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favorite cars of the golden era

davestlouis

Practically Family
Messages
805
Location
Cincinnati OH
Real flower cars are actually professional cars built on long wheelbase chassis, there are variants that hold caskets under the stainless lid, and others that just hold flowers. Accubuilt and Eagle both make flower cars today, if you're prepared to spend close to $100K. I have read that some years, they only sold 10 or so flower cars.

Just to give some perspective, roughly 2000 hearses per year were built in the 50s, by the big hearse makers, plus several hundred made by small, regional coachbuilders. So, as a percentage, flower cars are a tiny bit of production.
 

El Guapo

New in Town
Messages
24
Location
San Diego, CA
I love all these old cars but, I prefer to drive trucks I don't know why but I do.

Trucks like these:

Well I was going to insert a 1955 Chevy truck in there but I must be computer illiterate, maybe later.
 

ron521

One of the Regulars
Messages
207
Location
Lakewood, CO
I liked the green Bentley driven by Ralph Fiennes in "The Avengers", looks to be a late 20's or early 30's model.
 

davestlouis

Practically Family
Messages
805
Location
Cincinnati OH
I saw a mid-60s "Kennedy" Lincoln suicide door convertible on I-44 yesterday...black with what I took to be red leather, top down, toolin' along. The top mechanism is freakishly complex, with dozens of solenoids and switches that have to work perfectly for the top to cycle, but what a cool looking car. Makes my little SAAB look puny.

I had a neighbor when I was a kid, who liked 1940's era Studebaker pick up trucks. He also didn't want people to think he was showing off, or being pretentious, so he had all of them painted dark green, with red wheels, and only took one home at a time. He had at least a dozen of these trucks, all beautifully restored, but since only one was at the house at a time, everyone assumed he had one old truck...strange.
 

Story

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,056
Location
Home
Genesis of the Interstate Highways

Ever wonder where your Interstate Highways came from? Eisenhower made a cross country trip in 1919 and was fairly cheesed off at how long it took, so when he got to visit Germany in 1945 and saw their autobahns, it was the inspiration for our highways.

ako-360-07.jpg

The cross country convoy arrives at Cantigny 20 June 2009 to rest, refuel and share their experiences with the local community near Chicago. The Convoy is retracing the route of the first major motorized expedition across the United States. (Photo by Army Public Affairs Midwest)
 

GoldenEraFan

One Too Many
Messages
1,164
Location
Brooklyn, New York
Golden Era Dream Cars

My dream cars of the golden era:

1927 Lincoln
1934 Chrysler Airflow
1936 Hudson
1941-1948 Oldsmobiles
1941-1950 Desoto's
1948 Packard
1949 Nash
1951 Hudson Hornet
1953 Studebaker Starlight
1955 Nash Ambassador
1957 Oldsmobile Rocket 88
1959 Plymouth Fury
 

Story

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,056
Location
Home
http://www.bonhams.com/cgi-bin/publ...ItemNo=4225407&iSaleNo=17327&iSaleSectionNo=2

Lot No: 229•
Formerly the property of Al Capone and “The Outfit”—the Chicago Mob
1930 Cadillac Series 452 V-16 Armored Imperial Sedan
Coachwork by Fleetwood
Chassis no. 701617
Engine no. 701617
Oh, if only cars could talk. What stories this one could tell.

Its modifications mark it as something truly special. Based on a seven-passenger Imperial Sedan by Fleetwood its doors are reinforced with ¼” steel armor. All the glass is 5-ply laminated. The side windows have round ports cut in them, and they’re not for ventilation. A police band radio nestles under the dashboard conveniently above the front seat passenger’s feet.
 

David Conwill

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,854
Location
Bennington, VT 05201
Story said:
Ever wonder where your Interstate Highways came from? Eisenhower made a cross country trip in 1919 and was fairly cheesed off at how long it took, so when he got to visit Germany in 1945 and saw their autobahns, it was the inspiration for our highways.

Worst thing that ever happened to this country - it changed the automobile from something desireable and romantic to something mundane and necessary. And I won't even get started on what the freeways did to our central cities.

If you want to point a finger at something that destroyed so much of what this board loves (be it classic autos or swanky downtowns), it's Eisenhower's freeway system. Though in fairness to Ike, we started down that road in the 1930s.

-Dave
 

volatile

A-List Customer
Messages
421
Location
London, England
1939 Buick Special:

429515.1939.Buick.Special.jpg


And the car that inspired it, the 1938 one-of-a-kind prototype Buick Y-Job

1938-YJob-blueback.jpg


If I win the lottery, the first purchase would probaby be a custom-built Y-job repro!
 

volatile

A-List Customer
Messages
421
Location
London, England
GoldenEraFan said:
My dream cars of the golden era:

1927 Lincoln
1934 Chrysler Airflow
1936 Hudson
1941-1948 Oldsmobiles
1941-1950 Desoto's
1948 Packard
1949 Nash
1951 Hudson Hornet
1953 Studebaker Starlight
1955 Nash Ambassador
1957 Oldsmobile Rocket 88
1959 Plymouth Fury

What's the car in your avatar?
 

LouieGee

New in Town
Messages
32
Location
UK
I have been reading this thread "ooh-ing" and "aah-ing" at all the utterly fabulous cars!

My personal favourite cars from the golden era would have to be:

hispano-suiza.jpg

1924 Hispano-Suiza Tulipwood Torpedo

800px_Duesenberg_Convertible_SJ_LA_Grand_Dual_Cowl_Phaeton_1935.jpg

1935 Duesenberg Convertible Phaeton

1939Delahaye.jpg

1939 Delahaye Type 165 M
 

StraightEight

One of the Regulars
Messages
267
Location
LA, California
1939 Buick Special:



And the car that inspired it, the 1938 one-of-a-kind prototype Buick Y-Job

1938-YJob-blueback.jpg


If I win the lottery, the first purchase would probaby be a custom-built Y-job repro!

Um, not quite. The Y-Job was the precursor for the '42 Buicks, which were built in more or less the same form through '48 with a re-skin for '49 in the upper trim levels. Note the grille, fully integrated headlights, bombsight hood ornament, overall shape, etc. The Y-job's interior is basically identical to the production '42-'49 Super and Roadmaster. Here's my '48 for comparison:

BILD0001.jpg
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
Mr H, I never noticed those elephant ears on your bumpers. Those alone cost a fortune. You have a real gem of a car. As I've mentioned about a million times, that 41 Buick, ideally a 4 door Century, is my ultimate. But I wouldn't turrn my nose up at a 42 thru 48, or even 49, either. But that 39 Buick, I dunno, I can't look at them without sort of wincing.
Dodge DeLuxe, I have great photo from 1951 of my 4 year old self and my grandfather's 39 Dodge. I'll post it tonight when I get home.
Regarding the whole Caddy vs. Packard issue. I think that the Pierce-Arrow outclassed both of them until its tragic demise in 1934.
 

StraightEight

One of the Regulars
Messages
267
Location
LA, California
1947 Buick Roadmaster...all original Survivor
prom007.jpg

Great looking car. Love those survivors. At the Buick club's all-GM car show a few weeks ago in Woodley Park, Van Nuys we had most of the '48 catalog lined up in the steel, including a Roadmaster just like yours.
 

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