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#1 |
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an Eric Dolphy fan
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: AW. A very nice place!
Posts: 8,331
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1980s & earlier Family Car / Name of one ?
... am looking for a car put out prior to the mid-eighties or thereabouts. Could go as far back as the 1970s. It would ideally be one owned by a family: husband, wife, and teen daughter. It'd be one that might almost be bragged about or driven with pride, to tour about the town in, though nothing too extravagant. (Just one make better than the Jones'.) Maybe something with some extra horsepower under the hood? Or maybe, distinguished by the brand: Cadillac, etc; if such companies put out "family" cars. Thanks!
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#2 |
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Delerium ex Ennui
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Edmonton, Canada
Posts: 8,165
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Chrysler New Yorker. We had a 1985 model in the 90s. Ok car.
Don't know how they would compare. Not big on cars myself. |
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#3 |
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grump
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1,619
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If they were three drivers but only one car, I'd think "poorer family." My parents were blue collar and we always had two cars, Chevrolets, and maybe a third, an old VW for the teens to battle over.
The 1980 Pontiac Phoenix was, I think, the first front-wheel-drive Pontiac. If you want foreign-built, maybe the Toyota Cressida? Any European car would have had extra cachet for being European. A Lotus, a Bentley, a BMW? Thankfully, it's easy to research all these including original prices on-line. Ain't the net great? |
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#4 |
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practical experience, FTW
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Fargo
Posts: 3,262
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I'll offer what my parents had: an Oldsmobile 98
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It's time to use the big hammer
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#5 |
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figuring it all out
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Toronto, Canada
Posts: 91
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Google something like:
Top selling car 1975 US And you will get some good answers. You can change the date based on the age and financial status of the characters. I just did something similar recently and was surprised to find out how much information is out there. |
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#6 |
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.. and the 'voices'
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Moose Rapids, Quebec
Posts: 11,218
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Ford Fairlane station wagon
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http://porterstarrbyrd.blogspot.com/ We have met the enemy and he is us - Pogo The reason I spend so much time out of the box is that somebody crapped in it Porter Starr Byrd |
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#7 |
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Retired and loving it!
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Central Ohio
Posts: 7,326
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High income family - Cadillac Sedan deVille or Fleetwood Brougham or Lincoln Towncar or Continential
Next step down - Buick Electra or LeSabre, Olds 98 or 88, Chrysler Imperial or New Yorker Next Pontiac Gran Prix or Bonneville, Chevy Impala, Ford Crown Victoria, Mercury Grand Marquis, Chrysler Newport or 300 Below that would be the smaller cars in the big three lines. Puma
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"Nothing ventured, nothing gained." |
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#8 |
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an Eric Dolphy fan
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: AW. A very nice place!
Posts: 8,331
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... thanks. Great suggestions!
A "station wagon." Had totally forgotten about those. Total family car. Yep. The net is awesome, Lorna. I checked out all the ones mentioned here. Good candidates. I'll take your suggestion, Peter. Am curious just to see how much I can narrow down the target buyer. (I have a feeling I'm going to go with the Oldsmobile, abridged to "Olds." They're rather fond of the car, so being able to offer up a nickname would be a definite plus. Now to see if Oldsmobiles were endearingly callled such. I think so? The Electra looks and sounds good too. |
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#9 |
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That's really my dog :)
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: NC
Posts: 10,766
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I was on a school team at that age and remember what the moms drove to pick up their girls. Many of them were the same cars the girls themselves drove in a couple of years.
Station wagons, definitely (and we had two, lol! Ford all the way there). Mostly Mercedes sedans - the 'mom car' for richer folks. Some Volvos and Peugots. Many VW models, but not bugs for moms. Some Hondas and Toyotas already. I don't know that this is still done, but it was very common for dad to have a very sporty car that was not a good family car. We piled in the back of Dad's tiny Jag and later his Corvettes as kids and sang to The Carpenters on family Sunday drives! Good times I can't believe three kids fit in the back of those
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It's Woman, by Kraft. All your favourite classic flavours like virgin, whore, damsel, black widow and now all-new feminazi! Extra spicy! -- BunnyMaz Did you just Godwin a 4 year old? -- Celia Cyanide I've walked these streets in the madhouse, asylum they can be Where a wild-eyed misfit prophet on a traffic island stopped And he raved of saving me Please donate: http://www.karmakrew.com/outreachprograms.asp
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#10 |
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but appreciated anyway...
