Growing up in the UK in the 70’s, we only saw these cars on imported shows like Starsky and Hutch, Columbo, Kojak and the list goes on. Having now lived in the US for the past forty years, I can see why they were popular with the rich.
They loved British cars here too. But my favorite uncle had a 1968 Jaguar E Type coupe (badged XKE here). As a very small boy, he let me steer and shift it on his lap. Fast forward to 1981 when I was 16 and dreaming of the car I’d buy, he said I could buy it (which was garaged most of the time by then) for $5,000. My parents wouldn’t let me do it, even though it was my own money I’d earned bussing tabes at a restaurant, knowing the notorious repair record and electrical issues. I then decided I wanted a used MG. Same thing. Wouldn’t let me. I settled on a ‘78 Camaro. I also had an aunt who bought a new 4 door Jaguar (model escapes me) every 4 years starting in the early 70’s up to the early aughts. She loved them. loved British cars. Also wanted, and still want, a Triumph TR3-6. Oh, and before my uncle bought the XKE, he had an Austin Healey (too young to remember that one). I do remember the shift starting in the late 70’s when more and more wealthy Americans were buying European luxury cars, whereas it had been mostly Lincoln, Cadillac and Chrysler (the latter being less common). . I never even heard of BMW or Audi until then, and I was always a car nut that scoped them all out. By the mid and late 80’s, they were everywhere here. My favorite car of my younger days was my ‘83 VW Scirocco I bought in ‘86. Black, with the then unheard of in a car of its class, leather interior. Sorry, didn’t start out to write a novel!
From 71 to 81 I was going to university and had a part time job as a mechanic. I worked at Pontiac, Buick , Oldsmobile, and Cadillac dealers. Sad to say, but all the model years were like a former football star. Fat, out of shape and past their prime. I therefore saw mostly the wheezing, smogged up engines featured here. However, for a very short time, 68 to 70, the GM divisions ALL created their OWN engines! The Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick 400s and 455s! All UNIQUE designs! I have forgotten where Cadillac slotted in but it was a 429, 472, or 502 (I think the 502 was later). I know most of this is about 'fine Corinthian leather' (if you are old enough you will get the joke). But let me tell you that as a mechanic, I would have to periodically road test these cars and as my race team cousin used to say 'they would rip your d**k off'. Even the front wheel drive Eldorado and Toronados , will 65% of wheels on the front wheels, you could melt a set of tires in one pass. A bit off topic but the Buick Gran Sport, a supposed luxury car, sold at old man dealerships , where I worked, with the Stage IV package as one of the fastest or fastest cars of the 60/70s. A friend of mine and I used to work at Buick and I helped crew a 70 Camaro body dirt tracker on outlaw tracks. With everyone running 350 Chevies, and us with a.060" overbore Buick coming in at 463 or more ci, we learned the lesson: Horsepower sells cars; torque wins races. And then, in 71, is was all over, like waking up from a dream in Toledo, Ohio.
08:10 Was only recently I learned my littlish '79 Cadillac Seville, which I still have, made from a stretched Chevy II/Nova body, cost more than a full size Cadillac...
A little extra info on the 9 passenger caddy limo….. they were referred to as the “informal” limousine while the “formal” limo had the addition of the divider ( by the late 70’s and the 80’s there was no longer an electric glass divider. It was a sliding glass divider, like in a taxi. Also the 9 passenger had 3 rows of seats - usually used as people movers by funeral homes. BTW the 75 also had jump seats that faced the rear passengers When the seats were not deployed there were foot rests for the rear passengers. Lastly the 75 had leather in the front, and the passenger compartment had velour. This was also a time before there were many companies stretching cars, so a factory limo was really special. By 1985 GM down sized the 75 and it was just a shame. Your reviews are wonderful. Thank you for your hard work. It’s great.
We had a '75 when I was a kid! My dad was a Cadillac collector and the limo was the jewel of his collection. We had lots of fun going to car shows in it :)
As the owner of a 2011 Maybach 57s with a V12 6.0 liter engine, the late model 1970s Lincoln Continental Williamsburg edition still takes my breath away ❤
@@jeremypearson6852 My uncle had a 68 Jaguar XKJ coup with a V-12 he bought new. He sat me on his lap to steer and shift, so I guess I kind of drove one. One time he took me up past 100 mph in it. Loved that car. I can still smell the leather.
I remember as a kid falling in love with a collector series mark v on the showroom floor in 79 and seeing it was $23,000 On the sticker, and wondering how anyone could possibly afford that… I wish America still made cars like that
Me also, saw my first Bill Blass summer of 78 and sitting next to that was the Gold , Diamond Jubilee MK V . Absolutely fell in love with Lincoln that day and started my life - long car addiction. I've quite a few 70s land yachts now that I'm 56 yrs old. This was an era when Detroit used to build cars WE wanted remember those days????
Saw a light green metallic Mark on the showroom floor, light jade mist package with the green Versailles velour interior. My first thought when I saw that interior: what a great ballroom!
Keep on making them man it’s how we an you learn about these cars more an that era was great man I was young kid in early 70s round about 1976 I was 9 yrs old an these cars I rode in an loved the smell of the leather or cheap leather but man rode great an I thought back then they were just beautiful cars all of them
My grandmother had several Cadillacs over the years, but when I was 11 in 1976, she bought a beautiful first year Seville. White with red leather interior. It was her last car and my favorite. So elegant. She traded in a dark blue Sedan DeVille for it. My uncle inherited it when she stopped driving in 80 and when I turned 16 he let me drive it once. Loved it.
I actually saw a Stutz in Huntsville AL about 10 years ago. It was in a common area at one of those fancy outdoor shopping plazas that were so popular then. I think it was being photographed for an online magazine of some kind. I didn't who know made them at the time, I had guessed it was a model from Morgan that I hadn't seen before. LOL.
Great video. My all time favorite decade of true American luxury cars. None of them make anything like these today as they all seem to be adicted to SUV's now. I'd gladly take any of these on your list with the biggest smile on my face. The only thing is that I have no more room. As it is, I have a stunning 1986 Cadillac Seville with 23,000 miles and a 1988 Cadillac Cimarron with 61,000 miles in my garage.
I was a young teenager in the 70’s and the Mark V was the most outstanding American luxury car. They were so ostentatious. Only a Bentley or Rolls could grab the same attention. You need to make a video about American luxury cars of the 1950’s. During this time is when American cars were the best in the world and decade’s ahead of all other manufacturers. For example, 50’s Cadillacs had electric windows, electric seats, AC and V8’s, when Rolls Royce didn’t offer any of those features.
