Muuuuuch much crisper! And the coupe itself fills half my screen when I open “in new tab”.
Pontiac, '47 Streamliner
Muuuuuch much crisper! And the coupe itself fills half my screen when I open “in new tab”.
Pontiac, '47 Streamliner
Ran across a YouTube on architectural styles that was interesting. Didn’t really define rambler though.
Also back to cars, there was one on the cars of Perry mason and leave it to ■■■■■■. I really appreciate seeing the 60s cars and a few in the 40s. I’m pretty sure my grampa had a 39 Pontiac that I can remember.
Oh my gosh, b e a v e r.
bing:
A rambler:
(rough sketch)
Note the presumed original part of the house has smoke coming out the chimney. ![]()
I still think it is a Chevy. The Chevy has a chrome cap on the forward edge of the rear fender… like the picture Random posted… and the Pontiac does not. GM shared sheetmetal between the 2 cars but trim is slightly different.
And folks complain about how hard it is to tell modern cars apart…
I’ve always found pre-’55 cars hard to distinguish.
+1
The people who complain that “modern cars all look the same” clearly don’t recall an earlier era. In the 1930s & 1940s, only a very close look could distinguish one make from another.
Our fathers and grandfathers could tell those cars apart like we can with cars of our own era.
It has always been a generational thing.
I think it’s a 1948 Chevrolet Fleetline. There is no trim splitting the trunk and the fender trim on the Fleetline is wider than the trim on the Pontiac. Similar cars though.
I posted the pic on another site, folks there agree it’s a Chevy, “based on the spacing of the [fender] moldings. Also the molding ahead of the rear tire says Chevy as well.”
RandomTroll’s car does not have Pontiac rear fender skirts. The Chevrolet rear wheel wells are round at the top, they will not accept factory skirts.
Also, no Pontiac chrome trim on the trunk lid.
You naughty boy.