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Aotearoa
Posts: 4,328
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Yup, the Oldsmobile was the upper-middle-class car (whereas the Lincoln Town Car was what they aspired to). The Olds that my dad inherited from my grandfather when my grandfather gave up driving (circa 1976) was a massive land yacht that could hold seven comfortably, ten in a pinch, and was a total gas guzzler.
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#11 |
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Caped Codder
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: In MA, USA, across from a 17th century cemetery
Posts: 3,945
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Ford Maverick. Small and sporty. We had a pale or powder blue one. (It was actually my mother's.) We got more turns of the head in that little car, and people honking (their approval), boys making sounds out the window at us, etc. The two colors which were seen everywhere were the powder blue and the lime green.
So it was a smallish, popular sporty car. My dad drove a Torino, aqua with a black top. My gf drove a Torino, yellow with a black top. My grandfather, who always had a little more money than the rest of us, always drove a Cadillac. |
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#12 |
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The cake is a lie. But still cake.
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Belfast
Posts: 6,927
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I guess it depends on where you are as well - some of the cars named above would be WAY out of the price range of the average family here at the time.
Also, in the 80's a lot of folks didn't have a car at all, and families generally had only one car. In the 80's we variously had Ford Escorts, a Cortina, there was a VW Polo at one stage as well (the awful box shaped ones). I used to have a Mazda 323 which was new in 1988, and more recently I've owned a Toyota Corrolla which was new in about 89/90. Here almost everyone had a Ford though, Japanese cars were more expensive and usually owned by the better off. Folks bought a VW for reliability. |
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#13 |
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Retired and loving it!
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Central Ohio
Posts: 7,326
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One of the other things, Ken, when you get into cars back in that period was the engines. Each of the big three had engines that were known for reliability and performance. The Chrysler 383 engine, GM 454 (can't remember at the moment what the next one down was), Ford 350 - and most of those frequently had 4 barrel carburetors. There was a distinctive sound when the second two carbs kicked in when you goosed the engine. I had a 1975 Olds 98 with the 454 and a 4 barrel - that car would fly. I'm not sure what the data was on how fast the acceleration was, but, never any problems merging onto freeways. And comfort - lap of luxury - roomy and all the bells and whistles. Puma
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"Nothing ventured, nothing gained." |
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#14 |
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an Eric Dolphy fan
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: AW. A very nice place!
Posts: 8,331
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... Fords sound interesting too. The family is conservative when out and about. So that'd tie in to that in a way. (Sharp looking cars those Mavericks, particularly the '72 Grabber.) Thanks for the suggestions and insight.
Consider this thread resolved :-) ----------------- Wow. That's a lot of horsepower. 454! Must've been something on the road. |
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#15 |
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Rewriting My Destiny
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Brillig in the slithy toves...
Posts: 12,590
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Speaking of engines:
We had a teacher whose dad drove a station wagon (baby blue at that). He wrecked it and told said teacher (who was 17 at this point) that if he'd pay to replace the engine, he could have the car. So teacher pays for a rebuilt engine - out of a police car - and proceeds to clean up at weekend drag races for 2 months before word got around about the "ringer" in the baby blue station wagon. ![]() (Not sure if that'll help, but it's the kind of story that belongs in a book somewhere.) |
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#16 |
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Dull Old Person
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Far North
Posts: 808
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Here it'd be a Volvo. It's been considered the generic family car for generations. In the 80's, it'd likely be a Volvo 240.
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Exploring the Victorian World | Twitter "One of the disadvantages of almost universal education was the fact that all kinds of persons acquired a familiarity with one's favourite writers. It gave one a curious feeling; it was like seeing a drunken stranger wrapped in one's dressing gown." - Stella Gibbons |
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#17 |
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Benefactor Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Naples, FL
Posts: 964
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Being from that era, we had a '72 Chrysler Town and Country wagon (did my driver's test in that one. Twice.), a '74 Plymouth Newport (Hemi 440), a '77 Pinto wagon, an '80 Dodge Omni, a '76 Ford Econoline van (yes, bed, refrigerator and 8-track...), a '74 Ford LTD wagon (460), a '78 Pacer, a '78 Subaru Brat, a '74 Plymouth Duster (6 cylinder), a '74 Plymouth Valiant, a '76 Oldsmobile 98 (454), an '81 Cadillac Fleetwood Broughm, an '84 Dodge 600 (Reliant K-car clone), an '86 Mercury Marquis, an '84 Ford Escort and a '72 Jeepster Commando.
