Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Just popping in
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Photo of the Nash.
Posted on: 2012/7/8 15:54
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Forum Ambassador
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for the sharing your pair of fine looking cars with us Jim.
Posted on: 2012/7/8 16:00
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Mal
/o[]o\ ==== Bowral, Southern Highlands of NSW, Australia "Out of chaos comes order" - Nietzsche. 1938 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD 1941 One-Twenty Club Coupe - SOLD 1948 Super Eight Limo, chassis RHD - SOLD 1950 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD What's this? Put your Packard in the Packard Vehicle Registry! Here's how! Any questions - PM or email me at ozstatman@gmail.com |
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Just popping in
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Photo of the Nash.
Posted on: 2012/7/8 16:42
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Just popping in
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Here are the interior dimensions.
Posted on: 2012/7/8 18:08
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Forum Ambassador
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In my mind the absolute pinnacle for Nash was the 890, 990, 1090, 1190 and 1290 series; these are bona fide CCCA "Full Classics" and very deservedly so - magnificnet cars. Never again did Nash flirt with the true luxury end of the market.
Posted on: 2012/7/8 19:26
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Home away from home
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Cousin Raymond -- Welcome. Your big Lincoln is a tasteful, restrained barouche. I saw a '36 Lincoln Willoughby sport sedan in the early '80s, someone storing it in a hangar at the airport, as many folk with old cars do.
Marveled at the quality. Packard and Pierce V-12s may've had more oomph, but NO big '30s luxury car had finer craftsmanship than the Lincoln K, which used, as you know, chromeplated brass fittings where a Cadillac or Packard used chromed potmetal. Majestic car, with quality second to none from either side of the Atlantic. My experience with Nashes comes secondhand, other than driving a friend's '54 Nash-Healey with its stock seven-main-bearing inline ohv six, one of those rare cars that has that solid, carved-from-a-single-billet-of-steel feel. I'm not a Porsche guy, but a friend's '65 356-C bathtub coupe shared that quality feeling, and is no doubt why Sir William Lyons admitted in later years, letting his hair down tho' while he was still on Jaguar's board, "We never got Jaguar quality near Porsche's." Saw a '38 Jensen Model H saloon, which as you also know, is the stock 260-ci Nash twin-ignition, ohv straight 8-powered alternative to the stock 254-ci flathead, splash-oiled Hudson inline 8-propelled Railton. Lovely, and they all came with overdrive, which only a couple '39 Railtons had. After asking everywhere why the 1935-41 Nash twin-ignition, ohv 260-ci eight wasn't more popular then and today, my auld mechanic's mechanic, a veteran amongst NorCal Hudson, Packard and other circles, being staff sergeant of War II Pacific motor pools, then working in, and running, postwar Hudson, Packard, Pontiac service departments, building Hudson sprint car engines before starting his own storied shop, gave me some insight. "That Nash eight had nine main bearings, but they were narrow, so they soon lost oil pressure. And the Nash front suspension was okay, but it was weak, should've been beefier. Mine (bought 1946) was in nice shape, only had 30,000 miles on it. It drove nice, smooth, but was no ball of fire. It had low oil pressure. I dropped the pan, looked up at all those main bearings, and sold it for what i paid for it." The Nash 8, as you also know, is a paragon of smoothness. Others here will sing, on key, the One-Twenty's virtues, i also owned one many years. And the Hudson, its splash oiling notwithstanding, despite being the same size as the Nash ohv, had more oomph. According to Maurice Hendry--- and will someone please tell me if he's still with us, he lived/lives in Auckland, New Zealand --- R-R engineers once substituted a stock 254-ci Hudson eight for the troublesome 445-ci ohv V-12 in the 1936-39 Phantom III. After R-R's brass drove it around Derby's grounds, raving about its virtues, the engineers opened the hood, showed them the flathead American engine. Clearly, R-R's beleaguered engineers didn't want to build that monstrosity anymore than Fred Duesenberg wanted to produce the outsized, quickly obsolete Model J. As mentioned, Augie Duesenberg was in 1940 offering a marine version of the Hudson 254-ci eight. I mention this merely as Hudson was as much, or more, competitor to your Nash than Packard's One Twenty. The Jensen was a higher quality job than the Railton, smoother, and a Model H owner told me back in the '90s that it was faster than his 4.3-liter Alvis, faster than a 3.5-liter R-R Bentley from the mid '30s. But a Railton had more hustle. Packard's One-Twenty, like the Hudson and most such sized inline engines, used five larger main bearings. The earlier big 384-ci Packard, Pierce, Chrysler straight eights, having more room, had wider bearings which held oil pressure longer in service. Duesenberg's outsized Model J used only five (large) main bearings likely as Fred Duesenberg was looking for performance over refinement. My old mechanic also said Nash built relatively few eights, most of their production being the six(es). Finally, if you know of a sound '37 Nash Lafayette coupe with overdrive for sale on the West Coast, please, please let me know, as an old friend who runs a Packard shop owned one as a young man, liked it, and wouldn't mind another, tho' he'll never, ever part with the '41 One-Twenty club coupe he's owned since 1956. BTW, reverting to our other thread, "Okay, I'm Calling Your Bluff, Show Me How Packard Was Better" on the General Forum here, the above underscores that all this junior/senior malarkey is just that. Fine cars can come in any size, both your Lincoln K berline's, and your Nash Ambassador 8's. Thanks again for sharing these rare marvels with us, since we've long wanted to know about your Nash eight, another "pocket luxury car," as such were known in the day. Most of us here at PackardInfo are catholic in our tastes. As Peter Packard posted on the aforementioned thread, they all have their merits.
