The 1957 to 1966 Imperial shared virtually nothing with the Chrysler New Yorker, outside the powertrain and brakes. Unlike the Cadillacs of that era. the Imperial body was unique to the Imperial, while Cadillac shared its body with the Super/Roadmaster/Electra 225 (depending on year) and the Olds 98 from 1961 (the 1952-60 Olds 98 used the 88 body with a longer wheelbase and trunk). Even the Cadillac Fleetwood 75 was based on Fisher Body's C-body starting in 1950. I believe Chrysler intended to make the Imperial a true comptetitor in the luxury market with the Imperial-only body in 1957 and an Imperial-only assembly plant for 1959. But the Imperial just did not have the sales numbers to make it all happen. Imperial always came in third, with 1957 Imperial model year production hitting the peak at 37,557 units. The 1957 Lincoln, with a finny version of the 1956 model, produced 41,123. And that was the closest Imperial ever came to beating Lincoln. Cadillac production for the 1957 model year hit 146,841. Sadly, Chrysler never separated the Imperial from Chrysler. It was always marketed by Chrysler or Chrysler-Plymouth, never having its own sales/marketing staff, never mind its own division and general manager. The "Imperial Divison" of the 1960's existed on paper only It never existed in real life. The 1958-60 Lincoln used its own body, but Ford lost money on them. The new, smaller 1961 Lincoln Continental was a do-or-die situation. Either Lincoln made money, or it was gone. Thus the Lincoln used the same body for nine years with a "reskining" in 1966. For 1970, the Lincoln was based on the large Ford-Mercury body and has shared bodies ever since. The 1967 Imperial went to the unibody C-body, sharing its instrument panel and roof lines with the Chrysler New Yorker. Every other piece of exterior sheetmetal and trim was unique to the Imperial. But the Imperial was still not making the financial returns on that amount of investment to make it a viable proposition. Thus the fuselage Imperials shared the New Yorker body with a different front clip and rear end treatment. The 1974 Imperial was so late in getting approved Chrysler did not have time to engineer and tool the usual longer front stub frame. The 1980-83 Imperials, although based on the Cordoba/Mirada, had completely different body sheetmetal, although sharing the front fenders and outer door skins with the C/M models. The instrument panel frame was shared, but that electronic marvel in front of the driver was Imperial-only. As was the EFI on the 318 V8 engine. The 1990-93 Imperials were Fifth Avenues with different grilles, taillamps and interior amentiies. The biggest diffrence between the Imperial and the rest was underneath the car - the brakes amd suspension. And if you compare the styling of the cars in that era, it was getting hard to tell the difference between makes for all North American manufacturers. So, basically, the Imperial existed to make a presence in the luxury field. A car for an owner of a Chrysler New Yorker to move up from. Chrysler made the Imperial as unique as financially possible. Chrysler gave the Imperial more luxurious and better quality interiors, more equipment, superior brakes and suspension. It spent the money where it truly counted to make the Imperial a superior automobile. A 1967 Imperial front door looks different from the New Yorker version, as does a DeVille from an Electra 225. But that's it - looks, nothing more. GM could give the Cadillac its own instrument panels, exterior sheetmetal, etc. as the sales were enough to pay for it all. Chrysler just did not have that (pardon the expression) luxury. Bill Vancouver, BC ----- Original Message ----- From: anthony romano To: mailing-list Sent: Sunday, July 23, 2006 5:04 PM Subject: IML: New Yorker & Imperial virtually the same car?? Why was the Imperial and New Yorker virtually the same in body and features? Cadillac made itself completely different than the top of the line for Buick, Pontiac, and Oldsmobile 98. Lincoln also like Cadillac stood alone against any other Ford product and their other divisions. So again, if the Imperial was to be recognized as a class unto itself it had to be different than the other Models. I believe it fail to do so. Example of today- The Imperial concept car of 2008 looks so similar to the 300 than why would you even look at the Imperial or get excited about it. Why pay more for and Imperial when there is no real difference except for the price tag! In my opinion the New Yorker/5th ave. sold more in the 90's because it looked the same as the Imperial ,but was cheaper! A loaded 5th gave you just as much as the Imperial- In fact , one can argue that the Interior on the 5th was more luxurious than the Imperial. Help me understand The Chrysler mentality on this matter -Regards -Anthony ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm