Re: 1940 Packard Super 8 160 Station Wagon (Cantrell) Factory Air Conditioning!
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Chris, Prewar was the end of the era of wood body frames which were cars with steel over a wooden framework but by the time this Packard was made (or "would have been made" if original) most makes used steel for the body EXCEPT for woodies which retained a full wood structure and appearance. It wasn't until postwar that woodies started having partial steel bodies and even then the wood was still somewhat structural and often comprised the entire upper half of the doors. It was really early to mid-50 that car makers started using all steel on the wagons, then adding wood as a trim detail and, of course, by the n Packard did not offer a wagon.
Posted on: 2020/4/22 2:35
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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: 1940 Packard Super 8 160 Station Wagon (Cantrell) Factory Air Conditioning!
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Looking at this from afar...wooden framed bodies on cars disappeared in the 1930's for good reasons. "Woody" wagons were an anachronism. They were comparatively expensive to build, and never really had global appeal. There were a few lingering examples of them - mainly from the UK coach builders - after WW2. These were called "shooting brakes". Armstrong-Siddeley also produced one post war, but they didn't sell many.
I guess there was not enough demand even prewar for Packard to want to build such a model themselves. But specialist builders persisted for some years. So that brings us to the example here. It was clearly built for Bill Harrah, who happened to fancy that style of body. And he - or maybe somebody else - wanted air con. It was fitted this way because the vehicle was never intended for commercial use. It must have been quite expensive to build, but that was hardly a problem for the Harrah's. It appears to be well constructed and sits on a genuine Packard chassis (origin/type unknown) with some original panels. It's not very different in that sense to a lot of the other rebody jobs, such as Ferraris, which were popular at that time and often incorporated a genuine chassis from a more mundane model. So what's to get excited about? It has not been passed off as the real thing, which is the biggest risk with these things. It's just someone's idea of a nice car. Not mine, though! As for the later metal-bodied "woodies" - it's hard to see the point. But they were popular enough for major manufacturers to include in their model line-up in the US. Brian
Posted on: 2020/4/22 17:12
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1941 120 Club Coupe (SOLD)
1956 Clipper Deluxe (RHD and auto) - for the wife, or so I told her! |
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Re: 1940 Packard Super 8 160 Station Wagon (Cantrell) Factory Air Conditioning!
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And after all these years, I was under the assumption that wooden cars were being made at that time due to the strikes and shortage of metal for the bodies. Why else would they go back to wood?
Wes
Posted on: 2020/4/22 20:34
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Re: 1940 Packard Super 8 160 Station Wagon (Cantrell) Factory Air Conditioning!
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Quote:
If you watch the video, the owner is obviously trying to pass it off as being the real thing. My other beef with the car isn't that it's a replica, but that it was sprayed so thickly with urethane that it looks plastic.
Posted on: 2020/4/23 10:09
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West Peterson
1930 Packard Speedster Eight boattail (SOLD) 1940 Packard 1808 w/Factory Air (SOLD) 1947 Chrysler Town and Country sedan 1970 Camaro RS 1936 Cord phaeton packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=4307&forum=10 aaca.org/ |
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Re: 1940 Packard Super 8 160 Station Wagon (Cantrell) Factory Air Conditioning!
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West
Yes, you're right. I watched the video and the owner was claiming it's the real thing. I wonder if he knew. Not all auctioneers are so scrupulous in checking provenance. Of course, if they get it wrong, they're in trouble especially in the US. The good news is that the truth about this one is now being told. One of the (many) good things about this site is that such stories are easily uncovered by future buyers. If they're dumb enough to buy something unusual like this without checking then I would say they deserve to get taken for a ride. There was a recent case here in Australia where an auctioneer insisted they had checked the provenance of a 1930 Packard 740 Roadster, and it was genuine. It was a beautiful job, but on a rebodied sedan. I know the guy who built it, and luckily so did the buyer. But the auctioneer still insisted it was genuine, even though the builder had earlier given them photographs of the original sedan from before he dismantled it. There was another well known case in the US, where a non-genuine Jaguar D-Type was sold but the truth emerged later. It ended up in court and the buyer was compensated. I think this "woody" is a well built and finished example, and pretty close to an original. As you say, not quite correct. Since it was created later - and presumably regardless of expense - it has been "improved" in some areas but still represents the period quite well. In my mind, this is way preferable resto-mods which are all the rage right now. Brian
Posted on: 2020/4/23 17:51
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1941 120 Club Coupe (SOLD)
1956 Clipper Deluxe (RHD and auto) - for the wife, or so I told her! |
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Re: 1940 Packard Super 8 160 Station Wagon (Cantrell) Factory Air Conditioning!
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Joe, it is the breath-taking pic of the 1940 floral car that makes to post the below shown image here. The descriptions reads:
"1938 A commodious Packard automobile was parked enticingly in front of dealer showroom." source:pressherald.com/media/gallery/historic-photos-the-month-of-may-80-years-ago/
Posted on: 2020/8/2 16:41
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The story of ZIS-110, ZIS-115, ZIL-111 & Chaika GAZ-13 on www.guscha.de
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