it was all washed-out looking, liked the AI’s purple.

That got me thinking. How many purple cars have I built?

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15

Car Show Classic: 1965 Nissan Silvia (CSP311) – Japan’s First PLC

Welcome to the month of March, which I have decided will be placed under the auspices of the 1960s – my favourite postwar decade. Even if you know nothing about classic Nissans in general and the Silvia in particular, it’s readily apparent that this is a special car. A special coupé, to be precise; Nissan’s first attempt at something truly exclusive.

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33

Curbside Musings: 1966 Chevrolet Impala Convertible – Don’t Blink

1966 Chevrolet Impala convertible. Edgewater Glen, Chicago, Illinois. Wednesday, August 2, 2023.

Welcome to March.  Only a couple of weeks ago, I was back in Las Vegas for what had been something of a last-minute decision to spend time there both with friends and by myself with my camera.  A couple of years ago, I had left some paid vacation days on the table that I couldn’t carry into the next year, so I’ve been more intentional about taking time for myself throughout the year.  Presidents’ Day weekend was calling my name.  I was torn between destinations, having considered going somewhere warm, like the Tampa Bay area where I had spent many happy years of my early adulthood, or southeast Florida where I could see more old friends and sites in Miami and Ft. Lauderdale.  Also, Las Vegas had never disappointed me in over a decade of adventures.

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162

Curbside Classic: 1960 Ford Starliner – Haste Makes Waste

(originally posted 7/31/2011)

Follow your own path.

Have the courage of your convictions.

Haste makes waste.

Ford would prove each of these adages with its 1960 full-size cars, although not in a way the company would have liked. Read the rest of this entry »

33

An Illustrated History Of Automotive Aerodynamics: Part 2 (1940 – 1959)

(first posted 1/29/2012)        [Like Part 1, this has been expanded and updated]

In the “streamlined decade” of the thirties, automotive aerodynamics was promoted as the great breakthrough to the modern high speed automobile, and to finally shed its horse-and-buggy roots. It was almost a religion, and its influence was almost universal. By the end of the thirties, highly streamlined automobile concepts were in every manufacturer’s styling studios, if not already rolling down the assembly line. The assumption was that the post-war era would be dominated by further developments on the air-splitting Tatra theme, like this 1947 Tucker Torpedo. But the reality turned out quite different, especially so in the US. Read the rest of this entry »