incredibly smooth. 175 hp was Alot of power back then. Most cameras pick up all the rattles in modern-day cars crappy trim & others noises. Not the case here. This is real craftmanship. Thank you for sharing.
@LMacNeill11 жыл бұрын
If you watched the entire series (three videos), they did put oil down in the cylinders and turned it over by hand many times to get it lubricated before they cranked it up and drove it. They did mention that they'd changed all the fluids also. Just because we're Americans doesn't mean we're ignorant about how to treat old cars, Jamjar107. The old-car restoration hobby is quite strong in this country, and there are thousands of people who do this -- and actually know what they're doing, too.
@rgion2924761611 жыл бұрын
I admire the efforts of anyone who takes on the restoration of a 76 year old classic car like a Packard.. The amount of investment required to do a full ground up restoration is done by this gentleman who clearly loves this car. Wish him the best.
@wholeNwon10 жыл бұрын
Brings back memories. My grandparents always had Packards. Grandmother liked to drive herself and she really moved!
@McBuggs.11 жыл бұрын
What a joy to see you start up and run that splendid classic fresh out of your barn find. I wished I could have gone on that test drive with you! (so cool)
@Fahrvergnugen11 жыл бұрын
That's really lovely. I know Packards were prestigious cars in their time, and rightfully so.
@darylcjackson6 жыл бұрын
Its amazing how smooth and quiet that v12 is. WOW is all I can say.
@blumobean20057 жыл бұрын
one of the finest cars ever. Packard had the smoothest engines. even after their heyday and about to go out of business, their straight 8 was so smooth that you could not tell if it was running.
@uasparts11 жыл бұрын
That is one fantastic, beautiful old Packard, man. Back in the 90's there used to be raves in the old Packard plant that shut down in 1958 or so in Detroit. It was the largest building under one roof in the world when it was built, a real modern marvel not unlike their cars.. Your Packard is definitely a testament to a slower, elegant, beautiful time. Nice ride..
@charlesbutler46467 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. Amazing how quiet she runs, no valve noise. Beautiful find.
@fleetwoodray9 жыл бұрын
I have always loved the early Packards. What surprised me here was that the mechanical gauges work! Thank goodness there is still a company that makes parts for these.
@josephefasciani7343
5 жыл бұрын
I believe what you describe is known as "quality", which has going out of fashion in favour of quantity. Instead of making 20,000 cars a year, a maker is only happy when they sell 2 million or more!
@williamschlenger15187 жыл бұрын
All older American cars had class &craftmanship.Beautiful dashboard.
@datsunz12 жыл бұрын
That engine must be ultra smooth, even quiet engines sound rattly on video. Awesome!!
@northerngaelireland850711 жыл бұрын
I've had 3 Packards A great cars....My mother had a 1937 Packard V12.and it was wonderful.You have to drive one to know.......We have nothing like them today
@bobfriendship88938 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic episode! It looked so stress-free and as if it wanted to go on forever. Packard, one of the most famous makes in American automotive history. Thank you and keep up the good work. Best wishes to you all from the UK.
@Organgrinder10108 жыл бұрын
Beautiful! My sixth grade teacher when in college had chauffeured a couple who had a limousine that he said was a parallel dual six if I recall. He said it could climb any hill in high with no difficulty. Your Packard is amazing.
@GK191811 жыл бұрын
You sure do know how to make an old man cry.
@frequencyfluxfandango85048 жыл бұрын
No doubt, the closest I will ever get to riding in a 1935 Packard, but I really enjoyed that so Thank you for taking the time etc. to upload this.
@53handyman12 жыл бұрын
Congratulations from France for your FANTASTIC barn find,thank for the ride,hope it never ends :-)
@TINRFD10 жыл бұрын
I´m amazed how quiet this thing runs, i mean it´s now nearly 80 years old! Thank you very much for uploading!
@gojoe28311 жыл бұрын
If the electrical system was designed for 6 volts, I'd leave it alone. I bet you got lots of smiles from other drivers watching this thing cruise on the highway! Great old classic! :-)
@santaclause2875 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful car. Thanks for posting!!! Even though I am a bit late, only eleven years!!
@Kreedon10 жыл бұрын
What a great car and thanks for sharing the ride. Definitely a classic!
@timothyauger990510 жыл бұрын
Very nostalgic. My father had a 1937 Packard 120 Woodie (right-hand drive - this was in the UK) for several years. Sure, it was the more humble model, but the view down towards the nose looked pretty similar!
@Jaydublus12 жыл бұрын
Elegance in motion! Packards were truly the American Rolls-Royce.
