I've put up a Web page with images so you can see what I'm talking about. http://home.earthlink.net/~rapilje/cars.html This talk about the Plymouth Belmont and Dodge Granada got me to wondering again about an article title "Packard Maps Sensational Comeback" in ans issue of CARS Magazine I have that was published in May of 1953. There's a sketch of a car on the first page of the article (see Web page) that's labeled "Sketch from design section reveals lines along which Packard is thinking." The second I saw that sketch I thought, "that isn't a Packard, that's the Plymouth Belmont!" which, of course, was introduced the following year, in 1954. That Briggs, as "brians@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" wrote, and not Ghia produced this car in their Advanced Design facilities when they were supplying bodies to Packard and Hudson before Chrysler took over leads me to wonder again whether the car was produced for Packard, who was beginning to suffer badly at that point, and who might not have been able to couldn't afford the finished product, leading Briggs to offer it to Chrysler, who accepted it and displayed it (and the Granada -- it never occurred to me until you pointed it out how much that car looks like the Panthers) as a Plymouth concept car. The sketch in the magazine, to me at least, looks amazingly like the Belmont. And both the Belmont and Granada would have looked very comfortable sporting Packard-type grilles. What do all of you think?
|