Re: Various CL Pickings
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Home away from home
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Well, that 1941 180 Lebaron is an obvious copy of a "factory" 1941 Cadillac (60S).
Posted on: 2014/8/8 8:49
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I restore the car, and the car restores me.
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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Home away from home
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Hi
The $3,545 semi-custom '41 180 LeBaron Sport Brougham certainly drew inspiration from the '38-'40 Cadillac 60 Specials for its body architecture and design details. The major difference was Cadillac knew enough to tool it up for volume production, to sell at a premium price, approximately $400-$500 more than the standard Fisher bodied Series 60's while taking advantage of standard Series 60 mechanicals. The high-profile 60 Special immediately accounted for 40% of all Cadillacs sold in those '38-'40 models years and more importantly served as the design basis for the GM Torpedo C-Body, shared from Pontiac Torpedo Eight through Cadillac Series 62. the success of those models took the industry by storm for 1940 and drove Packard to hastily create the '41 Clipper. The LeBaron Sport Brougham was exactly the type of ultra-luxury sedan that should have been introduced by Packard for 1939 Super Eight as a production model in the $2,300-$2,600 price range, just a step up from the $2,100-$2,300 60 Special. As wonderful as the Sport Brougham is, it represents another of the missed opportunities of their late pre-war years. Steve
Posted on: 2014/8/8 9:20
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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Hydraulic windows? Device mounted on engine side of cowl wall, switches on top center of instrument panel, and switches on doors, tells the story, right? Beautiful Packard.
(o{}o)
Posted on: 2014/8/8 9:26
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We move toward
And make happen What occupies our mind... (W. Scherer) |
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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Yep. Switches, and the up-down twin solenoid on the cowl wall. The pump and tank full of brake fluid was mounted under the car.
Posted on: 2014/8/8 9:41
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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Posted on: 2014/8/8 10:51
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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John
Yes the Clippers advanced and jumped the 60S, so it was a bit too late for what LeBaron did, a copy. Still, it is a spectacular looking car, just instantly dated and a copy. I am in the process of trying to purchase both a 1942 180 and a 1946 Clipper. They are like night and day, separated by a war.
Posted on: 2014/8/8 15:44
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I restore the car, and the car restores me.
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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Bryan
I'm living that difference. I sold a very well running 1950 Eight when I bought a 1941 160 sedan. Both cars were out of estates in Westchester County and both suffer from the work of previous owners. The 160 has had a very hard life and is needier than I wish it to be. I just spent much of my vacation time this week packing the shift mechanism with washers so I can drive it without grinding gears or locking the shift arm. I appear to be successful. However I did some wondering about the twisted minds of men while underneath the car wrestling with the splashers and such. Good luck with the 180, I hope that has been taken care of Regards John Harley
Posted on: 2014/8/8 17:52
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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Posted on: 2014/8/8 20:17
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Re: Various CL Pickings
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I didn't realize the executive used a 2 barrel carburetor
Looks like it has a dual action fuel pump, and the brake fluid reservoir on the firewall. It looks like it had factory seatbelts too. The hotrodders will buy this car for the tail lights and throw the rest away. ebay.com/itm/Packard-Executive-Base-1956 ... item=221518441457&pt=US_Cars_Trucks
Posted on: 2014/8/9 11:16
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