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5

Vintage Snapshots: What’s On The Road? – A City In Ontario In The 1970s

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2

Car Show Classic: 1949 Plymouth Special Deluxe – We Don’t Build Excitement

Imagine being in the market for a new American car in 1949. What a time, what choices! Statuesque Studebakers, portly Packards, handsome Hudsons, curvaceous Cadillacs and many other alarmingly alliterative pairings would flood the mind. Another one might be: pity the poor Plymouth. Mopar’s entry-level marque really got the short and dumpy end of the deal during the Detroit-wide postwar redesign.

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10

Curbside Musings: 2014 Chevrolet Spark LS – Lemon Pez

2014 Chevrolet Spark LS Auto. Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois. Friday, August 9, 2024.

Times of spending some or all of my weekly allowance on candy are among my happiest childhood memories.  This was true up until one year when I had earned a boatload of cavities for which to account at the dentist’s office, which required two separate trips to have all of them drilled and filled.  That was a lesson learned, but all of that unpleasantness couldn’t completely eliminate my sweet tooth.

Then as now, I was focused on getting the best bang for the buck, or at least some sort of unique experience or added value if I was going to get more than just a handful of Now And Laters flavored taffies.  Sometimes on special occasions, a new Pez candy dispenser would find itself in my possession as part of an Easter basket or treat my dad had picked up for us kids while he was traveling.

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25

Brickyard Classic: 1958 Indy 500 – The Salih and Epperly “Laydown” Roadsters

01 Bryan

The #1 indicates that this car and car owner won the Indy 500 the previous year

 

(first posted 4/2/2014)    Jimmy Bryan won the 1958 Indy 500 driving for car owner/builder George Salih. Salih was an engineer and foreman for Meyer-Drake, the Los Angeles firm that produced the Offenhauser engine that won Indy from 1947 through 1964. In four of those races-1954, ‘55, ‘59 and ‘60, the entire field was made up of Offy power. Only Paul Russo in a Novi, (start 8, fin 33) in ‘56, and again in ‘57 (start 10, fin 4) nosed out Offys in those years. Read the rest of this entry »

45

CC Capsule: 2013-19 Ford Police Interceptor Sedan – 21st Century Bluesmobile

(first posted 9/17/2018)        “It’s got a cop motor, a turbocharged 3.5, it’s got cop tires, cop suspension, cop shocks. It’ll run good on regular gas. Whaddya say? Is it the new Blues Mobile or what?”

When The Blues Brothers reached movie theaters in 1980, their Bluesmobile – a Dodge Monaco – was six years old. Now, the earliest of the Police Interceptor Sedans – aka the police version of the Taurus – are approaching that age, ready to be snapped up for cheap by ex-con musicians. Read the rest of this entry »

35

Vintage Snapshots: Imports On The Road ’50s-’60s – Can You ID Them All?

Let’s pay a moment of attention to imports on US roads back in the ’50s-’60s. The images feature at least one import on each, either prominently or somewhat discreetly. The makes are varied, as they were at the time; most are from Europe but at least one Japanese brand makes an appearance.

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22

Curbside Find: Volvo 240 Pickup – A Real Maverick

There’s been lots of complaints about the lack of truly compact pickups available in the US. The Maverick (and Santa Fe) has significantly closed that gap. But not everyone wants to pay the rapidly escalating price of a Maverick. The solution is easy enough: there’s still plenty of older Volvo wagons around to cut up and turn into a compact truck.

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12

Car Show Capsule: 1957 Cadillac Coupe de Ville – Oh! Maybellene

When I was about 12, I got my hands on a compilation of Chuck Berry’s earlier hits. It was on a cassette (remember those?), and I listened to that thing on a loop for a good long while. Even then, my tastes in music – and cars – veered towards the older stuff. This was circa 1991-92 and nothing on the radio sounded as good as Roll Over Beethoven or Sweet Little Sixteen. The real highlight of the tape was Maybellene, though. Great riff, sweet piano licks, infectious beat – and a Ford in hot pursuit of a Coupe de Ville.