Nice job on this video, young man! These were the cars I grew up with, and learned to drive! My father always had big Ford's, and Mercurys, and I now have my grandfather's 78 Lincoln 2dr town car coup, with 64,980 on the clock, and the 460 cubic inch, (7.5 L) with the original 850 Holly 4 barrel carburetor, and c6 3speed automatic...no overdrive! This car has a 28 gallon fuel tank, and the curb weight is 6,433lbs. And it still gets about 17 mpg hwy at 70 on the vacuum cruise control. Not too bad for a big boat land yacht!. I only take it out about a dozen times a year during the fair weather months, as to keep it up, and minimize wear, as parts are becoming really hard to find. But, it is a joy to drive, and really draws alot of attention both on the road, and at car shows. Thanks again for doing this video.
New subscriber sends Greetings from Tucson, Arizona. Quite a nice video...I had a number of the cars featured. Interestingly, the featured Designer Series Lincoln Continental used the same steering wheel as all other Ford products of the day. The 1975 Imperial was rebadged New Yorker for 1976-1978, and the 1975 New Yorker became the Newport for 1976-1978.
Great video of the super luxury cars i grew up with. Those prices were out of this world but kudos to the people that could afford them. That's why im a car enthusiasts today. In 1979 i bought a brand new Olds 98 Regency coupe. Black cabriolet roof with astro roof and gold velour interior. It had every option just like the top of line Cadillac Fleetwood Coupe De Ville. I had a big edge on the Cadillac because of the Regency stance and the beautiful crafted chrome grille. I kept the edge on Cadillac and others because my car was always clean to the MAXXX! Can't forget those 2 inch Firestone 721 white walls that even had other luxury car owners with Vogues tires even take a second look at my 98 !
My mom had the 1981 (same car) 98 Regency in midnight blue, with blue velvet interior (may have been velour but looked and felt like velvet). Wire wheels. Vinyl roof (was cabriolet roof for the two door; my mom’s was the sedan). They were nice. Took my drivers license test in it. I had my own car, but occasionally she’d let me take it when I was going out. So my friends and I had a luxurious living party room on wheels. I can still hear those sub-par muffley Delco speakers (factory stereos were crap compared to aftermarket then, even in luxury cars.).
I own a 1978 Eldorado Biarritz and the steering is perfect. It reacts to movements from the steering wheel instantly. So what is your problem? The ONLY disadvantage is the large blind spot in the rear, but when I change lanes everyone gets the hell put of my way anyway.
Such a well-produced series, these graphics and adverts bring back the memories! these were the cars (yaughts) I liked best! My grandpa had both a '71 Olds 98 four door (beautiful blue with white top and a '78 Buick Park ave).He was always trading in cars in Big springs, Tex so as a kid it was like what will he get next?! Loaded, that '71 Olds would get passed to my mom and then was my first car right outta highschool! We would be driving along and (esp in the country) and peeps would wave- but I kept her real clean. It had a glossy polyester 6 way power seats with armrests that folded down, very comfortable, powerful (and gas thirsty car)! Anyway, these cars were the SUVs back then, I mean small cars were everywhere too but you saw just as many of these fancy boats! That Stutznwas designed by the famous designer who was dumped by Chrysler in the early 60s after his no-doubt drug or booze influenced monstrosities of later career. Virgil Exner. But I dug most his designs this Stutz was over the top, looks silly really😅 P . S. You'll do one on Sixties as this will top 5000, and we all can hardly wait GH❤🎉
The two most obscene American luxury cars ever built (1930's) were the Cadillac V 16, and the Duesenberg SJ. I'd love to see the selling price on those two!!
People were starving during the Great Depression. Only the very wealthiest could afford cars like that. Where did they get their money? They were the people that caused it!@@htimsid
It's Sooo hard for kids to wrap their heads around the fact that air conditioning was a very expensive option in the 20th century except in a true real luxury car.
Of the 70’s big luxury cars the Chrysler had the best handling and the roughest and noisiest ride. Lincoln was the opposite with sloppiest handling but the smoothest quietest ride. Cadillac tended to be in the middle on all those points.
My dad had the 77 Sedan DeVille. I learned how to drive partially in that car. I used to feel like I was taking up 2 lanes but it was so smooth, comfortable and quiet.
Thank you for sharing life back then. I am from the 1960s. So, yes I had a few uncles and aunts how work for a few auto factories here in Chicago back in tge 1970s to the early 2000s.😊
Thank you! My Step-Father back in the 1970s had a Convertible Pontiac Bonneville from Los Angeles. But when he meant my Mom and she wanted the family style look here in Chicago. So, he, my Step-Father, traded that Pontiac Bonneville later on for a family Pontiac Catalina 4 door. ☺ Hahaha The older vintage cars had some great memories!!
My 72 was high 8k and my 73 was 9k, but it was a Town Car package, and fully loaded (a misconception that TCs came fully loaded). One correction. The Continental was a unique platform. It is completely different from the Marquis. They are similar but as similar as a Crown Vicotira frame is to the Continental (which is eery hose similar the Panther is to the FS) They didnt have names for all platforms at Ford back then. The LTD and the Maquis were Ford Full Size as the official name. The Continental was the Luxury Size, which it had exclusively. in 1970 and 71 and early 72 is when the 460 was an exclussive Lincoln engine (like the 462 ahead). 70 and 71 had Lincoln 460 on the aircleaner cover, where as in 72 it was switched to Ford 460 4BBL. Midyear in 72, Mercury was given the first dibs to the 460 in the Colony Park wagon, and then it trickled to the Country Squire and the sedans, and making it all the way to the Ranchero in 73. The early 70s cars are the same platform, up to 74, with the same interior and green house. The only changes were made were due to the govt mandated bumpers. I could do a 2hr video on the history of these cars lol, and why Lee Iococca HATED them. Its a cool story one where Im glad Iococca lost! He would ultimatley go to Chrysler over how buthurt he was over it I still love those cars, but the are very easy to park. The steering is firm. One of the things about the early Continentals, was that they were geared for performance. Not off the line but top speed. They were FAST, and fastest Ford in 72, and challenging Corvettes for top speed. They also were set up for handling. Despite the size (70-72 being 5200lbs and 73 5500, and 74 about 5650) they could corner deceivingly well. Because of that MANY films used them as bad guy cars, from Herbie the Love Bug to Rockford Files, and so many were wrecked. Add to that the carburetor, the C6 trans, and the rear end that were pilfered from used car sales (people would buy the car just to take those parts) that so few of the early 70s cars survive. The Marks werent as performance oriented as the sedans (4dr and 2rd). Its a shame we cant truly get that feeling today because no decent white walls are made. Yes, you MUST run white walls, and inch and a quarter, not the goofy wide whites. Its a law lol.
