Happy Thanksgiving and welcome to Packard Motor Car Information! If you're new here, please register for a free account.  
Login
Username:

Password:

Remember me



Lost Password?

Register now!
FAQ's
Main Menu
Recent Forum Topics
Who is Online
129 user(s) are online (99 user(s) are browsing Forums)

Members: 3
Guests: 126

Ken_P, humanpotatohybrid, Gary Kulp, more...
Helping out...
PackardInfo is a free resource for Packard Owners that is completely supported by user donations. If you can help out, that would be great!

Donate via PayPal
Video Content
Visit PackardInfo.com YouTube Playlist

Donate via PayPal




Convertibles
#1
Home away from home
Home away from home

Gary Marshall
See User information
Was there any convertibles made after the Caribbean? in 1958 ?

Posted on: 2013/1/24 21:18
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#2
Forum Ambassador
Forum Ambassador

HH56
See User information
No. In 57 Packard's offering was the Studebaker based sedan and station wagon only. In 58 the sedan, wagon, hardtop and the Hawk. Stude had stopped making convertibles in the early 50's -- 52 I think -- so no convertible bodies wee available in 57 or 58. S-P didn't start making convertibles again until the 59 or 60 Studebaker Lark. Packard was gone by then.

Posted on: 2013/1/24 21:34
Howard
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#3
Just can't stay away
Just can't stay away

Mike O'Handley
See User information
Not entirely true. No production convertibles but there was one made in 1958 - ostensibly for a senior engineer at S-P. It's in the museum in Dayton.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:1958_Packard_Hawk_Convertible.jpg

Posted on: 2013/2/3 15:52
Mike O'Handley
Kenmore, Washington
hausdok@msn.com

'58 Packard Hawk
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#4
Forum Ambassador
Forum Ambassador

HH56
See User information
I stand corrected although I was thinking production.

Sure hope that car looks better in real time than it does in the picture. Wonder how much strengthening and weight they had to add to the frame to make it work on a convertible. IIRC, the coupe frames were known to crack at the front crossmember and was never significantly changed.

Posted on: 2013/2/3 16:10
Howard
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#5
Just can't stay away
Just can't stay away

Mike O'Handley
See User information
Hi,

I hadn't heard that. I don't think I've ever heard it mentioned in any of the threads I've read about chassis over on the Studebaker Driver's Club forum. Could be true though, I've only been back to the automotive world for the past couple of years after a 38 year hiatus.

My P.H. was literally used as a pickup truck by the original owner for more than 50 years. The guy had a tractor repair shop. When I bought it, the interior and exterior of the car looked like the outside and interior of most pickup trucks looked. There were actually dried out dead pigeons under the front seat! Inner control arm bushings had worn out ions ago and the holes those were turned into were egg shaped from decades of driving around without any grease. I expected to find the frame all tweaked and cracked. When I got the body off, got the frame home and tore it all the way down I found no cracks and, according to my lazer level, it's straight as an arrow despite all that abuse.

Maybe mine is the exception to the rule.

Attach file:



jpg  (50.95 KB)
3950_5111972954156.jpg 600X405 px

Posted on: 2013/2/5 18:35
Mike O'Handley
Kenmore, Washington
hausdok@msn.com

'58 Packard Hawk
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#6
Home away from home
Home away from home

55PackardGuy
See User information
Mike,

It would be nice to hear more about the car as you work on it. Is the pic a recent one? It doesn't look bad enough to be in the original shape you described. Let us know if you start a blog on the Project Blogs forum.

I just noticed how the Hawk sort of preserved some of the original outline of the famous Packard grill. As I've mentioned elsewhere, if you look at the '55 and '56 models, the grill itself follow the lines of the old grille with the hump in the middle and the flat sections at each end. Check out how the Hawk uses the hood scallops and drops them down under the headlights, so instead of a grill outline holding the old styling cue, the body itself does. Like I said though, just a little bit!

Posted on: 2013/2/9 16:52
Guy

[b]Not an Expert[/
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#7
Home away from home
Home away from home

Allen Kahl
See User information
I have always said that if Stude or S/P had made convertibles out of the Loewy designed cars we might still be buying Packards today. If any car begged a convertible those were it. I'm glad to see at least one engineer agreed with me.

ALK

Posted on: 2013/2/19 7:30
Al

1955 Patrician
 Top  Print   
 


Re: Convertibles
#8
Just can't stay away
Just can't stay away

Charles Neuhaus
See User information
In 1955 I was in the graduating class of Haverford College in Pennsylvania. The graduation speaker was Paul Hoffman, Board Chairman of Studebaker-Packard and recently Chief of the Marshall Plan. In a small meeting with Mr. Hoffman I asked him , "Why didn't Studebaker build a convertible on the Loewy coupe chassis?" He replied that they had make a big mistake in that they underestimated the coupe's popularity, He added that when the board realized its error the engineers claimed that the first Loewy convertible could not be built until the 1955 model. The board felt that was too late. Hoffman then said, "That was their second mistake!"

Posted on: 2013/3/13 16:06
 Top  Print   
 









- The following Google Ad-Sense Advert helps fund the cost of providing this free resource -
- Logged in users will not see these. Please Join and Donate to help support the website -
Search
Recent Photos
Photo of the Day
Recent Registry
Upcoming Events
32nd Annual Florida Packard Club Meet
01/26/2025
46th Annual Texas Packard Meet
04/03/2025 - 04/06/2025
Packard Salon - Calling All Twelves
05/27/2025 - 05/29/2025
58th Annual National Meet
05/31/2025 - 06/06/2025
AACA Fall Meet (Hershey)
10/06/2025 - 10/10/2025
Website Comments or Questions?? Click Here Copyright 2006-2024, PackardInfo.com All Rights Reserved