A '68 Ford Mustang fastback (302 overbored, 4:11 gears, 11:1 compression and 290 HP), a '77 El Camino, an '80 F-150 and a '76 Chevy LUV were the non-family types of vehicles. Never got my '76 Trans Am Screaming Chicken in Smokey and the Bandit trim, or my Triumph TR 7, but my friend got a Datsun 280Z that we should have died in. Multiple times. It and my rebuilt '68 Mustang would crack 120 MPH. At night. Side by side on a two lane road. Jeff |
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#18 |
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practical experience, FTW
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 268
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Not sure what the family in your story is like, but maybe this will be useful: Back in the 80's I had a relative who worked at a General Motors plant--had been there for years, started off on the assembly line. His dream was to own a Cadillac. In the 80's he finally was able to purchase a used one, and I think he, his wife, and their teenage daughter were all plenty proud as they drove about town in it.
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#19 |
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an Eric Dolphy fan
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: AW. A very nice place!
Posts: 8,331
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... definitely. Maybe instead of drag racing the protag could be a bandit. The irony: that his get away car had a police engine in it, or something of the sort. // I like how un-aerodynamic Volvos look, in stark contrast to today's vehicles. Rather refreshing. // Plymouth Duster gets my vote. Wonder if there are any still about. (You had a lot of neat cars. Wow. You probably needed a parking lot for them all ;-) // Cadillacs. Bragging rights with those for sure. For quite some time they were "the car" to own. Still are to some degree. // Thanks everyone!
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#20 | |
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Benefactor Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Naples, FL
Posts: 964
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Quote:
Jeff |
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#21 |
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That's really my dog :)
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: NC
Posts: 10,766
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Oh, I should mention that many of the Mercedes, etc, were old compared to how often folks buy new cars nowadays. The parents said they were very reliable cars. They'd drive an old Mercedes sedan, old enough that I don't know how much they'd cost, you know?
Dunno. That's just what I saw
__________________
It's Woman, by Kraft. All your favourite classic flavours like virgin, whore, damsel, black widow and now all-new feminazi! Extra spicy! -- BunnyMaz Did you just Godwin a 4 year old? -- Celia Cyanide I've walked these streets in the madhouse, asylum they can be Where a wild-eyed misfit prophet on a traffic island stopped And he raved of saving me Please donate: http://www.karmakrew.com/outreachprograms.asp
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#22 |
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There is no spoon.
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 1,001
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We had a 1976 Mercury Cougar when I was a young teen. At some point the latch mechanism for the passenger door failed so my dad used a length of chain to keep it closed. I remember having to climb over the chain when getting in and out of the backseat.
I come from a comfortably middle-class family, but I think people of my parents' generation were more money-conscious and apt to repair and make do because they grew up during the Depression or just after. I know we drove that car for a couple of years with that chain across the back. Oh, another tidbit from that time: seatbelts didn't exist in all cars (depending on age) and a lot of people didn't use them. I know I never did as a kid. It wasn't until I started driving that I started to use one. Aerial |
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#23 |
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Soldier, Storyteller
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Metropolitan District of Washington
Posts: 4,262
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These probably won't have much power under the hood, but a Volkswagon Van (pumpkin or chocolate colored) or a Volkswagon Rabbit.
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Soldier, Storyteller |Publications - Books | Publications - Magazines "Six Bullets" in the anthology A Princess, A Boatman, and a Lizard, Starcatcher Publishing |
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#24 |
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practical experience, FTW
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 193
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1973 Plymouth Satellite. Back when I was young and there was virtually no traffic on the interstate at night, I used to drive it home from work (2nd shift) at 100mph....
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#25 |
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an Eric Dolphy fan
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: AW. A very nice place!
Posts: 8,331
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... thanks for the insight. LOL about the chain. I had to do something similar with my first. Seat was broken. Propped it up with a cinder block. Was also a hole in the floor. So you had to be careful where you stepped. // People do seem not to hold on to cars long these days, compared to years past. Probably were better built back when. Still see some on the road from time to time. Refreshing. // '73 Satellite is a sharp looking car. Wish I had one. // Volkswagon Vans looked very functional. No nonsense transportation vehicle there. // Plymouth Fury. (Station wagon models too.) Like the name. Wouldn't have guessed they were that powerful. Sometimes you can't tell by looks.
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