My personal favorite is a 1971 mercury marques 2 door, 429 cobra jet. My dad bought that car and when i got my license at 16 i was aloud to drive that car. In 1977 i turned 17 and me and my girlfriend used the back seat as our personal rumpass room if you get my meaning. Great review on these timeless cars, i wish that the manufacturers of vehicles would bring back these boats. I don't care for the big SUVs.👍🍻
Interesting to see the Lincoln Mark 5 being that expensive. I own one and im 19, i like restoring old cars and im glad to have one. I made a cold start video of it.
@@glenw-xm5zf If you can’t figure out what I was saying, then perhaps you shouldn’t own a vehicle, or be registered to vote. Can you balance a check book, or don’t numbers count
@@Doc1855You can't answer the question: Why to people use the term 'Original miles' What is meant by 'original miles??? Sorry you couldn't understand the question. If you can't, then perhaps you shouldn't own a tricyle, let alone be registered to vote.
@@glenw-xm5zf A lot of people can’t imagine that an older car, truck, etc has such low mileage. The “Original Miles” refers to the actual mileage of the vehicle and the odometer has not rolled over or been tampered with. Therefore it’s the Original Mileage
@@Doc1855Yeah, I sold one of my cars a few years back and the guy asked me, 'Are those original miles?" I told him, NO, I borrowed them from my brother's pickup. (He hung up.) Nobody who is so sleazy that they would roll bad the O.D. is going to admit to it, I just think it is a stupid question. but the, I am an old grouch so whatever
I’m a Cadillac fan, during the 70’s my family and close friends owned 73’ Eldorado, 73’ Fleetwood, 79’ Seville, 76’ Fleetwood Brougham, 73’ Lincoln and 79’ Bill Blass Continental. I grew up driving luxury cars. My favorite was the 73’ Eldorado, 73’ Lincoln, 79’ Seville which I wish I still owned. After 31 vehicles I drive a SC 430 Pebble Beach Edition 08’ and love it!
A former friend of mine had an Olds Toronado back in the late 00s, it was either a late 70s or early 80s model, it looked exactly like the one at 4:00. That thing was a damn boat but it was so gangster, go figure that clip I mentioned has it parked next to an actual boat. It just had a presence to it, you know?
My wonderful Dad owned some of these through the 60’s & 70’s, starting from a vague memory, a 61 Imperial Crown Coupe, in all black, all I remember is the big headlights and squarish steering wheel. But I definitely remember more of the 64 Lincoln Sedan that was a lemon and stranded the family three times , so Dad dumped that for an amazing 64 Imperial Crown Coupe in stunning metallic aqua blue black leather. Then there was a 69 Thunderbird Sedan, 71,73,75 Lincoln Coupes, finally a 78 Town Car loaded in all sky blue.
My 2nd car was a 78 Cadillac Seville...3rd a 85 Seville - white w/ black carriage top - Rolls Royce grill and wire hubcaps and maroon to leather interior...had the 4100 engine heads fixed...thanks Mom and Dad!!! Graduation from college surprise 😊... I limo tinted the windows and windshield half way down.... ultimate pimp mobile for a 20 year old spoiled brat!!! What a surprise!!! My parents were AWESOME 🎉❤
That green 76 Lincoln photo is from the dealer sales brochure. I know because my dad brought the brochure home after he ordered an identical green 2 door back in 76. It had a green tinted moonroof, green leather seats and 4 wheel disc brakes. Pretty cool car.
I remember how smooth,comfortable and powerful and sound less was these cars at the time when they were brand new, i think they were much better than any 2024 cars,
My first new car was a Pontic Bonneville, 2dr, ht, with a 455 High Output engine, 385HP, automatic, with PB, PS, power windows, power antenna, dual exausts, resonators, positraction, AM/FM radio ( no tapes yet), heavy duty suspension, and a big gas tank. used to do about 15 miles per gallon, who cares, gallon of premium of around $.36, and I paid $5100 for that car in Chicago in 1971, today it would be around $40000, so I had a cheap car, but I had broads by the trunk load in that beast!
You put some effort into this video. I was laughing so hard about the things you said. I saw all the Oldsmobile images and smiled. I did want to tell you that 5.7 liter 350 was 1980. It was gone by 1981 and replaced by the 307 which it used until 1985 then Toronado was downsized for 1986 sadly. They 307 V8 was used until 1990 at GM in the wagons and Cadillac Brougham and Chevrolet Caprice. I do not know how you find the footage and photos, but that is great. You could get digital gauges in the 1976-1979 Seville. The cars you shared were quite interesting. I liked what I saw. The Lincoln Town Car changed for 1980 model year. The Lincoln Mark V was a huge success at that time. It outsold the Cadillac Eldorado. I like the fact you did your homework about Stutz, That New Yorker you shared was the Imperial from 1974-1975. It them became New Yorker. in 1976. You did a good job and you learned a lot about this era too. Keep it up. I really enjoyed the footage.
Maybe you are unaware but, my friend's grandfather who had a ton of cash. Very wealthy. Had a Cadillac that was I believe called the Opera Coupe. It was a two door, with a long front with wheel packages on each side behind the front wheels with a small cabin that was like a Seville in its squareness and it had the opera half vinyl roof with the big chrome S emblem on the side behind the door windows., real wire wheels, wide whitewall tires and in 1976 I think is when he had ordered, they were not available they only custom built by Cadillac and I think he paid about $15 or $20 thousand dollars. It was a very very nice looking car that only a few were ever made.
I'm sure he is unaware of your friend's grandfather. The reason that the car you reference is not on the list is because to was a Cadillac modified by a coach builder.
Hey! I loved this! I was a kid and still cated about cars. I think as you do more tesearch youre gonna be more appreciative and hottified at the same time. I look forward to your futute videos. Great research and intelligent yet down to earth presentation.
The 66 Fleetwood Bgm was the absolute top of the quality for Cadillac up until then and forever after. The gorgeous Tapestry cloth and leather or all leather with real wood and stainless, tea tables, footrests, made this the classic luxury car.
