12 August 2012
Fratzog
Dodge's logo from September 1962 through 1981 was a fractured deltod composed of three arrowhead shapes forming a three-pointed star. The logo first appeared on the 1962 Polara 500 and the mid-year 1962 Custom 880. One of its designers came up with the meaningless name Fratzog for the logo, which ultimately stuck. As the Dodge Division's logo, Fratzog was incorporated in various badges and emblems on Dodge vehicles. It was also integrated into the design of such parts as steering wheel center hubs and road wheel covers.
10 August 2012
09 August 2012
08 August 2012
07 August 2012
06 August 2012
Plymouth XNR

Virgil Exner (1909-1973) was an automotive designer who produced some of the best looking cars of the 50s and 60s. He started his career with the Raymond Lowey Studio in 1938. After designing the Studebaker Starlight in the early '50s, he joined Chrysler and designed some of these memorable autos; Chrysler 300 ,Chrysler New Yorker, Plymouth Fury, Plymouth Valiant and Dodge Coronet.
Here is one of Exner's concept cars. It might have a touch of Lowey in it, even after he'd been gone 2 decades. It certainly bears a little resemblance to Lowey's Avanti of the same era.
Exner chose to power the XNR with a 170-cu.inch* slant-six engine with a Hyper-pak intake manifold, four-barrel carburetor, ported cylinder head, high-performance camshaft, and split exhaust. To get a short, sporting wheelbase, he chose to base the XNR on Plymouth’s new Valiant chassis, upon which the Italian firm Ghia then draped a body made entirely of steel.
*Some sources say it had a 225 slant six, but I don't think that engine was being produced at that time.
It certainly would have been an interesting car, and with Ford leaving the sports car market by turning the Thunderbird into a luxury car, it would have given the Corvette a run. It was tested at 146 mph. With a fiber glass nose cone ala the Superbird of a decade later, it was clocked at 152. Not bad for something built of stock parts.
There was only the one example made. Tax laws demanded that it be shipped back to Italy after it's use as a show car, and it ended up being owned by the Shah of Iran, who sold it to a Beirut businessman before fleeing the county in 1979. It managed to survive war torn Beirut of the 80s and is now seen at car shows around the world.
05 August 2012
03 August 2012
02 August 2012
The Goatee Zone
We're used to seeing Rod Serling as a dapper, urbane narrator of ironic morality plays. Here he is in his 2nd and last role as an actor...from the Ironside episode aired on the 3rd of February, 1972. Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Murder also starred young Jodie Foster.
01 August 2012
Land of the Giants #2
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