@TheChevytruckguy12 жыл бұрын
wow im amazed at how quietly she runs thats really quite amazing those cars really are so cool
@hmhoek11 жыл бұрын
Great to see this on the road and not at Pebble Beach. My dad owned a 1930-something Packard 12 convertible in the 50s. He bought it from a junkyard in southern California where it was being used as a hauling vehicle.
@erikb22704 жыл бұрын
Beautiful automobile! The exquisite designs were exemplary in those years and there was considerable pride from ctory workers, designers, and upper management. These cars had "style", were solidly built and even the upholstery was of fine workmanship. We modernized sure, but along the way, I feel that although we have advanced monumentally, we have also lost something. Maybe it's the 'romance' factor!!
@Koveve9 жыл бұрын
It's so crazy that this car is EIGHTY years old!
@brustar51523 жыл бұрын
The view out the windshield is even more impressive than looking down the hood of a long nose Peterbilt. That era had it all.
@Mullay211 жыл бұрын
As Packard used to say, "Ask the man who owns one." Beautiful original car.
@SquillyMon7 жыл бұрын
Now THAT is a GRAND Automobile in every sense of the word.
@goldbergje12 жыл бұрын
Just incredible :) Amazing quality back in '35. Thanks for sharing.
unbelievable...no vibration in the steering wheel ..... more to that car than just the motor..nice job thx for sharing
@simpleinseattle12 жыл бұрын
Amazing vehicle! I hope to own a Packard with a symmetrical dash someday.
@roberetrodgers11 жыл бұрын
PEACE AND LOVE TO ALL MEN THANK YOU KIND SIR FOR ALLOWING ALL OF US TO SEE ANOTHER VERY CLASSIC CAR ALSO PACKARD MOTOR COMP WOULD BE AMONG THE TOP CAR MANUFACTURERS TODAY HAD THEY NOT STOP PRODUCTION IN 1959 WHAT ASHAME QUALITY NEXT TO NONE
@terrafirma9110 жыл бұрын
If only I had this. Tears running down my face about now.
@jamessawchuk56829 жыл бұрын
Packards, there's a car I wish would make a comeback. Shame what happened to the Packard plant.
@bnosrati7 жыл бұрын
Wonderful car. I wish I could find something like that in that mint condition.
@pugman20512 жыл бұрын
what a fantastic car and in great condition for a 1935! The old girl drives well for her age. It is also so great to see a car like this being used and cherished as a classic, rather than being cut and shut into a a rat/hot rod, imho it spoils a car that should be restored and saved. Well done
@user-ir1bh2vm2w2 жыл бұрын
Amazing how something built 87 years ago keeps up with modern traffic. Packard was well ahead of its time.
@Geordo19608 жыл бұрын
If I had the past that car on the interstate I would've been surprised! Beautiful!
@sr63311 жыл бұрын
So cool ! I am real happy for you. My dad had a 30s Hudson Terra Plane that was his baby.
@kevinsnyder84482 ай бұрын
This car is still to this day a mechanical marvel
@garylangley45025 жыл бұрын
I'll bet that the people in the other cars were surprised. Last thing they expected to see that day way a '35 Packard, particularly cruising along at freeway speed.
@rickreid818 жыл бұрын
What a great car! Thanks for sharing it with all of us. What a great piece of American Engerning at its best!
@yamahonkawazuki11 жыл бұрын
very true. id have given anything to go along on that ride. the symphony of it all. would have been a thorough ear to ear grin on my face for sure.
@kickit595 жыл бұрын
The Packard was one of the premier vehicles of it's time! No negative one of the premier vehicles of any time! I wish it was in my garage! I would properly maintain it but I wouldn't change a thing patina wise! It's way cool as it is!
@JeffDeWitt10 жыл бұрын
It IS a Packard after all... that was a state of the art, very expensive car when it was new, in good shape I expect it could cruse comfortably at 70+ all day long.
@Richard-zc1cj2 жыл бұрын
That car is amazing for as old as it is It's so quiet. Beautiful car. It looks like there's no play in the steering. Not a bit of shake from the wheel balance.
@lelboy10 жыл бұрын
Now that is one pretty car!
@sevencorsa10 жыл бұрын
Please share more videos of this Packard. Such a beautiful design. I love Packards !!!!
@dennisleporte232710 жыл бұрын
What a piece of art!
@jeffmartin31797 жыл бұрын
when we got our Rolls Royce in 1986 I took granny for a ride in it. I was in my 20's. She walked all around it and then off we went. When we got back home she walked to the neighbors house to get her to come and have a look. When the lady was looking it over Granny said "rides like a Packard".. lol.
