Posts Tagged Sedan

1962 Chevrolet Bel Air Sedan

Brian Earnest, at the Old Cars Weekly Car of the Week website writes about the history of a vintage American icon, the 1962 Chevrolet Bel Air Sedan. thanks for another great story!

1962 Chevy Bel Air Sedan front

1962 Chevy Bel Air Sedan front

Even if tomorrow it were trampled by elephants, or run over by a train, or entered into a demolition derby, Frank Keller’s 1962 Chevrolet Bel Air four-door sedan has still lived a charmed life.

Somehow, the lovely red Chevy has survived life as a daily transportation during its early years, avoided being pounded into the ground by a college kid who apparently didn’t even like the car, and lived through a major tornado that tore the roof off the garage it was in. To top it off, against all odds, the 47-year-old car is almost as rust-free today as the day it rolled off the assembly lines, even though it has never been restored and sat untouched and unloved in a garage for about 16 years.

“We found chips in the metal, but no rust at all!” said Keller, a resident of Chetek, Wis., who bought this week’s OldCarsReport.com “Car of the Week” last summer. “There was no discoloration of any of the chrome or aluminum. Nothing.

“We can’t figure out what is going on with this car. It just defies logic.”

Frank and Diane Keller run the Shady Grove Resort in northern Wisconsin and found out about the car through a customer. The Kellers are a horsepower-loving muscle car clan — Frank has a ’71 Chevelle SS 454, Diana rolls in a ’69 GTO convertible, and their kids, Scott and Wendy, own a ’68 4-4-2 convertible and ’68 Charger, respectively — but Frank liked what the customer told him about the Bel Air. “He told me about the car and gave me a price, and I thought, ‘Well, it might be worth playing with,’” he said. “The man was meticulous about things, and if I believed what he said about the car, I figured it would be pretty nice.

“The car belonged to your typical little old lady, and the guy had bought it from her back in about ’91 for his son to drive to college. Well, the kid only drove it for about two years and then he garaged it. I guess he didn’t care too much for it. It started with 41,000 miles on it when he got it, and it had 45,000 when he parked it.”

62-Chevy-BelAir-rear

62-Chevy-BelAir-rear

And then the car sat, untouched, at least until things got exciting with Mother Nature in 2001. In April of that year, an F4 tornado rolled through the small town of Hoisington, Kansas, where the car resided. The twister tore a huge swath through the heart of the town and destroyed or damaged about 400 homes and a number of businesses. The storm put Hoisington on the map, for the wrong reasons, and made national headlines.

The storm claimed the roof of the Bel Air’s garage, according to Keller, and knocked the adjacent brick home off its foundation, but the only damage the Chevy suffered was a small ding near the center of its hood. “There were only two real dings in the car and that was one of them,” Keller said.

The car then sat for eight more years after the tornado before Keller came for a visit. “When I saw the car, it had about two inches of dust on it,” he said.

62-BelAir-Benchseat

62-BelAir-Benchseat

Keller said he and his son typically restore one car a year for fun and profit during the winter, but it didn’t take him long to realize that the Bel Air didn’t need a lot of work. In fact, aside from having some new OEM-style seat covers made and replacing the carpeting, he’s basically kept the car as he found it. Aside from the seat covers, all of the interior is new, and all of the body panels are original.

“I had intentions of building it up and fixing it up, but I was thrilled it came back naturally on its own terms,” he said. “Could it be fixed up perfectly and have the little nicks and scratches fixed? Yeah, but to me, that’s character. I’m going to leave it just the way it is.

“The engine compartment — we cleaned it up, but that’s about all we did. I thought somebody must have painted the valve covers and intake, but they didn’t. It’s never been painted, and all the decals are in place.

“The car had been sitting so long that we had to flush the tank out four times. Then we pulled the carburetor. Those cars were very touchy with gasoline. They used pure gasoline, not the garbage that is out there today.”