1:55 Curious Car's does 30-45 minute histories of cars and the decade or year they were produced, and all sorts of other small details that are interesting and entertaining. He is a retired dealer who still dabbles in selling some vehicles occasionally in Florida and in his videos, he has pristine examples of the car's he features. I'm not trying to steal any of your thunder Green Hawk, just a place to scratch an itch if someone wants more. The car shown here I believe could be the exact same car and if not, one exactly like it in one of his videos. These cars have swagger like no other car I have ever come across. Check him out if curious, he's entertaining and extremely knowledgeable,
My parents had a 1981 Cadillac Eldorado with the diesel engine (that combo was my father's dream car) and it cost $24K, which is what our house cost 20 years earlier. My father passed in November of 1980 but fortunately he had credit life insurance on the car so when he died, it was totally paid off. My mother drove it until 1983, when-after having to have the engine worked on one too many times-she traded it in for a 1980 Toyota Celica (no money exchanged hands-straight trade) that she had for almost two decades and it finally gave up the ghost.
You know what's sad is in purchasing power the average new car is more expensive then most luxury cars of the 1970s adjusted for inflation. Consumers have truly lost a lot with deindustrialization.
Back when cars were king with many beautiful colors, today it's all SUVs and Crossovers in ten shades of black,white and grey . My family always drove Oldsmobiles, we had every model of the 60's, 70, and early 80's our last 98 had fender skirts. I learned to drive in a 68 98 , my siblings and I could parallel park it in seconds flat.
My next door neighbor had a stutz when I was a kid. I thought the car was super ugly. He was a grumpy, old, alcoholic who would just sit in the car chain-smoking in the driveway because he was retired and had no place to go.
I had a 76 sedan deville, no fancy packages tmk, did have alot of cool features tho. power seats, power antenna, automatic climate control, and a softclose trunk.
Great video... only one little mistake I saw... when you're talking about the rear wheel drive X Body cars, they're referring to the NOVA (Nova, Omega, Ventura, Apollo) platform... but you show a 1980 Oldsmobile Omega, which is the "new" X Body, which was the new front wheel drive platform, Citation, Omega, Phoenix, Skylark, etc. The 1979 Omega was a totally different car that looked very much like a Chevy Nova.
My girlfriend's dad has a 1976 Lincoln Mark IV in pristine condition, that he's kept garaged forever.... I will have to send him this video...He wants to sell that car, it is Sky Blue w/White Landau top and a beautiful huge white leather interior.
That’s hard to make cause there’s so many,Stutz doesn’t belong to me wasn’t part of the big 3 production cars. Really good video that Police car one too got me subbed. NewYorker if I had to pick one.
I loved this video. Its nice to have a human voice rather than the computer generated voices in some other videos, where they mis-pronounce some of the words and cant tell that "1070s" is not pronounced 1970 "S" as in "ess". Good job. Liked the look of the Cadillac 75 limousine. I miss seeing actual limos for the rich and famous rather than the pimped-up trucks that they now use.
The late 70's Seville was truly an amazing car despite its humble architecture. GM got the game together we terrific build quality. The seats were supremely comfortable, the ride was like being on a cloud and they handled fairly well for that size of car.
My 69 Plymouth Fury torsion bar suspension rode like a boat on water on the interstate. Very easy to rebuild, no coil springs, ball joints screwed out.
The New Yorker was straight up Poor Pimpilicious! However, the Fleetwood Brougham d'Elegance was the real world luxury standard of the time for American overworld and underworld business figures... And boy were they super-nice. The Biaritz was so rare that absolutely no one had heard of a Biaritz, not to mention being able to afford one.
Growing up in the UK in the 70’s, we only saw these cars on imported shows like Starsky and Hutch, Columbo, Kojak and the list goes on. Having now lived in the US for the past forty years, I can see why they were popular with the rich.
They loved British cars here too. But my favorite uncle had a 1968 Jaguar E Type coupe (badged XKE here). As a very small boy, he let me steer and shift it on his lap. Fast forward to 1981 when I was 16 and dreaming of the car I’d buy, he said I could buy it (which was garaged most of the time by then) for $5,000. My parents wouldn’t let me do it, even though it was my own money I’d earned bussing tabes at a restaurant, knowing the notorious repair record and electrical issues.
I then decided I wanted a used MG. Same thing. Wouldn’t let me.
I settled on a ‘78 Camaro.
I also had an aunt who bought a new 4 door Jaguar (model escapes me) every 4 years starting in the early 70’s up to the early aughts. She loved them. loved British cars. Also wanted, and still want, a Triumph TR3-6. Oh, and before my uncle bought the XKE, he had an Austin Healey (too young to remember that one).
I do remember the shift starting in the late 70’s when more and more wealthy Americans were buying European luxury cars, whereas it had been mostly Lincoln, Cadillac and Chrysler (the latter being less common). . I never even heard of BMW or Audi until then, and I was always a car nut that scoped them all out. By the mid and late 80’s, they were everywhere here.
My favorite car of my younger days was my ‘83 VW Scirocco I bought in ‘86. Black, with the then unheard of in a car of its class, leather interior.
Sorry, didn’t start out to write a novel!
I grew up with my parents having a Ford Galaxy and Plymouth Fury and I wanted an MG Midget
I'm surprised you didn't include the 74-76 Cadillac Fleetwood Talisman. It definitely should have made this list
From 71 to 81 I was going to university and had a part time job as a mechanic. I worked at Pontiac, Buick , Oldsmobile, and Cadillac dealers. Sad to say, but all the model years were like a former football star. Fat, out of shape and past their prime.
I therefore saw mostly the wheezing, smogged up engines featured here.
However, for a very short time, 68 to 70, the GM divisions ALL created their OWN engines! The Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick 400s and 455s! All UNIQUE designs! I have forgotten where Cadillac slotted in but it was a 429, 472, or 502 (I think the 502 was later).
I know most of this is about 'fine Corinthian leather' (if you are old enough you will get the joke). But let me tell you that as a mechanic, I would have to periodically road test these cars and as my race team cousin used to say 'they would rip your d**k off'.
Even the front wheel drive Eldorado and Toronados , will 65% of wheels on the front wheels, you could melt a set of tires in one pass.
A bit off topic but the Buick Gran Sport, a supposed luxury car, sold at old man dealerships , where I worked, with the Stage IV package as one of the fastest or fastest cars of the 60/70s.
A friend of mine and I used to work at Buick and I helped crew a 70 Camaro body dirt tracker on outlaw tracks. With everyone running 350 Chevies, and us with a.060" overbore Buick coming in at 463 or more ci, we learned the lesson: Horsepower sells cars; torque wins races.
And then, in 71, is was all over, like waking up from a dream in Toledo, Ohio.
My dad. Had. A Burgundy 1974 Tasman with a moonroof
My parents had the cheapest of the cheap American cars in the 70’s.
@@appleiphone69 which one was it?
08:10 Was only recently I learned my littlish '79 Cadillac Seville, which I still have, made from a stretched Chevy II/Nova body, cost more than a full size Cadillac...
