Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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May I ask , would the car originally have indicators / trafficators / turn signals ? Unless it was built for a market that used trafficators, it would not have them. The standard equipment was turn signal lights built into the taillights and front parking lights.
Posted on: 2024/9/22 11:10
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All generalities are false.
Once I thought I was wrong but I was mistaken. Don Pierson Packard / IMPERIAL page CA DMV Licensed Vehicle VIN Verification 1951 Henney-Packard 3-Door Long Wheelbase Air Force Ambulance The 1951 Henney-Packard is For Sale! 1954 Packard Patrician 1954 Packard Patrician Parts Car 1956 Clipper Custom Sedan |
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Forum Ambassador
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G'day PaulUK,
![]() If you purchase the '49 Deluxe Eight Coupe or any other Packard, for that matter, I invite you to include in PackardInfo's Packard Vehicle Registry.
Posted on: 2024/9/22 15:44
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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: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Home away from home
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Paul, run, not walk, from this nightmare. The only love that car was ever shown in recent years was incorrect seat upholstery. It's got rust out in the rear floor, the chrome is not just shot, but pitted, which means the plater will have to grind and grind before it ever gets its first dip into the "copper strike" tank. The engine looks like no one's bothered to so much as wipe a kerosene rag over it in 50 years. You can bet it needs rebuilding, at very least new rings.
If someone g a v e you that car, you'd still be so far in the hole the sun will never shine. It is not a rare car. You can find restored, good-running examples here in the states, if you really want a 1948-50 bathtub (?) from all the cars produced their first 48 years (est. 1899), for a minute fraction of bringing such a forlorn hulk back to life. If the seller in the US sounds like a square bloke and you hit it off, it is vastly cheaper for you to fly over, get a rental car, drive over to his house and look at, take it for a spin, perhaps to a local old car/Packard specialist, pay him to put it on his lift and check it out like you would any used car. If it's as he says, ship it back to the Sceptered Isle. You'll still be far ahead financially. Paul, you'll get some "misery loves company" countering. That's the trouble with some suffering "one marque-itis." Now, we like what we like, and if that pudgy look sings to you, so be it. But have you looked at junior 1942-47 Packard Clipper 8 fastbacks (two-door club sedans)? Or 1936-42 One-Twenty coupes? Packard didn't make overdrive standard equipment so they could advertise lower base prices in that cutthroat market, and because it takes a certain amount of sense to operate correctly. That doesn't mean you should suffer such a car. Electromatic was a quick Rube Goldberg response from an already troubled Packard to GM's HydraMatic, optional in the 1940 Oldsmobiles, '41 Cadillacs. My car had it, and after rebuilding by a Packard owner/specialist, worked fine, if you're idea of luxury is moving your column shift lever without the Herculean effort of depressing a light, easy, semi-centrifugal clutch. It is far from "automatic" other than that. If you're smart, you drive a couple miles to warm up your engine before engaging it. Electromatic operates only the clutch, not the transmission. The latter's your part. One thing i loathed about EM is when at a long light, your clutch pedal remains depressed, doing your throw out bearing no favors. Packard was on the skids and could care less. In fact, they were so afraid of GM, they ran ads suggesting the Packard driver with EM in city traffic leave his or her gearshift in second and drive all day like that, doing the pressure plate no good. If you get a restored/rejunated/rebuilt Packard with EM, it will be finicky no matter what. The smart thing is to remove all that hardware from your engine bay. Packards are good road cars. Part of that allure is d r i v i n g the car, not suffering a last-ditch gimmick. Hudsons 1935-on offered vacuum clutch control, later christened "Drive-Master." Ask anyone debating this if he'll fly to England and service yours. The market for all old cars, other than '34 Packard Dietrichs, Packard Darrins, Duesenbergs, Alfa-Romeo 2900 8C 2900Bs, a few of the gaudier Delahayes and the like is shrinking by the day. So there are p l e n t y of nice examples of whatever you really want (c'mon, a bathub?), where someone else has already done or commissioned all the time-consuming and very expensive work. To your general old car question: No, you do not need lead additive unless you're pulling a trailer or you've a car full of friends the size of Sumo wrestlers and are racing in the highlands. For decades, tens of millions of cars in the eastern and central US performed fine on Amoco, which was always unleaded. However, many of us hedge our bets and use Red Line Lead Substitute, which uses benign sodium to protect valve and seat from the nanosecond micro kiss. Potassium was tried in Europe but formed deposits.
