Re: DashBoard material for 1928 -533 Limo
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Home away from home
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Hi,
I am by no means an expert on the late 20s cars. I have an unmolested 1929 model 645 7 passenger sedan (virtually identical to the "big" limo for '29). The instrument panel is metal painted in a woodgrain pattern. there is a strip of wood for the dashboard. I seem to recall either hearing, or reading somewhere that Packard used carpathian elm veneers for the wood trim on the late 20's cars, but I refer back to my opening statement. John Wogec
Posted on: 2019/10/17 16:33
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Re: DashBoard material for 1928 -533 Limo
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Home away from home
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Here is a picture of a 426 dashboard.
By 1929 Packard was putting some fancier patterns. They were done by lithography the same way as toys. What I have never seen is two same series original cars next to each other and whether the dashboards had identical patterns. If the panels were decorated and then stamped they would differ by car. Packard was the king of fake wood, but given their penchant for expensive finishing processes, I doubt it was cheaper than paint or actual wooden parts. I would classify the pattern for this car imitation mahogany and it probably lost some redness over the years.
Posted on: 2019/10/18 16:15
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