unclescott58 Posted January 2, 2021 Author Posted January 2, 2021 Ford doing a good of taking advantage of the idea.
unclescott58 Posted January 2, 2021 Author Posted January 2, 2021 Going back to this one. It amazes me that here are two cars. From two big competitors at the time. Aiming at the same market/customer. With two cars that look so different.
ChrisBcritter Posted January 2, 2021 Posted January 2, 2021 (edited) 8 hours ago, unclescott58 said: So, Ford - If the Granada was so great compared to the Seville, why'd you need to build the Versailles? Edited January 2, 2021 by ChrisBcritter
unclescott58 Posted January 2, 2021 Author Posted January 2, 2021 (edited) 1 hour ago, ChrisBcritter said: So, Ford - If the Granada was so great compared to the Seville, why'd you need to build the Versailles? Exactly. They say the 1st generations Seville was based off of the GM X-body platform (Nova, Omega, Ventura, Apollo). But, not enough to tell in the end. Where with Versailles, you could tell it was directly related to the Granada/Monarch. I quite figured out how Ford thought they could get away with that one? Especially with the car sitting on there Lincoln-Mercury show floors with the Monarch. As close as the Monarch and Versailles were. And how nice one could option out a Monarch or Granada, how did they think they could pull that one off? Yet they did. My folks bought a stripped Mercury Monarch in 1975 to replace their '67 Mercury Comet 202. When I say stripped, the only option was an AM radio. It was a 2-door with a three on the tree and the 200 cu.in straight six. The base '75 Monarchs did come with bucket seats. No basic bench until the '76 models. The particular car they decided to buy had one minor defect. If you did not get the optional digital clock, it was replaced with a Monarch nameplate on the dash. In the case of the car they were buying, it had a Granada nameplate in its place, instead. The dealer, good old Northside Lincoln-Mercury in north Minneapolis, did change it out soon after my parents bought the car. A Monarch or Granada? They were so close, that guys on the assembly line either couldn't tell or care, what name was on the dashboard. Edited January 2, 2021 by unclescott58
sfhess Posted January 2, 2021 Posted January 2, 2021 2 hours ago, unclescott58 said: Exactly. They say the 1st generations Seville was based off of the GM X-body platform (Nova, Omega, Ventura, Apollo). But, not enough to tell in the end. Where with Versailles, you could tell it was directly related to the Granada/Monarch. I quite figured out how Ford thought they could get away with that one? Especially with the car sitting on there Lincoln-Mercury show floors with the Monarch. As close as the Monarch and Versailles were. And how nice one could option out a Monarch or Granada, how did they think they could pull that one off? Yet they did. I remember some dealerships were putting Versailles front clips, taillights etc on Granadas and Monarchs and selling them for a good profit for a while.
ZTony8 Posted January 3, 2021 Posted January 3, 2021 The reason for the similarity of the PT Cruiser and the HHR is that they were styled by the same guy,
unclescott58 Posted January 3, 2021 Author Posted January 3, 2021 A couple of days ago, I finished building Revell's 1/32 scale Corvette C3 (1969) kit. A couple of years back, I built their 1/32 scale Opel GT. So it is natural to post pictures of the two together. Either the Corvette is too small. Or the Opel too big. Because from looking at the photo of two real one together, the model are just a little too close in size.
slusher Posted January 4, 2021 Posted January 4, 2021 On 1/1/2021 at 11:11 PM, unclescott58 said: My ex wife had an automatic Chevette and going up a hill the air would cut off automatically when the rpms would start to lower...
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