Re: The '48 redesign
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Home away from home
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The real problem in the immediate post war time is that Packard built tons of Clippers. They should have made as many Packards as possible; they would have sold well from the war shortage, and helped maintain the image of the make.
Posted on: Yesterday 14:06
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1955 400 | Registry | Project Blog
1955 Clipper Deluxe | Registry | Project Blog 1955 Clipper Super Panama | Registry Email (Parts/service inquiries only, please. Post all questions on the forum.) service@ultramatic.info |
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Home away from home
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I think your car looks fine to me! I prefer the fully radiused rear wheel openings to the skirts, this applies to '53 Caribbean compared to the '54 for me as well. Having said that, I like the skirts on my '53 Cavalier, which doesn't look as good without them and not sure that it would look as good if it had fully radiused rear wheel openings.
Everyone has their preferences, and my biggest preference is for my '53 Cavalier to look like it did in '53.
Posted on: Yesterday 14:13
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Just popping in
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Yeah, there's that. I almost forgot the Clipper was a lower-rung car that eventually replaced the "real" Packards. Nonetheless, it was a great design but then you see all those Clipper taxi cabs in old movies and begin to dis-associate it as a real luxury car.
Posted on: Yesterday 14:13
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Home away from home
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I agree that 46-7 should have ignored the taxi and six, reduced the 282 production, and emphasized the Senior cars.
The 356 gave superior or competitive power up to the end of production As to the bathtub design, the fuselage styling was up to date. The problem was using the Clipper center section meant filling out the doors to do so. I do like the Berlina’s rear quarter window treatment
Posted on: Yesterday 14:24
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Forum Ambassador
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Dan_O, I agree about the Clippers thru 47 being some fine looking cars. One of my favorites too.
For some more thoughts on the styling change for 48, if you have not already seen or have a copy you might enjoy the book Packard -1948 to 1950 by the late Robert J. Neal. As I recall the book has a bit on the early styling discussions and reasons for some of the decisions on the move away from a slim face lifted Clipper variant. Believe he offers both deduced reasons and some actual as copied from notes taken during board meetings. I don't know if the book ever made it to public libraries but if you are interested in a copy, I believe Dwight Heinmuller is now the exclusive sales distributor and he does list it on his website storefront as still available.
Posted on: Yesterday 15:37
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Howard
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Just popping in
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Quote:
Yes, I thought there was a good reason for the greenhouse to have remained relatively narrow vs the new ('48) fender profile. I may have read something about them starting with the Clipper and just slapping on the clay until they got that through fender line. Had the greenhouse width been pushed out closer to edges it would've looked a lot better, you can see that in the berlina. That whole '48 theme of course started with the Macauley Phantom which was speaking a design language that I feel was already outdated by they time it was in it's second (final?) iteration.
Posted on: Yesterday 17:07
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Just popping in
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I would love to check out that book, I'm sure they were positive they were moving in the right direction. At the time, who would've guessed all those fuselage, slug-like designs from nearly every make during that era would have such a short shelf life? Guess fins and chrome changed everything.
Posted on: Yesterday 17:13
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Home away from home
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O Danny Boy....lovely bit of whimsy, yours, and believe i'd take one over a 1950-on Jag Mark VII, the car the XK engine designed for, the 200 "Super Sports" roadsters built to promote it in late '48 so popular they also went into production.
But such ponderings discount the tenor of the times, despite many then and now thinking the 1948-50 bathtub a blunder, certainly a fiscal waste, costing as much for a partial reskin (Clipper's roof and trunk lid retained) as a wholly new car, underscoring Packard by now more focused on their less hassle, more lucrative government and jet engine contracts, increasingly phoning in the cars. Dean of road testers, "Uncle" Tom McCahill, who loved the junior 1946 Clipper 8, termed the '48 tub "a goat," and "a dowager in a Queen Elizabeth hat." If East Grand dead set on a squat grille, Chrysler's C-200 by Ghia handled it better a couple years later: Attach file: ![]() ![]()
Posted on: Yesterday 17:29
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Re: The '48 redesign
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Home away from home
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Hi Dan_O, welcome to PackardInfo.com!
![]() A Europeanized Packard is an interesting idea, even if it wouldn't be based on a design as beautiful as the Alfa Romeo 6c 2500. It is somewhat difficult for a European to always fully understand the American design language, even without the expectation that the vehicles on both continents are identical. Quote: ...Guess fins and chrome changed everything. Their first appearance hit old Europe like a blow, but after just a few years, Italian, German and oher non-US designers reflected on their own ideas of form.
Posted on: Yesterday 17:45
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