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Photo Feature: 1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

Note: The following story was excerpted from the October 2018 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

Frank Troost says his 1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban draws a common comment when he has it out: “We had one when I was a kid, but I haven’t seen one in years.” That’s not surprising since the American station wagon was immensely popular in the Sixties and Seventies, yet the survival rate has been low. 

Troost bought this Sport Suburban in 2008. The Oak Brook, Illinois, resident doesn’t know the history of the car except that it sill wears the badge of a Louisville, Kentucky, dealer. Subject to less wintertime road salt than in more northerly climes, the Plymouth was well preserved, and is original except for the paint and floor mats. Now the nine-passenger model with a rear-facing third-row seat is a favorite spot for Troost’s grandchildren.

Longroof Madness! 13 Classic Ads Featuring Station Wagons

Photo Feature: 1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

The Sport Suburban was Plymouth’s premium wagon. It had interior trim comparable to the Fury III sedan and woodgrain vinyl panels on the sides and tailgate as a badge of rank.

Plymouth’s full-size line was redesigned for 1969 with Chrysler Corporation’s “fuselage” styling that made the big cars look even more massive. The wagons rode a 122-inch wheelbase, had an overall length of around 220 inches, and weighed 4260 pounds. For comparison, a modern Chevrolet Suburban SUV is only about five inches longer, but is substantially heavier at 5808 pounds.

The 5 Most-Expensive American Wagons of 1969

Photo Feature: 1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

The Plymouth was big inside too, with 104.2 cubic feet of cargo room when the back seats were folded. The Chevy Suburban wins with a 121.7-cubic-foot capacity, but the Plymouth beats the current Dodge Durango’s 84.5-cubic-foot capacity.

The two-way tailgate opened both as a tailgate and as a door. Convenient chrome handles on either side of the opening aided entry. Popular Mechanics commented that the handles “give a long overdue helping hand.”

A standard deflector directed air over the tailgate window to help keep the glass clean. This feature was found on many wagons of the time, but Plymouth’s deflector worked better than the Ford and Chevrolet versions. In a test of 1969 wagons (Chevrolet Kingswood, Ford Country Squire, Sport Suburban, and Pontiac Catalina), Popular Science said, “During PS tests, the Plymouth always had the cleanest tailgate window.” The magazine’s Sport Suburban achieved a 0-60-mph time of 10.4 seconds with a 330-horsepower four-barrel-carburetor 383-cubic-inch V8. Plymouth had the worst fuel economy of the group, averaging only eight mpg—but the best was Pontiac’s 10.4 mpg, so none of the big wagons were exactly frugal.

Woodie Madness! 5 Classic Car Ads Featuring Wood-Sided Rides

Photo Feature: 1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

Plymouths were facelifted for 1970 and gained a loop-style front bumper. The Sport Suburban and Sport Furys received a hidden-headlight grille. 

The ’70 Sport Suburban’s base engine was a 230-horse, 318-inch V8. The featured car has a 290-horsepower 383 with a two-barrel carburetor, but peak performance was available via a 350-horsepower 440-cube V8. 

Ford traditionally led in full-size wagon sales, and won in 1970 with 189,015 units sold. Plymouth trailed at 36,813. Among Plymouths, the nine-passenger Sport Suburban was the most expensive at $3804 but the most popular with 9170 sold. Add in the less popular six-seat version and a total of 13,573 Sport Suburbans were built for 1970.

Rising gas prices and changing tastes would soon doom the big station wagons, but in 1970 these welcoming gentle giants still were family favorites.

Woodie Madness! Classic Ads Featuring Small Wood Sided Wagons

Photo Feature: 1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban

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Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

1970 Plymouth Sport Suburban Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

Longroof Madness! More Classic Wagon Ads

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1960 Edsel Ranger

1960 Edsel Ranger

by Don Sikora II

Note: The following story was excerpted from the April 2011 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

Introduced by the Ford Motor Company in September 1957, Edsel was Ford’s attempt to capture a larger portion of the medium-price new-car market. But by the start of the 1960 model year, the brand was on very shaky ground.

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1960 Edsel Ranger Two-Door Sedan

1960 Edsel Ranger

1960 Edsel Ranger

As the medium-price market developed in the years between the world wars, Ford really didn’t do anything to address this growing—and profitable—part of the business. The 1939 Mercury was the company’s first medium-price offering, but it had to compete with Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick from General Motors; Dodge, DeSoto, and Chrysler from Chrysler; and a collection of strong independents including Nash and Hudson.

