Showing posts with label Cadillac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cadillac. Show all posts

the 1935 Diamond T Doodlebug, 26 feet long, 1500 gallons, designed by H W Kizer




the above and below images are from the same time and place, check out the VIP limo, a 1940Cadillac V16



It was stylistically important for several reasons. First, it departed from all common car and truck-body conventions. There were no fenders on the Doodlebug, certainly not in any normal sense. The conventional hood was gone, as were the running boards, cowl,and setback windshield. The "little house on wheels" that made up the passenger compartment of most vehicles of the day was visually absent. The Doodlebug's bread-Ioaf shape was all of one piece and, except for the applied headlights, could have been designed today. Second, the Doodlebug used curved side glass and a compound curved windshield. This last innovation didn't see mass production until the '57 Chrysler Imperial. The "through" body sides were at least 13 years ahead of their time--Kaiser and Frazer put the idea into production for 1946. The eyebrows over the full wheel cutouts reappeared as a focal point on the '66 Olds Toronado. Third, the Doodlebug tapered toward the rear and had considerable uninterrupted tumblehome curve, which were unusual features in that day of boxy bodies.

Most surprising was the overall height. At 72 inches, the Doodlebug stood a mere 4 inches higher than a '34 Ford sedan. No one was building trucks that low in those days, nor do many manufacturers do so even today. Bel Geddes' inspired Texaco fleet, helped prompt other oil companies to produce similarly streamlined commercial vehicles.

I saved these photos yesterday and now I can't find the webpage I got them from

wow.



http://www.dogfightmag.com/2011/03/cadillac-v-day-in-shanghai/ for the story

great photos on Hellformotors tumblr

You don't need me to tell you it's the Galpin Ford sponsored "Back Up Pick Up" unusual wheelstander, but you can't read that this is Lions in 1971
Briggs Cunningham at Le Mans 1950. Who is Briggs? race car driver and museum owner, and a sports car legend as he was one of the first in the 1950's to go all the way to try and win the European races as an American, like Reventon did after him, and Shelby after Reventon http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2011/03/le-monster-of-briggs-cunningham.html
From the movie "The Quest" http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2011/05/this-is-something-you-really-ought-to.html



http://hellformotors.tumblr.com for many more interesting and variety of wide range photos of race cars

Cadillac ambulances rusting away after decades in a forest









Found on http://www.professionalcarsociety.org/forums/showthread.php?t=5688

unrestored 1932 Cadillac 7 passenger Imperial sedan



The current owner kept tabs on this car for a loooonnnng time. His college roommate's dad bought it in 1938 for his wife, and in the late 1970's moved it to Oregon, and 30 some years later this owner bought the car he'd been keeping track of since 1970









The little white button above the armrest is to call the driver

1961 Cadillac Brougham Jacqueline coupe, body by Pinin Farina


full story from Hemmings at http://www.hemmings.com/hcc/stories/2009/05/01/hmn_feature9.html

One just sold at Bonhams Auctions, it went for $289,000

The Jacqueline was named for the wife of the American President at the time, it debuted at the 1961 paris Auto Show. In the 1990's the head of Cartier, Alain Perrin had the concept (no powertrain) grafted to a 1960 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz

Cuban Classics, great photography of the last American cars in Cuba








see more at http://cubanclassics.blogspot.com/

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