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Packard Balboa: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:25, 5 February 2007
Packard Balboa | |
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Packard | |
Years | 1953 |
Production | One-off concept car |
Class | Full-size Sedan |
Body Style | 2-Door Hardtop |
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Similar | Packard Caribbean |
Designer | Edward Macauley |
The 1953 Packard Balboa was a hardtop based off of the Packard Caribbean. The main point of interest on the car was the canopy-style C-pillar that held a nearly vertical rear window. The Caribbean never recieved a hardtop like the Balboa's in 1953, but it did recieve a normal hardtop in 1956. The Packard Predictor also featured a C-pillar that was similar to the one on the Balboa.
See Wikicars' comprehensive Packard_Balboa Review.
Recent Changes
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Unique Attributes
Criticisms
Worldwide
Design quirks and oddities
Awards
See also
image (between 170-190 pixels) | ||
PACKARD | ||
Studebaker-Packard Corporation Clipper | Packard | Studebaker | Ultramatic Models 200 · 300 · Caribbean · Cavalier · Clipper · Clipper Constellation · Eight · Light Eight · Super Eight · Executive · Four Hundred · Hawk · One-Eighty · One-Ten · One-Twenty · Patrician · Packard Six · Twin Six/Twelve · Station Sedan · Studebaker based Packards Concept Models Balboa-X · Pan American · Panther · Predictor · Request · Special Speedster One-Off Customs Brown Bomber · El Paso · Pacifica · Parisian · Howard Darrin · James J. Nance · James Ward Packard · William Dowd Packard · George T. Christopher · Hugh Ferry · Alvan Macauley · Edward Macauley · Jesse Vincent · Richard Teague · John Reinhart | ||
James Ward Packard and William Dowd Packard | None; Defunct | A division of the Studebaker-Packard Corporation |