Re: We haven't had a good "What If?" for a while, so.....
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
The discussion of the 1938 Cadillac 60 Special caught my eye as I am a long-time fan of Bill Mitchell's hand at styling the Riviera (which was initially considered to be a possible re-introduction of the LaSalle, and ended up a Buick, hence the "clamshell" lamps in '63 and '64--and the headlight covers in '65--were initially an homage to the LaSalle's pointed grill). Looking at some history on the '38 Cadillac, it started life as a LaSalle design and then was bumped up the brand ladder to Cadillac when its price was calculated to be too high for LaSalle. History repeating itself in reverse.
Looking at the '38 Cadillac 60 S mindfully for the first time, based on what's been said here, I agree that the front view is really quite ugly... if the goal was an aggressive look, that was achieved at the expense of making it far too truck-like for my taste. From the side, the most striking thing to someone used to the now-ubiquitous "3 box" style that was so radical then, I see the front fenders as the outstanding styling feature. Not knowing much about these Cadillacs, I don't know if this was a fresh design, but it certainly gives the car an imposing big-car presence, and an elegant sculpted look from the side. For my money, the '47 Clipper does the same thing, only better, with a much more appealing front view and more integrated yet still massive looking fenders. Clipper stacks up pretty well eh? Granted it's 9 years later, but there was a war in between. The photo just happened to be sitting right in front of me here on the PMCI sidebar. (Thought that since we were talking styling so much here, some pics might be in order.) Attach file: (3.32 KB) (23.55 KB)
Posted on: 2012/4/15 15:11
|
|||
Guy
[b]Not an Expert[/ |
||||
|
Re: We haven't had a good "What If?" for a while, so.....
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Interestingly, Bill Mitchell liked the '38 60 Special styling the best, feeling it was the cleanest and purest of the '38-41s. Apparently the grill design was inspired by the '36 Cord's horizontal air slots. Most historians seem to like the '41 the best.
By the time the 41-1/2 Clipper came out, Cadillac had two 3-box sedans in the line-up, the 60S and 62. Both were very clean and modern looking by this time. Cadillac also had a coupe and convertible (including a 4-dr convertible) based on the low slung 62. This is what Clipper was competing against initially. GM raised the stakes again for '42 when Cadillac restyled both cars. The new 60S also got a big wheelbase stretch that provided limo-like rear legroom, something the One Sixty/One Eighty Clippers never matched. Cadillac also offered an automatic beginning in 1941 which got improved during the war and became very popular once peacetime returned. All in all, GM was on a real tear and it wasn't just Packard that felt the heat. The whole industry was reeling. Only Studebaker and Packard managed to launch a 3-box sedan before the war and by the time they did, Cadillac and GM had moved on to the next phase, which was full showroom coverage with all body styles included and subtle refinements to styling. And they had that automatic.
Posted on: 2012/4/15 20:27
|
|||
|
Re: We haven't had a good "What If?" for a while, so.....
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
You have to remember, though, that the Clipper was aimed at the Buick market. I don't know how well they did against that, but it was the seniors that should have been taking on Cadillac, and postwar, for my money, Cadillac had them beat in styling every which way until 1955, except for the Caribbean, which was more a specialty "car for the stars" than it was a mass-produced competitor for the well-to-do "wealthy" market. The '48-'50 was a styling experiment that was very bold but ultimately not very appealing, except perhaps for the "fastback" models, and '51-'54 always lacked that real "luxury" look. It seems that few of these cars could really shout success about their drivers. I think they needed a true limo or at least a "stretch" six-passenger sedan to keep their hand in the ultra luxury market. A small, sporty model priced for the masses, like the "twin six" roadsters of old might have been a very good bet, too.
Posted on: 2012/4/16 21:32
|
|||
Guy
[b]Not an Expert[/ |
||||
|