@tpowell453
6 жыл бұрын
How old was your granny, 104? lol
@JdeeRat9 жыл бұрын
Wow nice, looks like real wood over the dash with the German Silver inlays.. I have not seen one like that ,only the door moldings we get in the shop on rare occasions ... I did get to do the Dash on the car of the dome. Fun to have even a tiny part of restoring these cars.....
@jackpontiac529 жыл бұрын
The American Equivalent of a Rolls Royce ! Packard quality was such that during WWII, Rolls Royce Merlin engines were built under license by Packard.
@wholeNwon
8 жыл бұрын
+jackpontiac52 In many ways, Packard was significantly superior to Rolls-Royce.
@hyzercreek
8 жыл бұрын
+wholeNwon No way, people in those days thought Packard was equal to Cadillac and neither was equal to Rolls
@jackpontiac52
8 жыл бұрын
+hyzercreek What people think and what is Actual are two different things. Packards were better than Cadillac's. I said the 'American Equivalent' to Rolls Royce. Rolls Royce was still #1.
@hyzercreek
8 жыл бұрын
jackpontiac52 Is that what you think?
@hyzercreek
8 жыл бұрын
In the 30's Packard was the car most used as taxicabs.
@steveinnepa12 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the ride in that great old Packard !
@dallen12275810 жыл бұрын
My dad said Packard were the best cars ever and he was always sad when ever talk about his old V12 Packard and how much he missed it like it was one of us kids.
@mtlicq
3 жыл бұрын
First thing on my shopping list if I win a big lottery, 1933 Packard
@billbright17559 жыл бұрын
Be on the look out for a maroon 35 Packard. Chief, there goes one now! That was more of a burgundy, keep looking.
@bobaldo23394 жыл бұрын
Wonderful car! And I love the dash too.
@jkay66124 жыл бұрын
a thing of beauty is a joy forever
@dekum68268 жыл бұрын
She's so beautifull. I looked at the all the cars on the freeway going past you and they all look the same. Nobody will ever have that Packard style nowadays.
@tomsriv12 жыл бұрын
That was awesome! So smooth! Thanks for the "ride".
@bensonwagoner1605 жыл бұрын
Beautiful! Can’t believe you started it with the garage doors closed.
@regsparkes65078 жыл бұрын
I don't know what to say, really, but looking out over that 'mile long hood' really brought back memories of the mid to late 1950's when I was a kid being taken on rides in our 1936 or '37 Packard Six. We have a difference of memory my older brother and I. I say it was a 1936, he insists that it was a 1937. All I know is that these Packards were total 'Class' ! I think these Packard models went; Packard Six, Packard One-Twenty, then Packard Twelve,.maybe more . Maybe you folks can educate me.
@midos6767
8 жыл бұрын
+Reg Sparkes >> All these old 1930's Packards were about 30 years before I was born... but I think they were classy cars in any era. I know my dad drove old Packards back in his day because he told me about them when I was a kid.
@kevinsnyder84482 ай бұрын
What a work of Art❤
@castirondude12 жыл бұрын
very nice! I just picked up a '39 hearse with the inline 8. The frame is as heavy as my 1-ton pickup. I'm looking forward to this moment - when I drive it for the first time!
@CurlyQLink7 жыл бұрын
What a beautiful car, in fact, I am surprised that more people passing you on the road did not acknowledge your car (with a honk or prolonged look). A few years ago, I purchased a 1931 Model A, Sport Coupe (Barn Find). I had the car trailered home with me following in another car and all the way home other cars were pointing and starring at my unusual car.
@walleylr
7 жыл бұрын
Curly Q. Link
@ruben330511 жыл бұрын
Such a beautiful car man. They don't make em like they used to
@fastdrive5512 жыл бұрын
Wow, a thrill of a video, a thrill of a ride.
@KLUNKET10 жыл бұрын
I am guessing that this thing MUST have been kept in running condition to some degree- because you don't just find a 79 year old car in a barn and drive it away obviously... I would LOVE to own this. My god is that a beautiful machine!
@TheMetalButcher
9 жыл бұрын
No kidding. When me and my dad pulled a chyrsler 300 out of a barn after sitting for 21 years, and tried to start it, it dropped a valve, and needed (still isn't finished) an engine rebuild. I'm just thankful that it dropped it while starting and not on the road.
@KLUNKET
9 жыл бұрын
justfakeit888 Same thing happened to me, when I was younger I was dumb enough to try and start a 58 Cadillac after it had sat for many years. All we did was feed it fresh gas from a milk jug (probably very unsafe lol) and we seized the engine. It did briefly start though after some tinkering. Done properly I'm sure the motor would have purred like new again.
@TheMetalButcher
9 жыл бұрын
Well, it depends on the engine. My dad's izuzu NPR had sat for some 8 years, and after turning it over a bit with the kill switches enabled, we disabled them, and it fired up instantly. Better than 99% of new cars today.