The Bel Air lineup occupied Chevy’s mid-priced niche in 1962, and sedans were the most popular. The Bel Airs came in two- and four-door sedans, a two-door hardtop coupe, and six- and nine-passenger station wagons.

Bel Air standard equipment included foam front and rear seats; color-keyed carpeting; foam backed luggage compartment mat; and a specific steering wheel hub. Interiors were higher-grade cloth and vinyl combinations. A full-length upper bodyside molding was used, with Bel Air script appearing on the rear fenders, just below it. A stainless bright gutter cap molding and four taillights, arranged two on each side, were other distinguishing features. A bright rear cove molding added a touch of distinction.

Also standard were a heater and defroster; dual sun visors; crank-operated ventipanes; directional signals; parallel action windshield wipers; front door armrests; ashtray and coat hooks.

62-engine

62-engine


62-engine2

62-engine2

The Bel Airs came standard with either a 170-hp 283-cid V-8 — which Keller’s car has — or 135-hp, 235-cid six-cylinder. Racier 327- and 409-cid engines were also available. Keller’s car is also optioned with full wheel covers, whitewall tires, AM radio, power steering and two-tone paint.

“It’s got a few chips in the metal, but no rust at all, even underneath,” said Keller of his ’62. “The paint was faded, but I spent two days buffing it out and I could comb my hair in the reflection. I was absolutely amazed. I started buffing one panel, then another… It was amazing the luster and shine that came back.”

The Kellers took their sedan to a couple of car shows not long after it got back on the road, and happily claimed trophies in both shows. “Both times it lost to fully restored four-doors,” Frank said.

The trips also gave Keller a chance to experience the fun of traveling in a full-sized “old school” family sedan — something he hadn’t done in a while.

“They’re a boat,” he said with a laugh. “Hey, they were Chevy’s full-size vehicles.

“The cars today, the technology is just astronomical. Back then, they were just put together! We laugh, my son and I, at some of the workmanship. It was not the greatest. But it’s like being out being out in a big old 20-foot Chris Craft on a lake. You could get seasick in one of these.”

62-profile

62-profile

Keller plans to sell the car if the right buyer comes along, but he won’t feel bad about having a nice, big red sedan around for a while if he has to. Clearly, the car is growing on him.

“I do buy some cars for investment, but I’m in no hurry to sell it,” he said. “I don’t want to see this car hacked … Somebody out there is going to love this car, and I hope they find it.

“You just don’t see these cars. They didn’t survive. And four-doors never got the respect they deserve, but they were the cars we were all raised with.”

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1934 Ford Sedan Delivery

The 1934 Ford Sedan Delivery. Is this this first true “crossover” vehicle? Did the term crossover vehicle even exist in 1934? Whether it did or not, the fine folks at Old Car Weekly see this 1934 Ford Sedan Delivery as a true crossover.

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery

By Brian Earnest

Cross-over vehicles have certainly been all the rage on the new car front in recent years. Every domestic car maker has been working overtime to come out with vehicles that seem to blur the lines between sedan, station wagon, SUV and truck. The “tweener” certainly seems like the car of the future.

But a look back through history shows that crossover vehicles that melded the best traits of cars and trucks and SUVs are certainly nothing new. Even back before World War II, Ford was offering such amalgamations it called “sedan deliveries.” The moniker is sometimes confused with the more popular “panel deliveries” of the period, but there was a major difference between the two: The sedan deliveries were basically sedans from the doors forward, while the panel deliveries were trucks all the way through.

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery flathead engine

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery flathead engine

The sedan deliveries were basically sedans converted into delivery cars. They featured Tudor bodies with blanked-out rear windows and a 36-inch-wide x 34-inch-high rear door. The spare tire was carried in a front fender well.

The sedan deliveries were available in both four-cylinder and flathead V-8 versions, and a total of 9,021 were built for the 1934 model year. It’s anybody’s guess how many are left, but they seem to be about as common these days as wolly mammoths. And it’s a fair bet you’ll never see a 1934 sedan delivery nicer than the near-perfect rig owned by Darrell and Lela Sago, of Festus, Mo.

