Re: Carpet '37 1508
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Home away from home
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My research into chauffeured cars is that the drivers cockpit is generally understated from the passenger area and thus, black on black comes up regularly. Often, there is no front radio, painted (not woodgrained) dash and painted (not chromed) steering column as the "staff" driver didnt need/warrant luxuries. This was a post depression cost savings measure, but more likely it set the owner apart from the staff.
An owner could pay for any upgrades they saw fit for the rear as well as the front zone...so, if your particular serial number vehicle has chrome, woodgrain, radio, etc...DONT assume its incorrect unless you see obvious evidence (old photos, prior owner's recollection) that it was diddled with over the years. The specifics are often found in the parts manual if you look at the trim and fittings chapters by model type...more there than most people know... In a pinch, get hold of Bob Supina, who is the 1937 guru finalizing his definitive book on 1937 Packards.
Posted on: 5/7 12:15
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Re: Carpet '37 1508
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Home away from home
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I have no idea if this applies to the senior cars, but I have a 1937 138CD limo with the original interior (what’s left of it). The rear passenger area was tan wool with tan carpet. The front chauffeur area used black leather, but had the same carpet as the rear.
What I found for my car is that the carpet is mohair.
Posted on: 5/7 15:14
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Re: Carpet '37 1508
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As Don indicates from his vehicle, it substantiates what the parts manual (P. 331) calls out:
1) either woolen (pile, not loop for that era) OR mohair options for the model 1035 (I think that is what yours is) 7-passenger touring limo. 2) Mohair is less moisture absorptive (made from the hair, not the wool, of older angora goats, not the younglings; older goats have larger diameter coarse stiff hair suitable for carpet), so water droplets and snow bead up on its tips and are easily brushed off. Wool, is softer and more available (cheaper) but absolutely needs a rubber coated/lined backing as it wicks moisture down. Separate loose top rubber mats (day to day that are removable) often preserve wool carpets until you get to pebble beach and throw them in your pickup truck. Since either wool or mohair were optional, you can make the decision based on your desires or just replicate what that owner chose to buy at the time. Is your front/driver compartment the same or did it simplify the chauffeurs carpet to a matting?
Posted on: 5/8 8:27
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Re: Carpet '37 1508
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Somewhere in my past I recall either reading or hearing the Senior carpet described as 'moss tread'.
Bob
Posted on: 5/8 9:23
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Re: Carpet '37 1508
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The front is leather seats & panels with black carpet.
Posted on: 5/8 20:59
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Re: Carpet '37 1508
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I only find vague "Moss Tread" references in post-war Packard citations...never run across it in the pre-war realm.
However, in the 37 sales brochure, there is an image and narrative describing how the carpet type with underlying rubber water-resistant lining is part of the design...in essence they describe the same configuration as the post-war "Moss Tread" references. I think a marketing slogan was introduced post-war to communicate the same condition more easily.
Posted on: 5/9 10:24
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