Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin:
Vehicle used by a character or in a car chase
Author | Message |
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◊ 2006-07-26 18:33 |
used in the car chase! :-)) martin |
◊ 2006-07-26 22:26 |
Wolseley |
explorer4x4 ◊ 2006-07-26 22:38 |
See to me, all these look the same! No matter what brand, no matter what country the early 1900s cars (from about 1910 to 1937) look the same! |
◊ 2006-07-27 00:00 |
From somebody that thinks that Citroën DS = Ford Scorpio, that is not really a surprise ![]() |
◊ 2006-08-09 08:50 |
Probably a Wolseley 14 60, from 1947 |
◊ 2006-08-17 10:26 |
To "Explorer4x4": if this Cadillac coupe from 1912 [http://www.car-nection.com/yann/Dbas_ima/12coupe.JPG] looks the same to you as this Cadillac coupe from 1937 [http://www.car-nection.com/yann/Dbas_37/3760CPE.JPG], you need glasses! I'm guessing you're a "youngster" (18-25) and don't know much about pre-WW1, pre-WW2 and pre-1970 cars. You can believe THIS grandpaw (from 1939), when I say that in the "good old days" all cars did NOT look the same. As regards Cadillacs in particular (my favorites), I can guarantee that 95% of them got a new and different front clip every year. From 1925 through 1985 (that's 60 years out of a total of 104 years in production) you can tell the year by just looking at that front clip. When I was your age, every new model that came on the market had a "visual identity" of its own (front rear and sides). Today, car stylists are a thing of the past; now car's are designed and their names chosen by computers. How long before there is only a single make of car, a single model name, a single power source and a single color (probably bright yellow, which is the most visible color in nature's spectrum and would prevent a heck of a lot of those "I-didn't-see-the-other-car" collisions). |
◊ 2008-02-15 01:40 |
fitted with grp front wings, for several takes where car crashes through fencing in chase scene. was a very poor example. |