Posted on: 2012/7/8 21:21
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Home away from home
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Quote:
Hi Jim, Beautiful cars! I used to subscribe to both Collectible Automobile and was a charter subscriber to Hemmings Classic Car. I have since stopped both for the error reason you cite. My reason for subscribing in the first place was to learn about cars that I was unfamiliar with. However, when articles were error ridden regarding cars that I DID know about, it made the prospect of learning about the others very, very dim. The pictures are nice; especially in Collectible Automobile and CA has the least number or errors that I've been able to find. Hemming's Classic Car's errors - which could be checked by a simple web search as well as typos are inexcusable! Good luck with Patrick Foster. Hopefully he is more receptive than Richard Lentinello who I've been told can get just plain surly.
Posted on: 2012/7/9 3:09
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1951 200 Deluxe Touring Sedan
1951 200 Deluxe Touring Sedan (parts ?) 1951 Patrician Touring Sedan 1955 Patrician Touring Sedan |
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Home away from home
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Special Interest Autos, when edited by founder Michael Lamm, then Dave Brownell, was the gold standard.
All the other downhome "classic and collector car" magazines are boys trying to do a man's job, bush league, embarrassing. Michael Lamm and Dave Brownell were and are literate adults who happen to love old automobiles. Sadly, after Terry Ehrich, Hemmings Motor News publisher and a class act, died of cancer aged only 61, a North Carolina-based publishing conglomerate bought Hemmings, and the cringe-inducing "Hemmings Classic Car" replaced Special Interest Autos. The new publisher also wasted no time deleting Terry's thoughtful urge for readers to recycle Hemmings and all forest products on each issue's opening page. Perhaps much of the problem is simply that older, educated fellows who happen to share a love for vintage cars are being replaced by the products of dumbed down schools of the 1970s, so you wind up with magazines written by people who can't write, for readers who can't read. It's the same at the mainstream roadtest monthlies. Compare the Road & Track of yore, with today's, in which the ONLY worthwhile things are by Dennis Simanaitis and Peter Egan. AutoWeek today has type twice the size it was in the '90s, with the usual happening dude graphics, being written by and for wizened mallbrats. Magazines and movies are edited and directed for a lower horizon, ADD audience. Automobile Magazine and Sports Car Market confuse pompous affluenza with literacy. Esquire used to be a men's magazine. Now it's a "lifestyle" guide for avaricious boys. Even the New York Times Review of Books insists on head shots of authors. This is more than a case of some of us accruing years. It's declining literacy, narrowing education. These chickens are coming home to roost. I'd be curious, for example, to see survey results comparing the percentage of Special Interest Autos readers who also read The New Yorker, vs. those who read "Hemmings Klassic Kar."
Posted on: 2012/7/9 15:53
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Re: 1938 Packard Eight Deluxe
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Forum Ambassador
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I was a dedicated reader of Hemming's Special Interest Autos and thought it a fine publication and one not requiring "improvement". But like our old cars, some folks just can't resist tinkering with the product. I stuck with it a short while after it morphed into Hemmings Classic Car, but found it just filled to the gills with errors, really - just horrible. For a short time I tried writing to the editor about the mistakes and suggesting ways to elminate them (like having articles peer-reviewed) but the magazine failed to improve (and it has a LONG way to go) and I haven't renewed it.
Posted on: 2012/7/9 17:23
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