A little extra info on the 9 passenger caddy limo….. they were referred to as the “informal” limousine while the “formal” limo had the addition of the divider ( by the late 70’s and the 80’s there was no longer an electric glass divider. It was a sliding glass divider, like in a taxi. Also the 9 passenger had 3 rows of seats - usually used as people movers by funeral homes. BTW the 75 also had jump seats that faced the rear passengers When the seats were not deployed there were foot rests for the rear passengers. Lastly the 75 had leather in the front, and the passenger compartment had velour. This was also a time before there were many companies stretching cars, so a factory limo was really special. By 1985 GM down sized the 75 and it was just a shame.
Your reviews are wonderful. Thank you for your hard work. It’s great.
We had a '75 when I was a kid! My dad was a Cadillac collector and the limo was the jewel of his collection. We had lots of fun going to car shows in it :)
As the owner of a 2011 Maybach 57s with a V12 6.0 liter engine, the late model 1970s Lincoln Continental Williamsburg edition still takes my breath away ❤
I owned a 08 may v12 I loved it but had a semi tank it
I cannot imagine driving a V12
@@jeremypearson6852 My uncle had a 68 Jaguar XKJ coup with a V-12 he bought new. He sat me on his lap to steer and shift, so I guess I kind of drove one. One time he took me up past 100 mph in it. Loved that car. I can still smell the leather.
@@jeremypearson6852 Meant XKE. Wouldn’t let me edit
Nice car!
The Oldsmobile 98 Regency was a very nice automobile ! Service mechanic for GM ‘76 - ‘87 .
Mr. Goodwrench. "...With Genuine GM Parts!"😎
Loved that car!! Fast and very comfortable!
I had a double-Palomino 2-door '76 and loved it.
I remember as a kid falling in love with a collector series mark v on the showroom floor in 79 and seeing it was $23,000 On the sticker, and wondering how anyone could possibly afford that… I wish America still made cars like that
Me also, saw my first Bill Blass summer of 78 and sitting next to that was the Gold , Diamond Jubilee MK V . Absolutely fell in love with Lincoln that day and started my life - long car addiction. I've quite a few 70s land yachts now that I'm 56 yrs old. This was an era when Detroit used to build cars WE wanted remember those days????
Saw a light green metallic Mark on the showroom floor, light jade mist package with the green Versailles velour interior. My first thought when I saw that interior: what a great ballroom!
Keep on making them man it’s how we an you learn about these cars more an that era was great man I was young kid in early 70s round about 1976 I was 9 yrs old an these cars I rode in an loved the smell of the leather or cheap leather but man rode great an I thought back then they were just beautiful cars all of them
Thank you, well said
Right on, thank you!
My grandmother had several Cadillacs over the years, but when I was 11 in 1976, she bought a beautiful first year Seville. White with red leather interior. It was her last car and my favorite. So elegant. She traded in a dark blue Sedan DeVille for it. My uncle inherited it when she stopped driving in 80 and when I turned 16 he let me drive it once. Loved it.
Sweet video, I enjoyed that as usual. The Stutz looked so garish though, like something Liberace would drive 😂
He actually DID OWN ONE 😂
@@terrym5023 No way!! 😂😂😂 well that figures then haha
Thank you man! I agree😂
Sweet LIBERACE!!!
I actually saw a Stutz in Huntsville AL about 10 years ago. It was in a common area at one of those fancy outdoor shopping plazas that were so popular then. I think it was being photographed for an online magazine of some kind.
I didn't who know made them at the time, I had guessed it was a model from Morgan that I hadn't seen before. LOL.
What a great video from you. I lived this era in the used car days, and owned or drove most of these. Personal fave was the town car.
Pimps were spoiled for choice in THOSE days!
In the 1970s, pimp cars would be cars from the 1940s or 1930s
Great video. My all time favorite decade of true American luxury cars. None of them make anything like these today as they all seem to be adicted to SUV's now. I'd gladly take any of these on your list with the biggest smile on my face. The only thing is that I have no more room. As it is, I have a stunning 1986 Cadillac Seville with 23,000 miles and a 1988 Cadillac Cimarron with 61,000 miles in my garage.
The Cimarron is a sweet ride.
@@charlieellis592 Thanks. I sure love it.
I was a young teenager in the 70’s and the Mark V was the most outstanding American luxury car. They were so ostentatious. Only a Bentley or Rolls could grab the same attention.
You need to make a video about American luxury cars of the 1950’s. During this time is when American cars were the best in the world and decade’s ahead of all other manufacturers. For example, 50’s Cadillacs had electric windows, electric seats, AC and V8’s, when Rolls Royce didn’t offer any of those features.
I would debate your Mark V opinion. For me it would have come as the second choice when I got my '73 Eldorado as a young man.
The 78 New Yorker " Salon" trim package was beautiful also. Great work here, truly Thank You.
Thank you for watching man!
Nice job on this video, young man!
These were the cars I grew up with, and learned to drive! My father always had big Ford's, and Mercurys, and I now have my grandfather's 78 Lincoln 2dr town car coup, with 64,980 on the clock, and the 460 cubic inch, (7.5 L) with the original 850 Holly 4 barrel carburetor, and c6 3speed automatic...no overdrive! This car has a 28 gallon fuel tank, and the curb weight is 6,433lbs. And it still gets about 17 mpg hwy at 70 on the vacuum cruise control. Not too bad for a big boat land yacht!.
I only take it out about a dozen times a year during the fair weather months, as to keep it up, and minimize wear, as parts are becoming really hard to find. But, it is a joy to drive, and really draws alot of attention both on the road, and at car shows.
Thanks again for doing this video.
Good video for learn about the options and special made cars from the 70s , wow what a luxury is in that cars.
New subscriber sends Greetings from Tucson, Arizona.
Quite a nice video...I had a number of the cars featured.
Interestingly, the featured Designer Series Lincoln Continental used
the same steering wheel as all other Ford products of the day.
The 1975 Imperial was rebadged New Yorker for 1976-1978,
and the 1975 New Yorker became the Newport for 1976-1978.
Welcome aboard man!
Loved this video! Fun to see all the cars I would admire when I was a kid. Really beautiful cars!
Thank you, Tim!
@@GreenHawkDrive Thank YOU!
Love your content, keep it coming.
I appreciate that man, thank you!
How come he never mentioned the Chrysler Imperal?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_(automobile)?wprov=sfti1#First_generation_(1955%E2%80%931956):_A_separate_make
Agreed, the 1972 2 door LeBaron Coupe...oh my!
Very cool. I have some good memories of some these cars when I was a kid.
You’ve got me looking forward to Saturdays just to watch your latest uploads. I LOVE your content man. 10/10 shit for real.
