At 235.3" (19 feet 7+ inches), it was a big one. Can't say it was the longest, however, for standard sedans, anyway. It may be. I'm thinking of those Continental Town Sedans of the era; maybe they came up an inch or two short. Big Mothers too, by any criteria. The largest wheelbase on a standard (non limo or commercial chassis) sedan was the 34-37 Cadillac V-16s, at 154". The '73 Imperial is 127",. However, the Caddy had its wheels pretty much at each corner, where the Imperial had some, ahem, overhang. So the Imperial probably was longer, overall. By the way, has anyone ever noted the square footage of the trunks on the 69-73 Imperial Coupes? They look like El Caminos if you squint, and pretend that there is an open bed back there. You could land a helicopter on them. And the legroom in the back seat, at least for the coupes, isn't that great. The overall length of the Coupe might be an inch or so smaller than the 235.3" for the sedan, but still... Not the greatest use of space in automotive history, anyway. Currell >From: KerryPinkerton <pinkertonk@xxxxxxxxx> >Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >Subject: Re: IML: 73 catalogue pictures >Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2002 05:33:33 -0700 (PDT) > >Oh, it doesn't take that much space...just a corner of >the garage for it to curl up in...LOL. Space is >definitely a consideration. It will 'fit' in a >standard garage but it is a very tight fit. Someone >told me the 73 Imperial was the longest American >production car ever made due to the 5mph bumper tips. > >Kerryp > >--- Matt Hopkins <mhoppy@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Kerry's 73 looks so good, I think these are really > > pictures out of a sales > > brochure. If I had the space and money, I'd take it > > off your hands. > > > > > > > Speaking of dependable. This is just a shameless > > > commerical plug for my 73. If anyone is looking > > for a > > > really nice, dependable 73, this is it. Many > > IMLers > > > have seen and driven this car. > > > > > > http://dte.net/57imperial/73imperial/ > > > > > > > >