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25

Curbside Classic: 1994 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Wagon – A Whale Of A Tail

There’s a concept in the study of history known as the ‘Short Twentieth Century.’ First coined in 1994 by historian Eric Hobsbawm, it posits that, from a geopolitical standpoint, the 20th Century was actually quite short: shorter than its 100 years would suggest. In contrast with the ‘long’ 19th Century, which can be considered to last from either the French Revolution to WWI, the historical 20th century lasted from 1914 to 1991 –from the First World War to the fall of the USSR. By implication, the historical 21st Century then started in 1991, instead of at the turn of the Millennium.

And, in so many ways, this feels accurate, as so many historical trends ended and modern trends began in the 1990s. The Eastern Bloc fell and its former members more or less became democratic and capitalist. Globalism and Neoliberalism became the global economic norm. The Internet gained popularity and connected the world as it never had been before. And, in the American automotive market, the traditional full-size sedan began to draw what would be its final breaths, as its dwindling long reign would begin to crumble under the pressure of minivans and SUVs.

For big station wagons, the fall would come even sooner, as there would be no more full-size wagons in production in the US by the middle of the decade. And this car — ’94 Caprice Classic wagon — was one of the last.

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29

Driveway Outtake: Two Red Hybrids

(first posted 9/15/2018)     Someone likes hybrids, and in the color red. The Prius is of course one of the most common cars here, but the number of gen1 Insights is becoming rather small, like the car itself. Isn’t it now a rather curious relic from a different time? At a time when SUVs are the dominant vehicle of choice, this diminutive little gas saver seems rather quaint.

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38

Modernity Question Versus The Driving Experience: The 1953 MG TD As An Intersection Point

1953 MG TD. Somewhere in Las Vegas

 

(first posted 9/10/2018)       In a recent post Dman asked us when we thought cars became modern. The CC readership enthusiastically responded with a vibrant discussion.

I was just one of those CC’ers who offered an opinion and some commentary which both Paul Niedermeyer and Ed Stembridge thought that I should put into a standalone CC post.  So the following is a slight retooling of my initial opinion and story with additional pictures.

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19

Vintage Snapshots: Airstream Trailers In The 1970s

When it comes to pictures of travelers, there are few shapes more distinctive than that of the Airstream trailers. Talking about which, I recently came across a neat collection of images from the 1970s where they star in large numbers. So why not a short gallery with Airstreams as the main act? From small caravans to parks stuffed with them?

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15

Curbside Find: 1978 Lincoln Continental Town Car – Looking Grand In The UK

Photos from the Cohort by L Seddon.

Lincoln Town Cars of the late ’70s have made repeat appearances here at CC, as it’s a favorite of the Brougham Epoch. And this one find is a fine addition to those previous ones; a pristine ’78 Town Car, in a setting that almost makes these shots seem out of a Lincoln brochure. Maybe I should get AI to generate human figures to complete the brochure-like setup?

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9

Truck Show Outtake: 2020 Scania R520 V8 Longroof – Eastbound

De Wolff - 2020 Scania R520 V8 4x2 truck - 1

‘Blumengroßhandel’ is German for a flower wholesale business, yet this Scania’s home base is in the Netherlands. So apparently, all merchandise goes east. And with an overall length of 10.95 m (35’11”), the truck itself is also quite ‘groß’. Certainly for a 4×2 chassis.

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18

The Volvo 480 ES – Dutch Treat or Cruel Trick?

My earlier post on the 343 GT concept car described Volvo of America’s interest in the North American sales potential for a face-lifted and re-powered version of Volvo Car BV’s compact 340-series three-door hatchback, an effort doomed to failure when it became clear that its intended B21F four-cylinder engine would not achieve better fuel economy ratings than those of the existing 240-series with the same powertrain. As the Federal government’s corporate average fuel economy standards (CAFE) were one of the rationales driving the initial 343 GT discussions, that realization helped to scuttle the project.

But it wasn’t the last time our corporate interest was piqued by the vision of a new range of compact cars sourced from our Dutch colleagues in Eindhoven. The then-exploding U.S. market popularity of small, sporty coupes didn’t go unnoticed in Rockleigh, either. Was there a way to address both opportunities?

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