Thank you man, I really appreciate that
Awesome Pimptastic episode Hawk! I know a guy with a 78 Pace Car edition Vette and he bought it new.
Thank you as always! That’s awesome man, they were pricy that’s for sure😂
@GreenHawkDrive They made quite a few of them, so a lot of people bought them as a future collectible.
Great video of the super luxury cars i grew up with. Those prices were out of this world but kudos to the people that could afford them. That's why im a car enthusiasts today. In 1979 i bought a brand new Olds 98 Regency coupe. Black cabriolet roof with astro roof and gold velour interior. It had every option just like the top of line Cadillac Fleetwood Coupe De Ville. I had a big edge on the Cadillac because of the Regency stance and the beautiful crafted chrome grille. I kept the edge on Cadillac and others because my car was always clean to the MAXXX! Can't forget those 2 inch Firestone 721 white walls that even had other luxury car owners with Vogues tires even take a second look at my 98 !
My mom had the 1981 (same car) 98 Regency in midnight blue, with blue velvet interior (may have been velour but looked and felt like velvet). Wire wheels. Vinyl roof (was cabriolet roof for the two door; my mom’s was the sedan). They were nice. Took my drivers license test in it. I had my own car, but occasionally she’d let me take it when I was going out. So my friends and I had a luxurious living party room on wheels. I can still hear those sub-par muffley Delco speakers (factory stereos were crap compared to aftermarket then, even in luxury cars.).
I own a 1978 Eldorado Biarritz and the steering is perfect. It reacts to movements from the steering wheel instantly. So what is your problem? The ONLY disadvantage is the large blind spot in the rear, but when I change lanes everyone gets the hell put of my way anyway.
Such a well-produced series, these graphics and adverts bring back the memories! these were the cars (yaughts) I liked best!
My grandpa had both a '71 Olds 98 four door (beautiful blue with white top and a '78 Buick Park ave).He was always trading in cars in Big springs, Tex so as a kid it was like what will he get next?!
Loaded, that '71 Olds would get passed to my mom and then was my first car right outta highschool! We would be driving along and (esp in the country) and peeps would wave- but I kept her real clean. It had a glossy polyester 6 way power seats with armrests that folded down, very comfortable, powerful (and gas thirsty car)!
Anyway, these cars were the SUVs back then, I mean small cars were everywhere too but you saw just as many of these fancy boats! That Stutznwas designed by the famous designer who was dumped by Chrysler in the early 60s after his no-doubt drug or booze influenced monstrosities of later career. Virgil Exner. But I dug most his designs this Stutz was over the top, looks silly really😅
P . S. You'll do one on Sixties as this will top 5000, and we all can hardly wait GH❤🎉
Orson Wells' comment on the ad for his "ediition" is funny. I never thought him to be the type to poke fun at himself!
Love Orson's advertising copy for his '78 Caddy at 4:45! 😅🤣
The two most obscene American luxury cars ever built (1930's) were the Cadillac V 16, and the Duesenberg SJ. I'd love to see the selling price on those two!!
'obscene' ?
People were starving during the Great Depression. Only the very wealthiest could afford cars like that. Where did they get their money? They were the people that caused it!@@htimsid
@@richardmerriam7044 go live in socialist splendor. you think they have the moral high ground?
Awesome reviews! So many features are standard today.
It's Sooo hard for kids to wrap their heads around the fact that air conditioning was a very expensive option in the 20th century except in a true real luxury car.
Thank you man!
The good thing about Chrysler's torsion bar suspension was its superior handling compared to other luxury cars of the day.
Oh, $#!+!!! We got a Torsion Bar Fight!!!!!😆😅🤣
Of the 70’s big luxury cars the Chrysler had the best handling and the roughest and noisiest ride. Lincoln was the opposite with sloppiest handling but the smoothest quietest ride. Cadillac tended to be in the middle on all those points.
My dad had the 77 Sedan DeVille. I learned how to drive partially in that car. I used to feel like I was taking up 2 lanes but it was so smooth, comfortable and quiet.
Thank you for sharing life back then. I am from the 1960s. So, yes I had a few uncles and aunts how work for a few auto factories here in Chicago back in tge 1970s to the early 2000s.😊
Thank you! My Step-Father back in the 1970s had a Convertible Pontiac Bonneville from Los Angeles. But when he meant my Mom and she wanted the family style look here in Chicago. So, he, my Step-Father, traded that Pontiac Bonneville later on for a family Pontiac Catalina 4 door. ☺ Hahaha The older vintage cars had some great memories!!
Very good video. Keep em coming
I appreciate that my friend!
My 72 was high 8k and my 73 was 9k, but it was a Town Car package, and fully loaded (a misconception that TCs came fully loaded).
One correction. The Continental was a unique platform. It is completely different from the Marquis. They are similar but as similar as a Crown Vicotira frame is to the Continental (which is eery hose similar the Panther is to the FS)
They didnt have names for all platforms at Ford back then. The LTD and the Maquis were Ford Full Size as the official name. The Continental was the Luxury Size, which it had exclusively. in 1970 and 71 and early 72 is when the 460 was an exclussive Lincoln engine (like the 462 ahead). 70 and 71 had Lincoln 460 on the aircleaner cover, where as in 72 it was switched to Ford 460 4BBL. Midyear in 72, Mercury was given the first dibs to the 460 in the Colony Park wagon, and then it trickled to the Country Squire and the sedans, and making it all the way to the Ranchero in 73.
The early 70s cars are the same platform, up to 74, with the same interior and green house. The only changes were made were due to the govt mandated bumpers. I could do a 2hr video on the history of these cars lol, and why Lee Iococca HATED them. Its a cool story one where Im glad Iococca lost! He would ultimatley go to Chrysler over how buthurt he was over it
I still love those cars, but the are very easy to park. The steering is firm. One of the things about the early Continentals, was that they were geared for performance. Not off the line but top speed. They were FAST, and fastest Ford in 72, and challenging Corvettes for top speed. They also were set up for handling. Despite the size (70-72 being 5200lbs and 73 5500, and 74 about 5650) they could corner deceivingly well. Because of that MANY films used them as bad guy cars, from Herbie the Love Bug to Rockford Files, and so many were wrecked. Add to that the carburetor, the C6 trans, and the rear end that were pilfered from used car sales (people would buy the car just to take those parts) that so few of the early 70s cars survive. The Marks werent as performance oriented as the sedans (4dr and 2rd). Its a shame we cant truly get that feeling today because no decent white walls are made. Yes, you MUST run white walls, and inch and a quarter, not the goofy wide whites. Its a law lol.