@KLUNKET
9 жыл бұрын
justfakeit888 Did you clean the old gunked up oil out of the crank case first? The reason we siezed that old Caddy is because we tried to start it with the 25+ year old gunk all through it's engine. We were simply stupid about it, all we did was top off the oil and left the existing in there. Fluids break down, seals leak and corrosion sets in. We should have dropped the oil pan and cleaned all that nasty slugde out, change the oil filter, put new oil in with some lucas to really lube everything, and turn it over a bunch of times to circulate the oil before trying to start her. Oh and a little tip I learned over the years is use Marvel Mystery Oil to lubricate the cylinders, pistons and rings. Take out the spark plugs and pour a small amount of marvel directly into the cylinders. Thats when you should try turning her over to circulate everything...when you have the plugs out. Once you've done all that you should put new plugs and wires, and try starting her with new gas from an alternative source, unless you've already dropped the tank and cleaned it, and got the old gas out of the fuel lines, and changed the fuel filters. Even then after doing all of that she still might blow sky high, it just depends on how corroded everything is in there. It's best to just rebuild the damn thing first. The last car we worked on that had been sitting was an old slant 6 plymouth volare that had been parked since 91, and this was in 2012. We got her going doing eveything I just said, but it still leaked because the seals were a little dry rotted- but after running it for a while the leaks got a little less dramatic. I love tinkering around with old vehicles. My friend Ronald the "Mole Man" and I have sort of a salvage business, we clean out old abandoned properties and so forth, and we have found many cars over the years. If we plan to sell the vehicle it adds more to the value being able to list it as "running". So over the years I've gotten a little better at working on these old vehicles. Oh and you are right, the old Izuzu's had some kick ass die hard motors... My buddy Mike has a 99 that we borrow from time to time to haul shit, its got that 4he1 4 3/4 liter motor and that thing has like 220,000 miles on it and is still going strong. Those things were built to last.
@TheMetalButcher
9 жыл бұрын
No sir, we did not drain the oil. Wouldn't have really mattered, as the valve stem was way corroded. I don't think we were giving it any gas at the time, just spinning it over. I'm pretty sure that my dad had ran some oil through the cylinders first, and that is always something I try to do. Marvel is good stuff. Sounds like you guys have had a good time pulling stuff out of the bust. I'm not yet fully sure of my career, but that's on the list. Keep at it. :)
@franzs91575 жыл бұрын
georgeous car Absolute treasure
@Dodger22047 жыл бұрын
Great video! Great car!
@Brookside9758 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Enjoyed the ride!
@DarkVoidDan9 жыл бұрын
I love old 1930's American cars.
@exzentrische10 жыл бұрын
Thank you for that ride !
@Luther15439 жыл бұрын
cool, such an old car and the engine is that quiet and powerful. i think there should be sound adsorbing material added all around the cabine and around the engine too, the quieter a car is, the more pleasent as stressless it is to cruize around in it.
@alanthompson10834 жыл бұрын
Beautiful car !!!
@TheFred195211 жыл бұрын
very nice you guys did a good job
@eltigre2495 жыл бұрын
Of course you checked all the equipment, brakes, cooling, etc. AND that the license was still valid. Sure is a clean looking car.
@bryanrmcf9 жыл бұрын
It's really quiet it's amazing!
@ricktraficanti2673
3 жыл бұрын
Yea I asked my uncle told me to get away from it or he put his foot up my ass he had a 1207 he got from his dad
@jacquespoirier90718 жыл бұрын
these packard are fantastic quality cars and this is why you can return them to the road without a complete teardown the danger with that is that somebody without your professionnalism can be tempted to return such a car to the road without passing thru full safety checkup and causes an accident by a breakdown.
@tpowell453
6 жыл бұрын
This car has already been restored and "gone through" several times in its lifetime.
@Roger.Coleman19499 жыл бұрын
Lovely car Tom.Has it been restored in the past prior to discovery ?.Love the Art-Deco interior and radio.My late father here in the UK had a 1938 R-R P111 , V-12 sports saloon and that at tickover was inaudible !.Wonderful video, many thanks.
@malkie6385 жыл бұрын
Quality Screen Time behind that wheel, that long bonnet,,,,road trip however short is wonderful
@adoreslaurel11 жыл бұрын
Sensational,wish I could afford a classic old car.
@cadrolls12 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing!
@JeffDeWitt10 жыл бұрын
I love it, what a beautiful car. Couldn't help but notice it had a feature not commonly seen in cars of that era, a radio. Did the radio work?
