Something for you, Hans ~ 1957 Chrysler dealer promo

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It seems to me Oldsmobile was the first to offer a Hydramatic in the late 1930's. Cadillac the following year. I remember when a lot of the late fourties and early fifties Cadillac commercial chassis cars were still manual shift. A hearse was little more than a truck in those days. Most of them lacked any creature comforts save a heater and I remember one that didn't even have that. If you had a Combination there was always a two-way radio. That was it.
In about 1953 we started to get Combinations with air conditioning. It was a great sales tool for the ambulance business but the old timers would yell at the attendants to keep the partition closed so only the customers could stay cool. If you were using it as a hearse you had to roll down the windows and suffer irregardless. Seems ridiculous now, but, the old timers remembered having to drive a horse-drawn hearse in all kinds of weather with just a top-coat and hat. They were bitter.

The 1956 Commercial cars were tanks. So large they would barely fit into the garage bays. I loved the sound of the engine/drive-train from a standing start. It would sound really fast in 1st gear and then drop down into 2nd gear with a slow and throaty, bass, bummmm,bummmm,bummmm sound. The hearse and Combination had the fuel door on the back behind a normal little lid. The Sixty-Special was under the left tail-light. You would mash the little reflector and the tail light would pop up. Cars had so much character back then. The a/c was ducted through the roof. Not sure how smart that was with a black car. In the oppressively hot and humid Atlanta summers, the vents would drip on people's heads. Nobody complained unless it put out their cigarette. The Power Brake Pedal was the size of my father's foot. A huge steering wheel as well.

I had a friend with a 1967 Buick Skylark GT. Burgundy with black top and interior. Wonderful and very powerful car. He was whacked on hash one night and drove it over a curb on Mt. Paran. Ripped the oil pan off. Parents took it away from him. Duh. They always blamed me for supplying the hash. Which wasn't true, but I did share a couple hits of Windowpane on another occasion.

I thought the old Chryslers with Fluid Drive were pretty cool. People would say " if it has a clutch it ain't an Automatic". Which was true, but, I thought it cool anyway. Relatives had a massive late Fourties New Yorker. What a tank. I loved it. They kept it well into the early Sixties and even then were loath to retire it.
I can still remember driving around Flatbush in that thing.

Fun to reminisce about these things. Helps keep the memories alive!
 
Hearses

I was always fascinated by hearses when I was a kid but never was around them. I'd just see them in action. I can remember when I started working in hospitals in college in the early 70's and we were using a mix of Cadillac ambulances and the newer 'box style' in Houston for the Medical Center. I was so shocked when I got around one of the Cadillacs for the first time and saw how spartan the front compartment was! Lord, those were beautiful vehicles, though. Within a very few years they were all off the road in Houston except for private transport, and that didn't last much longer.

As for a/c, I can't imagine having to transport before air conditioning in this area. We not only get the heat here in the Houston area, but we also get the humidity. I was born in 1955; in 1954 my parents bought a beautiful Pontiac Star Chief coupe, the first year for it with the ultra-long trunk, but also the last year of the straight eight. However, Pontiac actually offered in-dash a/c that year and yes, my parents bought it. Everyone who could afford it had either wall units in their homes or central for new homes. We had 3 wall units in our home, two Carriers and an old Fedders that I think made more noise than cold air. I had an aunt with a '56 Sixty Special with the a/c vents in the roof. It's funny how remote a/c units has come back around now.

Kids these days don't understand that part of the issue with those early automatics was driver control because they're so used to being passive with today's cars. I had two uncles who just swore by Fluid Drive and drove them until they couldn't any more. They were relatively simple (certainly more than the H-M) they were easy to use and they didn't cost a lot. You just couldn't be in a drag race.

Do you know why, when GM began using the excellent Harrison a/c compressor in the mid fifties with the 'wobble plate' technology, why the other car makers stuck with the piston compressors, that made not only more vibration, but more noise? Was it a patent issue?
 
Chrysler Push Button Automatic Transmissions

The goverment had nothing to due with this cool feature being discontinued, but rather public opinion, a survey showed that about 10% of car buyers in the US would NOT BUY a Chrysler automobile because of this feature, so Chrysler decided that it was not worth it to kill off the chance to sell their cars to even 10% of the buying public.
 
Thanks Lord Kenmore-----

I understood why the Government would want to standardize the "Order" in which cars were shifted. However, they could have done it with push-buttons as well. Once the Government got into the business of saving people from themselves it was all over. It was pretty dumb to have a Park N D L R sequence, though. Seemed like a no-brainer to keep Reverse over by Neutral and Park.

I liked the system that had the slide-lever for "Park" the best. I never heard anyone complain about push-button shifting---ever. But, hey, it stands to reason there would be people who didn't like it. I loved removal of the clumsy stalk! Dad had one of the last Packards and it had a little "pod" with push-buttons on it where the stalk was normally positioned.
 
PNDLR

The reason early automatic transmission shift quadrants were set up PNDLR on early Powerglides and Dynaflows was to make it easier to “rock” your car from being stuck in sand, mud or snow by shifting quickly between low and reverse. There are at least a few You Tube videos about this, and it is also explained in the owners manuals of these earlier cars.

This did pose a problem though for people that were used to driving automatics without the R at the end of the quadrant. I saw this happen to a girl that lived up the road from us. She was following the school bus up a steep grade in her Dads 57 Buick Stationwagon, when she needed to shift to Low she instinctively pulled the lever down to what she thought was Low and dropped her Dads transmission on the spot. Lucky for her that her Dad had a wrecking yard and a tow truck just 2 miles up the road when this happened.
Eddie
 
Here's the dash of my l964 Dodge 440 with the pushbutton transmission system located to the left of the steering wheel. I often wondered why they didn't put it on the right, where most people were used to having the transmission controls, but I think it would have put too many buttons on that side with the heat/defrost controls and the radio.

Funny how some new cars are using buttons again for transmission control, or in the case of my 2017 Chrysler Pacifica, a round dial that you turn to engage the transmission.

My Dodge 440 has a 318 engine, and while it doesn't get too much use these days, the acceleration on that car is incredible, and the TorqueFlite shifts almost seamlessly.

kevin313-2017101309380303002_1.jpg
 
Eddie...

<span style="font-size: 14pt; color: #008000;">...isn't that interesting. I always wondered why some cars had reverse at the end of gear selection. The only car I've ever driven with push-button drive was back in high school . My friend's dad had a 64 Dart convertible which we'd cruise around in thinking we were the "cool guys". Another friend had an Edsel with Teletouch but I never drove it. Back then it was considered embarrassing to be seen in an Edsel.</span>

 

<span style="font-size: 14pt; color: #008000;">Kevin, I like that photo. That steering wheel has tasteful "60's Class".</span>

 

<span style="font-size: 14pt; color: #008000;">They say people refused to touch the Teletouch. </span>

[this post was last edited: 10/13/2017-13:32]

twintubdexter-2017101311510409488_1.jpg
 
" Hydra-Matic didn’t have a Park position until the second-generation Controlled Coupling Hydra-Matic arrived in 1956, but with the engine off, the reverse pawl would effectively lock the transmission output shaft, serving the same purpose."

Not sure why they did it that way, but people who drove manual transmissions were used to leaving them in gear when they parked.

http://https//ateupwithmotor.com/terms-technology-definitions/hydramatic-history-part-1/3/
 

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