1979 Cadillac Seville is my all time favorite car. It was the first Cadillac I saw when I was 4 years old and fell in love with Cadillacs forever.
Yes, we absolutely hated the future when that Lincoln Continental showed up in the last few seconds of your video. Bravo!
My personal favorite is a 1971 mercury marques 2 door, 429 cobra jet. My dad bought that car and when i got my license at 16 i was aloud to drive that car. In 1977 i turned 17 and me and my girlfriend used the back seat as our personal rumpass room if you get my meaning. Great review on these timeless cars, i wish that the manufacturers of vehicles would bring back these boats. I don't care for the big SUVs.👍🍻
Interesting to see the Lincoln Mark 5 being that expensive. I own one and im 19, i like restoring old cars and im glad to have one. I made a cold start video of it.
We have a 77 Continental with 70K original miles that’s driven occasionally.
My wife’s Grandfather was a Pilot and he called it the Corporate Jet
What exactly is an "Original" mile? Every mile ever driven. walked or measured is exactly 5,280 feet
@@glenw-xm5zf If you can’t figure out what I was saying, then perhaps you shouldn’t own a vehicle, or be registered to vote.
Can you balance a check book, or don’t numbers count
@@Doc1855You can't answer the question: Why to people use the term 'Original miles' What is meant by 'original miles??? Sorry you couldn't understand the question. If you can't, then perhaps you shouldn't own a tricyle, let alone be registered to vote.
@@glenw-xm5zf A lot of people can’t imagine that an older car, truck, etc has such low mileage.
The “Original Miles” refers to the actual mileage of the vehicle and the odometer has not rolled over or been tampered with. Therefore it’s the Original Mileage
@@Doc1855Yeah, I sold one of my cars a few years back and the guy asked me, 'Are those original miles?" I told him, NO, I borrowed them from my brother's pickup. (He hung up.) Nobody who is so sleazy that they would roll bad the O.D. is going to admit to it, I just think it is a stupid question. but the, I am an old grouch so whatever
You have my thumbs up!! Great videos, thank you for posting. Grew up with those beauties in the 60s & 70s
Great video idea!!!!!! So fun!!!
Glad you liked it!
I’m a Cadillac fan, during the 70’s my family and close friends owned 73’ Eldorado, 73’ Fleetwood, 79’ Seville, 76’ Fleetwood Brougham, 73’ Lincoln and 79’ Bill Blass Continental. I grew up driving luxury cars. My favorite was the 73’ Eldorado, 73’ Lincoln, 79’ Seville which I wish I still owned. After 31 vehicles I drive a SC 430 Pebble Beach Edition 08’ and love it!
Excellent presentation!
Thank you kindly!
My buddy had one of the 2 door Continentals. It was white and huge. Smooth ride.
My dad loved his 3rd gen Oldsmobile Toronado it was smooth and comfortable. Great video 👍
I appreciate that man, thank you!
A former friend of mine had an Olds Toronado back in the late 00s, it was either a late 70s or early 80s model, it looked exactly like the one at 4:00. That thing was a damn boat but it was so gangster, go figure that clip I mentioned has it parked next to an actual boat. It just had a presence to it, you know?
I agree
Other than your mispronunciation of MANY, MANY words, this was very informative!
A land yacht parked next to the Love Boat! Perfect!
My wonderful Dad owned some of these through the 60’s & 70’s, starting from a vague memory, a 61 Imperial Crown Coupe, in all black, all I remember is the big headlights and squarish steering wheel. But I definitely remember more of the 64 Lincoln Sedan that was a lemon and stranded the family three times , so Dad dumped that for an amazing 64 Imperial Crown Coupe in stunning metallic aqua blue black leather. Then there was a 69 Thunderbird Sedan, 71,73,75 Lincoln Coupes, finally a 78 Town Car loaded in all sky blue.
I love these cars! Thanks for the video.
I built the Monogram 1/24 scale 78 Corvette Indy Pace Car model kit last Fall.. A nice kit that went together very well..
I like your style dude...
Informative great pictures well done. The Stutz was one of Elvis favorite cars.
There's someone on TH-cam who has one of the 1983 anniversary pace car Corvettes and it has 9 miles on it!!!
They didn’t produce a Corvette in 1983.
My 2nd car was a 78 Cadillac Seville...3rd a 85 Seville - white w/ black carriage top - Rolls Royce grill and wire hubcaps and maroon to leather interior...had the 4100 engine heads fixed...thanks Mom and Dad!!! Graduation from college surprise 😊...
I limo tinted the windows and windshield half way down.... ultimate pimp mobile for a 20 year old spoiled brat!!! What a surprise!!! My parents were AWESOME 🎉❤
That green 76 Lincoln photo is from the dealer sales brochure. I know because my dad brought the brochure home after he ordered an identical green 2 door back in 76. It had a green tinted moonroof, green leather seats and 4 wheel disc brakes. Pretty cool car.
This video made me homesick for my past! (Just subscribed!).
I appreciate that brother, thank you
I remember how smooth,comfortable and powerful and sound less was these cars at the time when they were brand new, i think they were much better than any 2024 cars,
My first new car was a Pontic Bonneville, 2dr, ht, with a 455 High Output engine, 385HP, automatic, with PB, PS, power windows, power antenna, dual exausts, resonators, positraction, AM/FM radio ( no tapes yet), heavy duty suspension, and a big gas tank. used to do about 15 miles per gallon, who cares, gallon of premium of around $.36, and I paid $5100 for that car in Chicago in 1971, today it would be around $40000, so I had a cheap car, but I had broads by the trunk load in that beast!
The Stutz has always been my dads favourite car, never realized how insane they were!
I love this video I definitely subscribed
Thank you man, I appreciate that!
You put some effort into this video. I was laughing so hard about the things you said. I saw all the Oldsmobile images and smiled. I did want to tell you that 5.7 liter 350 was 1980. It was gone by 1981 and replaced by the 307 which it used until 1985 then Toronado was downsized for 1986 sadly. They 307 V8 was used until 1990 at GM in the wagons and Cadillac Brougham and Chevrolet Caprice. I do not know how you find the footage and photos, but that is great. You could get digital gauges in the 1976-1979 Seville. The cars you shared were quite interesting. I liked what I saw. The Lincoln Town Car changed for 1980 model year. The Lincoln Mark V was a huge success at that time. It outsold the Cadillac Eldorado. I like the fact you did your homework about Stutz, That New Yorker you shared was the Imperial from 1974-1975. It them became New Yorker. in 1976. You did a good job and you learned a lot about this era too. Keep it up. I really enjoyed the footage.