Ford executives recognized the importance of this market soon after the end of World War II. Still, serious strategic planning didn’t begin until the Fifties.

Carefully orchestrated leaks and media speculation preceded the introduction of FoMoCo’s new medium-price car, the 1958 Edsel. Despite the planning and hoopla, the Edsel faced major problems even before it ever went on sale. 

Dead-Brand Madness! 10 Classic Edsel Ads

1960 Edsel Ranger

1960 Edsel Ranger

The new car found itself caught up in a perfect storm of brutal office politics, a dramatic sales downturn in the medium-price field, and the worst economic conditions since the end of World War II. With sales failing to live up to expectations from the start, and powerful opponents in company management, Edsel quickly lost support inside of Ford, even before New Year’s Day 1958. It was branded a loser, but no matter how good or bad the ’58 Edsel truly was, it probably never really had a chance to succeed. 

Edsel offerings were dramatically scaled back for 1959, and by 1960, the Edsel was little more than a badge-engineered Ford. Introduced on October 15, 1959, the ’60 Edsel arrived in one series, Ranger. Body styles included two- and four-door sedans and hardtops, a convertible, and six- and nine-passenger Villager station wagons. 

Model-Year Madness! 10 Classic Ads From 1960

1960 Edsel Ranger

1960 Edsel Ranger

Unique sheetmetal was at a minimum, with the hood and the small sections of the rear fenders next to the decklid being the differences. Edsel’s signature central vertical grille was jettisoned, and the new front end looked quite similar to a 1959 Pontiac. At the rear, vertical taillamps set the car apart from the ’60 Ford with its horizontal lenses.

Dealer and customer response was tepid, allowing the company to officially throw in the towel on Edsel a little more than a month after the 1960 model’s introduction. Production ended by November 30, 1959, and totaled a mere 2846 units. 

The featured car is owned by Judy Doster of Abilene, Texas. The two-door sedan was the price leader of the line at $2643 to start, and the second-most popular 1960 Edsel with a run of 777 units.

A 292-cubic inch “Ranger V8 was standard, but this car has the 223-inch “Econ-O-Six,” a $83.70 credit option. It’s joined to an extra-cost automatic transmission.

No Laughing Matter: 5 Cars We Make Fun Of, But Maybe Shouldn’t

1960 Edsel Ranger

1960 Edsel Ranger

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

1960 Edsel Ranger Two-Door Sedan Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

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1964 Ford Galaxie 500

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Note: The following story was excerpted from the June 2011 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

By John Biel

When Gary Spracklin answered the classified ad in a hobby publication, he thought he was buying a whistle-clean daily driver. What he wound up with was an unlikely “trailer queen,” a 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 four-door sedan that gets the royal treatment because he decided he wants to keep the odometer reading below 1000.

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That’s right: Spracklin’s 47-year-old Wimbledon White-over-Rangoon Red Galaxie has just 920 miles on it and he’d like to keep it that way. With a few minor exceptions, it’s an homage to originality and preservation.

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Faced with a loss of storage space, the Galaxie’s previous owners in New York State put the car up for sale in 1997. A fan and collector of full-sized ’64 Fords (a convertible was his first car at age 16), Spracklin thought the demure four-door sedan would make ideal transportation for someone with his interests. But once he got the Galaxie home to Omaha, Nebraska, he realized that his anticipated “driver” was really a virtual time capsule of how Fords were made in 1964.

At the time Spracklin purchased the car, it had a mere 905 miles on the odometer. Only the original battery and fanbelt had been replaced by earlier owners. Almost immediately he opted to maintain the car as a showpiece of originality. The 15 miles the Galaxie has accumulated since Spracklin obtained it were mostly added in increments necessary to move it around his shop or show fields. In his care, only the engine pulleys and a leaking heater core have been replaced—and Spracklin still has the original pulleys. Though they’re showing signs of age, the bias-ply tires are the same ones that have been on the car since it left the factory.

Photo Feature: 1958 Ford Del Rio Ranch Wagon

1964 Galaxie

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Full-sized 1964 Fords were at the end of a four-year styling cycle. However, that didn’t prevent two- and four-door sedans from receiving a new roof design that had a bit more of a forward slope than the Thunderbird-inspired unit of recent years.

Wheelbase stayed pat at 119 inches. Leaf springs supported the rear of big Fords for the last time.

With five body styles, the Galaxie 500 series offered the broadest availability of models and was the volume leader among “standard” Fords. The Galaxie 500 Town Sedan—company nomenclature for a four-door sedan—accounted for 198,805 orders, making it second only to the Galaxie 500 two-door hardtop for the affections of Ford customers that year.