@scottmckee87836 жыл бұрын
Awsome car
@kd1s11 жыл бұрын
Pretty sweet vehicle! And I thought I recognized that section of highway.
@GK191810 жыл бұрын
Sweet all I can say is when I was born I came home in a wicker basket - same car, my father was a Packard freak.....
@warringtonfaust1088
3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, and got in trouble, I hid in the glove club compartment of my grandfather's Packard.
@beeh3810 жыл бұрын
waow ! the parkard of the late 30's is my favorits, i never seen one of this periode but i hope i can own one maybe one day. i drove a 46 clipper sedanette few miles and it's like a dream. i have 2 dodge, a 1941 club coupe and a 1948 custom sedan in France but i want sell the 48 and find a packard as possible a 1939, my favorite year, a one twenty coupe or convertible but unfortunatly it's realy hard to find in france. have a good day Adrien.
@johnhowardesq12 жыл бұрын
Wonderfully solid.
@hotrodsurplus11 жыл бұрын
Easy. Wayne S Johnson modifies 12V amplifiers for 6V use. Run an MP3 player or cell phone through an L pad (for convenient volume control) and you're done. Started doing that with portable CD players more than 20 years ago in 6V cars and have that same setup with an iPod Touch in a car to this day. You can also run a step-up converter to run a head unit. They were common in the '70s. If you can't get creative you probably shouldn't have an old car in the first place.
@DUI5MSN11 жыл бұрын
awesome car!
@winkyboy977 жыл бұрын
It's beautiful. I wish I knew what it feels like to drive. The oldest car I've driven is a 50'year old Jaguar.
@tpowell453
6 жыл бұрын
I have a 110 year old buckboard you can drive if you find a horse. lol
@DesertDigger111 жыл бұрын
I,ll bet the more she ran,the more she wanted to run.That was cool,thanks.
@ushillbillies12 жыл бұрын
Such Quality & character goota love em....NICE !!!!
Пікірлер: 344
incredibly smooth. 175 hp was Alot of power back then. Most cameras pick up all the rattles in modern-day cars crappy trim & others noises. Not the case here. This is real craftmanship. Thank you for sharing.
If you watched the entire series (three videos), they did put oil down in the cylinders and turned it over by hand many times to get it lubricated before they cranked it up and drove it. They did mention that they'd changed all the fluids also. Just because we're Americans doesn't mean we're ignorant about how to treat old cars, Jamjar107. The old-car restoration hobby is quite strong in this country, and there are thousands of people who do this -- and actually know what they're doing, too.
I admire the efforts of anyone who takes on the restoration of a 76 year old classic car like a Packard.. The amount of investment required to do a full ground up restoration is done by this gentleman who clearly loves this car. Wish him the best.
Brings back memories. My grandparents always had Packards. Grandmother liked to drive herself and she really moved!
What a joy to see you start up and run that splendid classic fresh out of your barn find. I wished I could have gone on that test drive with you! (so cool)
That's really lovely. I know Packards were prestigious cars in their time, and rightfully so.
Its amazing how smooth and quiet that v12 is. WOW is all I can say.
one of the finest cars ever. Packard had the smoothest engines. even after their heyday and about to go out of business, their straight 8 was so smooth that you could not tell if it was running.
That is one fantastic, beautiful old Packard, man. Back in the 90's there used to be raves in the old Packard plant that shut down in 1958 or so in Detroit. It was the largest building under one roof in the world when it was built, a real modern marvel not unlike their cars.. Your Packard is definitely a testament to a slower, elegant, beautiful time. Nice ride..
Fantastic. Amazing how quiet she runs, no valve noise. Beautiful find.
I have always loved the early Packards. What surprised me here was that the mechanical gauges work! Thank goodness there is still a company that makes parts for these.
@josephefasciani7343
5 жыл бұрын
I believe what you describe is known as "quality", which has going out of fashion in favour of quantity. Instead of making 20,000 cars a year, a maker is only happy when they sell 2 million or more!
All older American cars had class &craftmanship.Beautiful dashboard.
That engine must be ultra smooth, even quiet engines sound rattly on video. Awesome!!
I've had 3 Packards A great cars....My mother had a 1937 Packard V12.and it was wonderful.You have to drive one to know.......We have nothing like them today
What a fantastic episode! It looked so stress-free and as if it wanted to go on forever. Packard, one of the most famous makes in American automotive history. Thank you and keep up the good work. Best wishes to you all from the UK.
Beautiful! My sixth grade teacher when in college had chauffeured a couple who had a limousine that he said was a parallel dual six if I recall. He said it could climb any hill in high with no difficulty. Your Packard is amazing.
You sure do know how to make an old man cry.