Maybe you are unaware but, my friend's grandfather who had a ton of cash. Very wealthy. Had a Cadillac that was I believe called the Opera Coupe. It was a two door, with a long front with wheel packages on each side behind the front wheels with a small cabin that was like a Seville in its squareness and it had the opera half vinyl roof with the big chrome S emblem on the side behind the door windows., real wire wheels, wide whitewall tires and in 1976 I think is when he had ordered, they were not available they only custom built by Cadillac and I think he paid about $15 or $20 thousand dollars. It was a very very nice looking car that only a few were ever made.
I'm sure he is unaware of your friend's grandfather. The reason that the car you reference is not on the list is because to was a Cadillac modified by a coach builder.
Hey! I loved this! I was a kid and still cated about cars. I think as you do more tesearch youre gonna be more appreciative and hottified at the same time. I look forward to your futute videos. Great research and intelligent yet down to earth presentation.
Oh for sure man! Thank you for your support😎
great video!
Thank you!
In 1977 I was 17 and we had a 1973 Buick Park Ave, pillowed valour int, 455, that thing moved for a huge car, the best riding car I've ever been in.
The 66 Fleetwood Bgm was the absolute top of the quality for Cadillac up until then and forever after. The gorgeous Tapestry cloth and leather or all leather with real wood and stainless, tea tables, footrests, made this the classic luxury car.
I love the 60s 70s and the 80s lincolns. And a few 70s cadillacs. Of course I am Italian LOL
Marvelous video
1:55 Curious Car's does 30-45 minute histories of cars and the decade or year they were produced, and all sorts of other small details that are interesting and entertaining. He is a retired dealer who still dabbles in selling some vehicles occasionally in Florida and in his videos, he has pristine examples of the car's he features. I'm not trying to steal any of your thunder Green Hawk, just a place to scratch an itch if someone wants more. The car shown here I believe could be the exact same car and if not, one exactly like it in one of his videos. These cars have swagger like no other car I have ever come across. Check him out if curious, he's entertaining and extremely knowledgeable,
Ohhh yes! I believe he’s in Naples and always saying something about the weather😂 Yeah man, he makes great videos!
@@GreenHawkDrive Yup, the weather, Vid whiskey, and damgerous deer, birds, and goats. 😆
My parents had a 1981 Cadillac Eldorado with the diesel engine (that combo was my father's dream car) and it cost $24K, which is what our house cost 20 years earlier. My father passed in November of 1980 but fortunately he had credit life insurance on the car so when he died, it was totally paid off. My mother drove it until 1983, when-after having to have the engine worked on one too many times-she traded it in for a 1980 Toyota Celica (no money exchanged hands-straight trade) that she had for almost two decades and it finally gave up the ghost.
I took my first driving test in a 1972 Cadillac Coupe Deville, 2-door. LOL. Today, I drive a FIAT 500! LOL
You know what's sad is in purchasing power the average new car is more expensive then most luxury cars of the 1970s adjusted for inflation. Consumers have truly lost a lot with deindustrialization.
9:49. Detective Frank Cannon would love this car .
Back when cars were king with many beautiful colors, today it's all SUVs and Crossovers in ten shades of black,white and grey . My family always drove Oldsmobiles, we had every model of the 60's, 70, and early 80's our last 98 had fender skirts. I learned to drive in a 68 98 , my siblings and I could parallel park it in seconds flat.
My mom drove a GIGANTIC and GOLDEN Cadillac 4-door beast with a white leather interior. DIGITAL Tape deck. That thing was insane 😂
Bravo 🙌
What about the Mohs SafariKar?
My next door neighbor had a stutz when I was a kid. I thought the car was super ugly. He was a grumpy, old, alcoholic who would just sit in the car chain-smoking in the driveway because he was retired and had no place to go.
What about Excalibur Series II, Clénet Series I or Dunham Corvonado?
My favorite was the mid to late 70's Continental. I love the length, comfort, with the 400 engine.
A 460 is even better.
The stutz black limo in the background is actually a royal saudi family personal vehicle you can see the logo ❤️👍🏾
I had a 76 sedan deville, no fancy packages tmk, did have alot of cool features tho. power seats, power antenna, automatic climate control, and a softclose trunk.
Preferated leather seats? (9:07) Where do you come up with the word preferated?
Strangely beautiful.
Great video... only one little mistake I saw... when you're talking about the rear wheel drive X Body cars, they're referring to the NOVA (Nova, Omega, Ventura, Apollo) platform... but you show a 1980 Oldsmobile Omega, which is the "new" X Body, which was the new front wheel drive platform, Citation, Omega, Phoenix, Skylark, etc. The 1979 Omega was a totally different car that looked very much like a Chevy Nova.
I'd LOVE to have a '71 Sedan de Ville!
My girlfriend's dad has a 1976 Lincoln Mark IV in pristine condition, that he's kept garaged forever.... I will have to send him this video...He wants to sell that car, it is Sky Blue w/White Landau top and a beautiful huge white leather interior.
Hellyeah brother!
That’s hard to make cause there’s so many,Stutz doesn’t belong to me wasn’t part of the big 3 production cars. Really good video that Police car one too got me subbed. NewYorker if I had to pick one.
I loved this video. Its nice to have a human voice rather than the computer generated voices in some other videos, where they mis-pronounce some of the words and cant tell that "1070s" is not pronounced 1970 "S" as in "ess". Good job. Liked the look of the Cadillac 75 limousine. I miss seeing actual limos for the rich and famous rather than the pimped-up trucks that they now use.
Awesome!!!
Can't resist pointing out Cartier is pronounced CAR-TEE-AY...
Cheers!
The late 70's Seville was truly an amazing car despite its humble architecture. GM got the game together we terrific build quality. The seats were supremely comfortable, the ride was like being on a cloud and they handled fairly well for that size of car.
My 69 Plymouth Fury torsion bar suspension rode like a boat on water on the interstate. Very easy to rebuild, no coil springs, ball joints screwed out.
My first thought about all of them ... how would I get them into a parking bay at my local shopping centre on a Saturday morning ? 😊😊😊
Brougham seats were so comfortable!
They should revive the Stutz to compete with Rolls Royce, Bentley and Maybach in the ultra luxury market.
I bought a 1982 tornado broum desial loved it.
the 72 Impala 4dr was my babymaker🎉🎉🎉
Excellent video but on my device the aspect ratio is wayyy too stretched
The New Yorker was straight up Poor Pimpilicious!
However, the Fleetwood Brougham d'Elegance was the real world luxury standard of the time for American overworld and underworld business figures... And boy were they super-nice.
The Biaritz was so rare that absolutely no one had heard of a Biaritz, not to mention being able to afford one.