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Harold Lloyd movie car meets train...


AURktman

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Welcome to the wonderful world of +/- 100 year old cars ! Accessory lights were necessary back then under certain driving conditions. These would have been aftermarket, not standard equipment. Thanks for posting ! Harold Lloyd also really loved these 100 year old cars. Had quite a few very nice ones. Funny thing is, I just don’t think the cars were quite that old at the time.     -     Carl 

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5 hours ago, AURktman said:

Screen cap from a YouTube video about trains and cars.  I’m still new to the pre-WW2 cars mostly so this has probably been posted 50 times and answered 100 times.

 

 

5250DC57-E2F9-4508-9FC9-FCC75CA6F977.thumb.jpeg.aa4a5da0fb42720590eda9dc985db589.jpeg 

 

https://youtu.be/Moh2l7udjio

 

 

There was some debate about this one - check the link to the other 1924 car which has different doors - looks as if no one has gone back to sort it - IMCDb.org: 1924 Packard Single Eight Touring [136] in "Requiem for Detroit?, 2010"

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6 hours ago, C Carl said:

Welcome to the wonderful world of +/- 100 year old cars ! Accessory lights were necessary back then under certain driving conditions. These would have been aftermarket, not standard equipment. Thanks for posting ! Harold Lloyd also really loved these 100 year old cars. Had quite a few very nice ones. Funny thing is, I just don’t think the cars were quite that old at the time.     -     Carl 


 

He was quite the car guy in real life. He owned and kept a 1936 Pierce Arrow V-12 from new into the late 60’s or early 70’s. It was a seven passenger sedan. A young Steve Martin was his neighbor in California. He wrote about the car in his autobiography.

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The doors are hinged opposite to any Packard touring but the same as Studebaker Special Six and Big Six of the earlier to mid '20's.   A bit of movie cosmetic work to make it appear to be a Packard would transform a cheap old Studebaker touring from a junkyard into an expendable movie prop.

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