No doubt, the closest I will ever get to riding in a 1935 Packard, but I really enjoyed that so Thank you for taking the time etc. to upload this.
Congratulations from France for your FANTASTIC barn find,thank for the ride,hope it never ends :-)
I´m amazed how quiet this thing runs, i mean it´s now nearly 80 years old! Thank you very much for uploading!
If the electrical system was designed for 6 volts, I'd leave it alone. I bet you got lots of smiles from other drivers watching this thing cruise on the highway! Great old classic! :-)
Beautiful car. Thanks for posting!!! Even though I am a bit late, only eleven years!!
What a great car and thanks for sharing the ride. Definitely a classic!
Very nostalgic. My father had a 1937 Packard 120 Woodie (right-hand drive - this was in the UK) for several years. Sure, it was the more humble model, but the view down towards the nose looked pretty similar!
Elegance in motion! Packards were truly the American Rolls-Royce.
wow im amazed at how quietly she runs thats really quite amazing those cars really are so cool
Great to see this on the road and not at Pebble Beach. My dad owned a 1930-something Packard 12 convertible in the 50s. He bought it from a junkyard in southern California where it was being used as a hauling vehicle.
Beautiful automobile! The exquisite designs were exemplary in those years and there was considerable pride from ctory workers, designers, and upper management. These cars had "style", were solidly built and even the upholstery was of fine workmanship. We modernized sure, but along the way, I feel that although we have advanced monumentally, we have also lost something. Maybe it's the 'romance' factor!!
It's so crazy that this car is EIGHTY years old!
The view out the windshield is even more impressive than looking down the hood of a long nose Peterbilt. That era had it all.
As Packard used to say, "Ask the man who owns one." Beautiful original car.
Now THAT is a GRAND Automobile in every sense of the word.
Just incredible :) Amazing quality back in '35. Thanks for sharing.
Elegant, smooth ride! Excellent narrative, too! Thanks!
unbelievable...no vibration in the steering wheel ..... more to that car than just the motor..nice job thx for sharing
Amazing vehicle! I hope to own a Packard with a symmetrical dash someday.
PEACE AND LOVE TO ALL MEN THANK YOU KIND SIR FOR ALLOWING ALL OF US TO SEE ANOTHER VERY CLASSIC CAR ALSO PACKARD MOTOR COMP WOULD BE AMONG THE TOP CAR MANUFACTURERS TODAY HAD THEY NOT STOP PRODUCTION IN 1959 WHAT ASHAME QUALITY NEXT TO NONE
If only I had this. Tears running down my face about now.
Packards, there's a car I wish would make a comeback. Shame what happened to the Packard plant.
Wonderful car. I wish I could find something like that in that mint condition.
what a fantastic car and in great condition for a 1935! The old girl drives well for her age. It is also so great to see a car like this being used and cherished as a classic, rather than being cut and shut into a a rat/hot rod, imho it spoils a car that should be restored and saved. Well done
Amazing how something built 87 years ago keeps up with modern traffic. Packard was well ahead of its time.
If I had the past that car on the interstate I would've been surprised! Beautiful!
So cool ! I am real happy for you. My dad had a 30s Hudson Terra Plane that was his baby.
This car is still to this day a mechanical marvel
I'll bet that the people in the other cars were surprised. Last thing they expected to see that day way a '35 Packard, particularly cruising along at freeway speed.
What a great car! Thanks for sharing it with all of us. What a great piece of American Engerning at its best!
very true. id have given anything to go along on that ride. the symphony of it all. would have been a thorough ear to ear grin on my face for sure.
The Packard was one of the premier vehicles of it's time! No negative one of the premier vehicles of any time! I wish it was in my garage! I would properly maintain it but I wouldn't change a thing patina wise! It's way cool as it is!
It IS a Packard after all... that was a state of the art, very expensive car when it was new, in good shape I expect it could cruse comfortably at 70+ all day long.
That car is amazing for as old as it is It's so quiet. Beautiful car. It looks like there's no play in the steering. Not a bit of shake from the wheel balance.
Now that is one pretty car!
Please share more videos of this Packard. Such a beautiful design. I love Packards !!!!
What a piece of art!
when we got our Rolls Royce in 1986 I took granny for a ride in it. I was in my 20's. She walked all around it and then off we went. When we got back home she walked to the neighbors house to get her to come and have a look. When the lady was looking it over Granny said "rides like a Packard".. lol.
@tpowell453
6 жыл бұрын
How old was your granny, 104? lol
Wow nice, looks like real wood over the dash with the German Silver inlays.. I have not seen one like that ,only the door moldings we get in the shop on rare occasions ... I did get to do the Dash on the car of the dome. Fun to have even a tiny part of restoring these cars.....