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery engine

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery engine

The Sagos’ sedan delivery might not necessarily be a car that turns heads when it makes a rare appearance at a show. Its authentic, but subdued, black-and-brown color scheme and panel car stying make it a car that’s easy to overlook. But for those who appreciate a finely restored vehicle, and a rare vehicle at that, this squeaky clean ’34 Ford is a true treasure.

“There really aren’t many of them around,” Darrell Sago said. “I know of about six of them around the country. “This one’s a national show winner. It’s been gone over pretty good. It’s pretty amazing, really.”

Sago owns a 1940 Ford and says he’s had “10 or 12” old Ford pickups over the years, but he took on a new challenge about seven years ago when he bought the panel delivery from man in California. The car was not finished, but a lot of the heavy lifting had already been done in its restoration by the time he purchased it.

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery rear interior

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery rear interior

The Model 46 V-8 sedan deliveries had only mild revisions to distinguish them from previous years. The grille was changed slightly and had fewer vertical bars. The Ford script in a blue oval with a V-8 logo under it was located on the side of the hood. The engine received a new fuel induction system with counter-balanced cast alloy steel crankshafts, open skirt pistons, waterline thermostats, improved fuel pump and unitized valve assemblies. The cargo area was 59 inches long and 45 ¾ inches wide with insulating board side panels. There was a single bucket seat, one sun visor and a three-speed floor shifted manual transmission. Deluxe models had pinstriping, cowl lights, twin horns and two tail lamps.

Everything is present and accounted for on the Sagos’ Ford – and in perfect working order.

“We had to re-do the engine — actually, I had to do it twice, because it wasn’t done right the first time … I’ve had to change probably 99 percent of all nuts and screws and screws on it. It’s got new tires on it, new battery … I did a lot of work on it, really.”

“The running gear underneath it, transmission and rear, that’s the same as on the car … It’s small, it’s not very big. I’ve run into a lot of problems with it, but I think I’ve fixed everything.”

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery side view

1934 Ford Sedan Delivery side view

That work has been noticed in recent years at two noteworthy shows. In 2005, the car received 954 points of a possible 1,000 at a show in Keystone, Col. “It had 46 points deducted, and 20 of those were for hydraulic brakes, which are for safety,” Sago said. “Then it won the Dearborn Award in 2008,” when it received a score of 967, including another 20-point deduction for the brakes.

But the beautiful Ford’s appearances in public are few and far between these days, as are its trips out of the Sagos’ driveway. “It’s so nice, I just don’t want to drive the dang thing,” Darrell said.

It might be a bit of an unlikely show pony, given that it was born to be a working vehicle, but the Sagos’ ’34 sedan delivery is rare, meticulously restored, and pretty darn cool.

And it’s this week’s Old Cars Weekly “Car of the Week.”

ENGINES:
L-head four: Bore & stroke: 3 7/8 x 4 ¼. Displacement: 200.5 cid. Compression ration: 4.60:1. HP: 50 at 2800 rpm. Carburetor: Zenith single-barrel updraft.

L-head V-8: Bore & stroke: 3 1/16 x 3 ¾: Displacement: 221 cid. Compression ratio: 6.33:1. HP: 85 at 3800 rpm. Carburetor: Detroit Lubricator or Stromberg two-barrel downdraft.

CHASSIS:
Wheelbase: 112 inches. Length: 176 inches. Tires: 5.50 x 17.

OPTIONS:
Low-compression cylinder head. Dual windshield wipers. Spare tire. Outside rearview mirror. Special paint.

PRODUCTION:
Four-cylinder
Model No. Body & Seating MSRP Weight Production total
68 Sedan Delivery $335 1,688 lbs. Note 1

V-8
Model No. Body & Seating MSRP Weight Production total
68 Sedan Delivery $360 1,798 lbs. Note 1

Note 1: Combined production of four-cylinder and V-8 sedan deliveries was 9,021.

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