Photo Feature: 1966 Ford Thunderbird

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Gary Spracklin’s age-defying car comes pretty close to depicting a Galaxie 500 four-door sedan in its $2667 base state. Blackwall tires, hubcaps, and a three-speed column-shift manual transmission were all standard-equipment items.

The handful of extra-cost options found on Spracklin’s Galaxie starts with its 289-cid V-8 engine. With a two-barrel carburetor and 9.0:1 compression, it develops 195 horsepower at 4400 rpm. As a replacement for the standard 223-cube inline six, it added $109 to the sticker price and was just the first of several available V8s that ran all the way to a 425-horse 427-cube job. Other add-ons to the featured car include its two-tone paint, AM radio, and seat belts.

Photo Feature: 1960 Plymouth Fury Hardtop Coupe

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan Gallery

1964 Ford Galaxie 500

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2000 Honda Prelude Type SH

2000 Honda Prelude Type SH

Cheap Wheels

by Don Sikora II

Note: The following story was excerpted from the October 2019 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine.

The fifth—and final—generation of the Honda Prelude made its American debut as a 1997 model. The sportiest of these final Preludes was the Type SH, and we think it makes an interesting choice for the historically minded enthusiast seeking cheap wheels. 

1997-2001 Honda Prelude Type SH

The fourth-generation Prelude had bold styling, but the redesign was an evolution of the more conservative look used by the second- and third-gen cars. The design was smooth and simple, the profile defined by a low hood, coupe roofline, and a nearly horizontal decklid. Fixed, flush-mount headlamp assemblies that dipped down into the front fascia helped define the car’s face, while a tall bumper dominated the rear view. The car ran a 101.8-inch wheelbase, was 178 inches long, and had a 3042-pound curb weight.

The engine was a 2.2-liter 16-valve four-cylinder job with Honda’s VTEC variable valve-control system. It used aluminum construction, and the 1997 brochure noted the block’s cylinder liners were made with carbon fiber and aluminum oxide. The engine was rated at 195 bhp, and the Type SH had a mandatory five-speed manual transmission. (Base Preludes with stickshift used this same powerplant, but when the optional four-speed automatic was ordered the engine ran in 190-horsepower tune.)

Cheap Wheels: 2003-2004 Dodge Intrepid SXT

The top-line Prelude Type SH added an Active Torque Transfer System (ATTS). Consumer Guide® reported that in turns ATTS could force the outside front wheel to rotate as much as 15 percent faster than the inner front wheel. In addition, ATTS was able to direct up to 80 percent of the engine’s torque to one front wheel. Other Type SH additions included a rear spoiler and a model-exclusive design for the 16-inch five-spoke alloy wheels.

Only four colors were available in ‘97: San Marino Red, Flamenco Black Pearl, Nordic Mist Metallic (silver), and Eucalyptus Green Pearl. The first three colors came with a black cloth interior, while dark-green Preludes had ivory-and-black two-tone trim.

Our CG colleagues liked the car’s reasonably supple ride, relatively quiet interior, lively acceleration (0-60 mph in 7.6 seconds for an SH), and slick shifter. Gripes included so-so rear-seat room and the required premium-grade gas.

The Prelude Type SH was one of Car and Driver’s “10 Best Cars” for 1997 and 1998. In C/D’s June 1997 issue, the SH was named the best handling car costing less than $30,000 after winning a comparison test. One short sentence summed up the Prelude well: “The feel is one of remarkable sophistication.”

The charts that accompanied the test clearly showed that this Prelude was not an inexpensive car. The Type SH’s $26,095 no-options as-tested price was exactly $1999 more than the Chevrolet Camaro Z28 that finished fourth. And then consider the Z’s $20,640 base price.

The Prelude didn’t change much after ’97. Highlights included the addition of more exterior colors over time, and in 1999 the engine picked up five horsepower for an even 200.

Future Collectibles: 2018 Subaru WRX STI Type RA

Pros:

  • Contemporary reviews lauded Prelude Type SH’s precise handling and rev-
    happy VTEC four-cylinder engine.
  • We think the clean styling has aged well.

Cons:

  • Prelude Type SH was only available with a slick-shifting five-speed manual
    transmission. Enthusiasts will delight, but it’s a problem if you can’t work
    three pedals.
  • Remember the last time you saw a nice one?

Final Drive:

It wasn’t an inexpensive car new, and as sporty front-drive coupes go, the Prelude Type SH still has an awful lot to offer. Plus, its handling was as good as it got for a 1997-model front driver.

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