The American Equivalent of a Rolls Royce ! Packard quality was such that during WWII, Rolls Royce Merlin engines were built under license by Packard.
@wholeNwon
8 жыл бұрын
+jackpontiac52 In many ways, Packard was significantly superior to Rolls-Royce.
@hyzercreek
8 жыл бұрын
+wholeNwon No way, people in those days thought Packard was equal to Cadillac and neither was equal to Rolls
@jackpontiac52
8 жыл бұрын
+hyzercreek What people think and what is Actual are two different things. Packards were better than Cadillac's. I said the 'American Equivalent' to Rolls Royce. Rolls Royce was still #1.
@hyzercreek
8 жыл бұрын
jackpontiac52 Is that what you think?
@hyzercreek
8 жыл бұрын
In the 30's Packard was the car most used as taxicabs.
Thanks for the ride in that great old Packard !
My dad said Packard were the best cars ever and he was always sad when ever talk about his old V12 Packard and how much he missed it like it was one of us kids.
@mtlicq
3 жыл бұрын
First thing on my shopping list if I win a big lottery, 1933 Packard
Be on the look out for a maroon 35 Packard. Chief, there goes one now! That was more of a burgundy, keep looking.
Wonderful car! And I love the dash too.
a thing of beauty is a joy forever
She's so beautifull. I looked at the all the cars on the freeway going past you and they all look the same. Nobody will ever have that Packard style nowadays.
That was awesome! So smooth! Thanks for the "ride".
Beautiful! Can’t believe you started it with the garage doors closed.
I don't know what to say, really, but looking out over that 'mile long hood' really brought back memories of the mid to late 1950's when I was a kid being taken on rides in our 1936 or '37 Packard Six. We have a difference of memory my older brother and I. I say it was a 1936, he insists that it was a 1937. All I know is that these Packards were total 'Class' ! I think these Packard models went; Packard Six, Packard One-Twenty, then Packard Twelve,.maybe more . Maybe you folks can educate me.
@midos6767
8 жыл бұрын
+Reg Sparkes >> All these old 1930's Packards were about 30 years before I was born... but I think they were classy cars in any era. I know my dad drove old Packards back in his day because he told me about them when I was a kid.
What a work of Art❤
very nice! I just picked up a '39 hearse with the inline 8. The frame is as heavy as my 1-ton pickup. I'm looking forward to this moment - when I drive it for the first time!
What a beautiful car, in fact, I am surprised that more people passing you on the road did not acknowledge your car (with a honk or prolonged look). A few years ago, I purchased a 1931 Model A, Sport Coupe (Barn Find). I had the car trailered home with me following in another car and all the way home other cars were pointing and starring at my unusual car.
@walleylr
7 жыл бұрын
Curly Q. Link
Such a beautiful car man. They don't make em like they used to
Wow, a thrill of a video, a thrill of a ride.
I am guessing that this thing MUST have been kept in running condition to some degree- because you don't just find a 79 year old car in a barn and drive it away obviously... I would LOVE to own this. My god is that a beautiful machine!
@TheMetalButcher
9 жыл бұрын
No kidding. When me and my dad pulled a chyrsler 300 out of a barn after sitting for 21 years, and tried to start it, it dropped a valve, and needed (still isn't finished) an engine rebuild. I'm just thankful that it dropped it while starting and not on the road.
@KLUNKET
9 жыл бұрын
justfakeit888 Same thing happened to me, when I was younger I was dumb enough to try and start a 58 Cadillac after it had sat for many years. All we did was feed it fresh gas from a milk jug (probably very unsafe lol) and we seized the engine. It did briefly start though after some tinkering. Done properly I'm sure the motor would have purred like new again.
@TheMetalButcher
9 жыл бұрын
Well, it depends on the engine. My dad's izuzu NPR had sat for some 8 years, and after turning it over a bit with the kill switches enabled, we disabled them, and it fired up instantly. Better than 99% of new cars today.
