My Next Car ... and YOURS?

by compound complex 52 Replies latest social entertainment

  • compound complex
    compound complex
    SERIES 70 ELDORADO BROUGHAM

    Announced in December, 1956 and released around March, 1957, the Eldorado Brougham was a hand-built, limited-edition four-door hardtop sedan derived from the Park Avenue and Orleans show cars of 1953-1954. Designed by Ed Glowacke, the Brougham featured America's first completely pillariess four-door body styling. The ventipanes were electrically controlled. The Brougham was further distinguished by a brushed stainless steel roof, the first appearance of quad headlights and totally unique trim. The exterior ornamentation included wide, ribbed lower rear quarter beauty panels (extending along the full rocker sills) and a rectangularly sculptured side body "cove" highlighted with five horizontal windsplits on the rear doors. Tail styling treatments followed the Eldorado theme and "suicide" type hanging was used for the rear doors. Standard equipment included all possible accessories such as

    • a dual four-barrel V-8
    • air-suspension
    • low-profile tires with thin whitewalls
    • automatic trunk lid opener
    • automatic "memory" seat
    • Cruise Control
    • high-pressure cooling system
    • polarized sun visors
    • Signal-Seeking twin speaker radio
    • electric antenna
    • automatic-release parking brake
    • electric door locks
    • dual heating system
    • stainless steel (with a silver finish) magnetized glove box drink tumblers
    • cigarette and tissue dispensers
    • lipstick (cologne was mentioned in the dealer Data Book, but was not actually offered)
    • ladies' compact with powder puff, comb, and mirror
    • leather notebook
    • STEP atomizer with 1 oz. bottle of "Arpege" perfume extract made by Lanvin, Paris.
    • automatic starter (with re-start function)
    • Autronic-Eye
    • drum-type electric clock
    • power windows
    • forged aluminum wheels
    • air conditioning
    Buyers of Broughams had a choice of 44 full leather interior trim combininations and could select such items as Mouton (French for lambskin) and Karakul carpeting.

    ENGINES
  • compound complex
    compound complex

    Will pay CA$H for good used cars ...

  • PEC
    PEC

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  • compound complex
    compound complex

    Monsieur PEC:

    FORMIDABLE!

    Merci,

    CoCo

  • JK666
    JK666

    Being raised in the area, I am also a sucker for Auburn Boattail Speedsters:

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    JK

  • compound complex
    compound complex

    JK666:

    That one is going in my garage!

    Thanks!

    CoCo

  • Outaservice
    Outaservice

    I really like the 1955 Studebaker Speedster. They were lime green and yellow with wire wheels. It kind of was a prototype to the later Hawks. Very few were made and I'm not sure if any exist. They basically were the same body as the 1953 2 dr. coupes, low and way ahead of their time.

    The Stevens museum in Milwaukee has the proto-types of what would have been the new Studebakers for 1967 and they were neat, but alas never to be put into production. Maybe there is a web-site that would show pictures of them?

    Outaservice

    PS In our area you could not be a good JW if you didn't have a 4 dr. Studebaker.

  • compound complex
    compound complex
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    Rob Ballard's 1955 Studebaker Speedster

    Rob Ballard thought he may never find another 1955 Studebaker President Speedster after he passed up buying one from a seller in Australia because shipping would be so costly.

    In a curious twist, however, that experience eventually led him, via e-mails from England, Holland, Australia and Texas, to another Speedster in California. By then, he said, he had learned not to quibble, and he snapped it up.

    Ballard’s fascination with this rare Studebaker coupe started when he first saw one about five years ago. “I just fell in love with that car,” he said. The Studebaker coupe, designed by Raymond Loewy in 1953, is an icon. Loewy was an industrial designer who also penned the Lucky Strike package and logos for Shell, Exxon, Greyhound and Nabisco.

    Loewy’s 1953 Studebaker coupe is touted as one of the top auto designs of all time, and his 1963 Studebaker Avanti has always been given high praise as well. Ballard’s Speedster has the distinctive profile and shape of the 1953. Priced at $3,253, it was the most expensive Studebaker until the supercharged 1957 Golden Hawk.

    Ballard’s Speedster has Stewart-Warner gauges, a turned-metal finish on the instrument panel and diamond-tufted leather upholstery. The engine, sourced from Packard, is a Passmaster 259-cubic-inch V-8 with 185 horsepower.

    Ballard said that of the 2,215 Speedsters produced, only 424 had this color scheme.

    His car was originally a gift to actress Mary Brian from her husband, George Tomasini. From the 1920s through 1947, Brian appeared in 87 movies, including “Front Page” and “Blessed Event.” Tomasini, a film editor who gained renown with Alfred Hitchcock’s “Rear Window,” “Psycho” and “The Birds,” died at age 55. Brian drove her Studebaker until age 87. Then she gave the car to her godson, Stuart Erwin, Jr., and he restored it. Ballard bought it from him. Brian died in 2002 at age 95.

    Ballard owns a number of collectible cars, and he said each one is an “affair of the heart.” It’s easy to put too much money into restorations, he said, and you don’t often come out ahead on value. He owns classic cars and motorcycles because he loves them. He laughs when he says that everyone should own a vehicle from each decade of their life. And while he’s not quite there, he’s close. For Ballard, owning classic cars is all about enjoyment, and that’s why his grin is so wide when he drives them.

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  • Barbie Doll
    Barbie Doll

    How do you like this car?

  • Barbie Doll
    Barbie Doll

    Our car is a 350Z 35TH ANNIVER

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