looks like a '27 to '30 model. Unusual fenders, bumpers, and lights.....with a flathead six.
I know there were hundreds of manufacturers in the late twenties....Anyone know?
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looks like a '27 to '30 model. Unusual fenders, bumpers, and lights.....with a flathead six.
I know there were hundreds of manufacturers in the late twenties....Anyone know?
Looks like a Chrysler , or if it's early enough, a Maxwell. Fenders, "cooking pot" headlights, body lines all match. No rad shell makes ID harder.
Headlights if original might be the best indicator as they are unique. I'd have to look in my old car bible to try to pin it down. Web sites mostly show cars that have been modified with head light buckets from Dietz or King Bee. Could be a Chrysler product, but not Plymouth as they started in '28, but there are dozens of manufacturers who made cars only for 2 to 5 years and then went belly up..
actually there were many made with similar headlights. The bumper on the front has three bars, making it unusual.
I'd bet it's a mid 20's Wippet
or a mid 20's Oakland
1927 Packard
I don't know because a 27 Parkard has a cowl vent but the pic HOTRODPAINT is showing appears not to have one. That w/the windshield & fenders between the 2 are different....joeQuote:
Originally Posted by Corvette64
Looks like the wippet to me.
Quote:
Originally Posted by brickman
http://georgemcdowell.com/show/02/het/het002.jpg
that pic is why I thought it could be a Wippet. Looks like the same body lines to me, even though the 2nd pic that HOTRODPAINT shows has the roof removed at the top body line....joe
...but the fenders are totally different...
iTS A HENWAY
"Whats a hen weigh?" ....I mean "Henway" :-)
28 HenwayQuote:
Originally Posted by HOTRODPAINT
http://georgemcdowell.com/cgi-bin/07...ie/pic1115.jpg
About two pounds..............:LOL:Quote:
Originally Posted by HOTRODPAINT
couldn't resist.
I knew somebody would remember that old joke! :-)
something has gone fowl around here:D
"fowl"...."hen".....I get it!
so just what is the chitty-chitty bang bang mobile??
Anything unusual about that flathead six?
The reason I ask is that the Oakland engine had two heads on it with the distributor sticking up between them.
....... I think.
Jim
I'm gonna go with the Whippet. The bumper dosen't work, but that could have been replaced. I saw one at an aution years ago, very classy little car. In the picture of the front there are two round canisters by the bumper irons. These are a type of shock that uses a coiled spring and a length of webbed belt. Odd set up, but the Whippet is the only car I've seen them on.
Youngster
The square exhaust manifold kinda looks like an Oakland. Wheres Uncle Bob? Uncle Bob help us!
This is not easy! I have spent a few hours on the net trying to solve this puzzle.
I knew there were hundreds of models before the Great Depression. I found a list of about 800-1000 different cars that have been made worldwide. It's kind of discouraging.
Many models have similar fenders, cowl, headlights, and wheels, but still, I haven't matched the bumper. So far, I think the closest was a '26 Pontiac, but not exactly the same. I even explored other GM models of the era that were discontinued. Sometimes the Nash, Hudson & Willys look similar....but not the same. The last thing I tried was to look at was inline 6 cyliner engines, but found that there aren't many engine pictures posted. I'm just about out of patience.
Maybe I'll ask Jay Leno. He likes the odd and obscure! :-)
Sorry, I took a quick look and not enough unique styling ques to get a lead from my memory. Just some thoughts to help with those who might be willing to do as HRP has done in searching a ton of info. Based on the headlight housings, artillary wheels, steering wheel center, and mechanical brakes, I'd say it's no newer than mid 20s, Mopar is out because of the mechanical brakes. Based on how the character lines stop at the belt line on the rear body panel it likely had a fabric covered roof turret. It's unusual to have such a difference between front and rear bumper design (not impossible though), it could be that front bumper is a transplant as the rear looks "right". The reveals stamped in the fenders would probably be the best comparative (absent the rad shell) if you think you've found a picture that's "right". If those sync up then you go to cowl design, and any other body feature that looks "unique". Comparing engines could work, but as HRP pointed out there were hundreds of "manufacturers" in the teens and early 20s, most of which were what were known as "assembled cars", meaning they bought components from subcontractors and put a car together. So many different brands of cars would have a Continental, or Buda engine, among several others, as well as off the shelf transmissions and rear ends. Same for items like headlights, handles, tanks and so forth. They would often tool up for a brand specific grille shell/radiator shell, mainly because that was the most distinguishing brand identifier.Quote:
Originally Posted by Corvette64
Waaaaaaay back (like 1951) I bought a '29 Pontiac from a wrecking yard for the princely sum of ten dollars cash. It had a big six engine like I described a few postings back, two heads on a straight six with the distributor sticking up between the heads. Since Oakland became Pontiac shortly before that car was made I'm assuming that the same engine was also used in cars with the Oakland name on them.Quote:
Originally Posted by HOTRODPAINT
It was a handsome old brute (a coupe) with an oval rear window and was heavy as a battleship.
I drove it for a while and would have kept it longer, but I got the patriotic urge REAL bad (that means that I was about to be drafted and I had to rush down and join the navy).
So I gave it to a buddy and never saw it again.
Jim
I'm not sure about the make of the car, but two of the bullet holes were from a Browing .22, and one was from a Colt .32 short . . . :LOL:
Good eye! :-)~
How about this one? Seems to match in every way.
1927 Chandler Standard Six Sedan w/Cleveland 6 engine.
could be, fenders, headlights & bumpers seem to match && if you look at the rear
http://www.trombinoscar.com/hupmobile/ch270104.jpg
everything seems to look the same including the tail light housing...joe
And the cylindrical shaped "doo-dads" at the front base of the fenders (probably part of the shock absorbers) look the same. I think you've finally figured it out HRP! Good on you!!
I used "Google Images", and found that when looking at certain makes, pictures of others would be mixed in. After I saw the unusual bumper, I knew what make I needed to look for. :-)