Posted on: 2024/9/23 2:22
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Just popping in
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Once again, many thanks for replies.
All advice took on board . And the tales of usage back-in the-day appreciated. Having studied the electromatic clutch service docs , does certainly seem a host of palavar ( bit reminiscent of Land Rover’s style of improvements ). ( seems that the electromatic clutch means that the vehicle originally had overdrive. Unless I’ve read the manual wrongly ) I should perhaps point out that the car is open to offers ……….. Am certainly not hoping for concours condition , am happy to work on cars and drive them. Car is only 30 miles away so will satisfy my curiosity later this week
Posted on: 2024/9/23 9:05
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Home away from home
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Paul, it would seem there is a growing consensus that the car you're currently looking at is overpriced and appears to be neglected.
Maybe a better route would be to look for another? Not sure what is available in the UK, but our club president has a 48 and a 49 for sale. There would be shipping and whatever other fees, but these are priced in Cdn dollars and you would get a much better car to start with. I think you'll be happy to have a Packard as a project car..........if it's not so rough that it costs you far more than it will ever be worth to fix it up. kijiji.ca/v-classic-cars/calgary/1948-packard-super-eight/1698692198 kijiji.ca/v-classic-cars/calgary/1949-pa ... -eight-7-passenger-sedan/1701674689
Posted on: 2024/9/23 9:06
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Home away from home
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seems that the electromatic clutch means that the vehicle originally had overdrive. Unless I’ve read the manual wrongly Overdrive and ElectroMatic were two separate options so either was available by itself. As for all the comments against buying this car, they are all right on the spot but if you can get the price far, far lower than it is, and if you understand all the work involved but want to do it for fun, that’s another matter!
Posted on: 2024/9/23 11:53
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All generalities are false.
Once I thought I was wrong but I was mistaken. Don Pierson Packard / IMPERIAL page CA DMV Licensed Vehicle VIN Verification 1951 Henney-Packard 3-Door Long Wheelbase Air Force Ambulance The 1951 Henney-Packard is For Sale! 1954 Packard Patrician 1954 Packard Patrician Parts Car 1956 Clipper Custom Sedan |
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Home away from home
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The ElectroMatic Clutch was available only with the Overdrive transmission, you could not order it by itself.
Posted on: 2024/9/23 14:41
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Home away from home
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Not true as far as I know. It was available by itself and I've even seen transmissions made for it without overdrive. They have a governor on the rear housing similar to that on an overdrive transmission but it's on the transmission's own output casting with no overdrive unit at the back. Maybe the governor was mistaken as being part of overdrive?
Posted on: 2024/9/23 19:47
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All generalities are false.
Once I thought I was wrong but I was mistaken. Don Pierson Packard / IMPERIAL page CA DMV Licensed Vehicle VIN Verification 1951 Henney-Packard 3-Door Long Wheelbase Air Force Ambulance The 1951 Henney-Packard is For Sale! 1954 Packard Patrician 1954 Packard Patrician Parts Car 1956 Clipper Custom Sedan |
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Re: Advice sought re buying (uk) ; 1949 PACKARD DELUXE EIGHT COUPE ,
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Home away from home
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I have to agee with Don,
I have seen an original 1941 manual transmission without overdrive that had the EMC switches for the early version on the right side of extended shift lever shafts and a governor on the rear speedo housing. Not sure about the later model Clippers and 1948-50 models with the much simpler EMC system
Posted on: 2024/9/24 0:04
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