@KLUNKET
9 жыл бұрын
justfakeit888 Did you clean the old gunked up oil out of the crank case first? The reason we siezed that old Caddy is because we tried to start it with the 25+ year old gunk all through it's engine. We were simply stupid about it, all we did was top off the oil and left the existing in there. Fluids break down, seals leak and corrosion sets in. We should have dropped the oil pan and cleaned all that nasty slugde out, change the oil filter, put new oil in with some lucas to really lube everything, and turn it over a bunch of times to circulate the oil before trying to start her. Oh and a little tip I learned over the years is use Marvel Mystery Oil to lubricate the cylinders, pistons and rings. Take out the spark plugs and pour a small amount of marvel directly into the cylinders. Thats when you should try turning her over to circulate everything...when you have the plugs out. Once you've done all that you should put new plugs and wires, and try starting her with new gas from an alternative source, unless you've already dropped the tank and cleaned it, and got the old gas out of the fuel lines, and changed the fuel filters. Even then after doing all of that she still might blow sky high, it just depends on how corroded everything is in there. It's best to just rebuild the damn thing first. The last car we worked on that had been sitting was an old slant 6 plymouth volare that had been parked since 91, and this was in 2012. We got her going doing eveything I just said, but it still leaked because the seals were a little dry rotted- but after running it for a while the leaks got a little less dramatic. I love tinkering around with old vehicles. My friend Ronald the "Mole Man" and I have sort of a salvage business, we clean out old abandoned properties and so forth, and we have found many cars over the years. If we plan to sell the vehicle it adds more to the value being able to list it as "running". So over the years I've gotten a little better at working on these old vehicles. Oh and you are right, the old Izuzu's had some kick ass die hard motors... My buddy Mike has a 99 that we borrow from time to time to haul shit, its got that 4he1 4 3/4 liter motor and that thing has like 220,000 miles on it and is still going strong. Those things were built to last.
@TheMetalButcher
9 жыл бұрын
No sir, we did not drain the oil. Wouldn't have really mattered, as the valve stem was way corroded. I don't think we were giving it any gas at the time, just spinning it over. I'm pretty sure that my dad had ran some oil through the cylinders first, and that is always something I try to do. Marvel is good stuff. Sounds like you guys have had a good time pulling stuff out of the bust. I'm not yet fully sure of my career, but that's on the list. Keep at it. :)
georgeous car Absolute treasure
Great video! Great car!
Thank you. Enjoyed the ride!
I love old 1930's American cars.
Thank you for that ride !
cool, such an old car and the engine is that quiet and powerful. i think there should be sound adsorbing material added all around the cabine and around the engine too, the quieter a car is, the more pleasent as stressless it is to cruize around in it.
Beautiful car !!!
very nice you guys did a good job
Of course you checked all the equipment, brakes, cooling, etc. AND that the license was still valid. Sure is a clean looking car.
It's really quiet it's amazing!
@ricktraficanti2673
3 жыл бұрын
Yea I asked my uncle told me to get away from it or he put his foot up my ass he had a 1207 he got from his dad
these packard are fantastic quality cars and this is why you can return them to the road without a complete teardown the danger with that is that somebody without your professionnalism can be tempted to return such a car to the road without passing thru full safety checkup and causes an accident by a breakdown.
@tpowell453
6 жыл бұрын
This car has already been restored and "gone through" several times in its lifetime.
Lovely car Tom.Has it been restored in the past prior to discovery ?.Love the Art-Deco interior and radio.My late father here in the UK had a 1938 R-R P111 , V-12 sports saloon and that at tickover was inaudible !.Wonderful video, many thanks.
Quality Screen Time behind that wheel, that long bonnet,,,,road trip however short is wonderful
Sensational,wish I could afford a classic old car.
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing!
I love it, what a beautiful car. Couldn't help but notice it had a feature not commonly seen in cars of that era, a radio. Did the radio work?
Awsome car
Pretty sweet vehicle! And I thought I recognized that section of highway.
Sweet all I can say is when I was born I came home in a wicker basket - same car, my father was a Packard freak.....
@warringtonfaust1088
3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, and got in trouble, I hid in the glove club compartment of my grandfather's Packard.
waow ! the parkard of the late 30's is my favorits, i never seen one of this periode but i hope i can own one maybe one day. i drove a 46 clipper sedanette few miles and it's like a dream. i have 2 dodge, a 1941 club coupe and a 1948 custom sedan in France but i want sell the 48 and find a packard as possible a 1939, my favorite year, a one twenty coupe or convertible but unfortunatly it's realy hard to find in france. have a good day Adrien.
Wonderfully solid.
Easy. Wayne S Johnson modifies 12V amplifiers for 6V use. Run an MP3 player or cell phone through an L pad (for convenient volume control) and you're done. Started doing that with portable CD players more than 20 years ago in 6V cars and have that same setup with an iPod Touch in a car to this day. You can also run a step-up converter to run a head unit. They were common in the '70s. If you can't get creative you probably shouldn't have an old car in the first place.
awesome car!
It's beautiful. I wish I knew what it feels like to drive. The oldest car I've driven is a 50'year old Jaguar.
@tpowell453
6 жыл бұрын
I have a 110 year old buckboard you can drive if you find a horse. lol
I,ll bet the more she ran,the more she wanted to run.That was cool,thanks.
Such Quality & character goota love em....NICE !!!!
a beautifull car. this should be kept like a baby
Beautiful car !