Thursday, May 28, 2026

First-Generation Panhard Dyna Walkaround


I called the Panhard Dyna X a "styling crime" in a 2014 post.  Now that I'm older and more mellow, I'm tempted to take back that harsh assessment.  But yes, the design is indeed pretty ugly.

On the other hand, the circumstances of its creation in the chaos and aftermath of German occupation of France in World War 2 make the design more understandable.  Also, Panhard chose to accept the Pons Plan (scrolll down), a French government initiative to control its automobile industry.  Panhard was to shift its market to small-size cars, and the Dyna was the result.

As I mentioned in that post, "During World War 2, [the famous engineer Jean-Albert Gregoire] worked on a small sedan design that, among other features, weighed comparatively little because much of the body was made of aluminum.

"His AFG design interested the Panhard firm, but when Paul Panhard licensed the design from AFG and Grégoire in 1943, it was stipulated that Panhard had the right to modify the design.  And modified it was, as the images below indicate.  As best I can tell, the redesign was handled by Louis Bionier and Panhard staff."

The Wikipedia entry for the Dyna X is here.  It mentions that its wheelbase was 84 inches (2130 mm).  Other, better-known, French postwar small cars included the Citroën 2CV with a wheelbase of 94.5 inches (2400 mm) and the Renault 4CV whose wheelbase was 82.5 inches (2096 mm).  Volkswagen's Beetle wheelbase was the same as the 2CV's.  So the Dyna sedan and the Renault were seriously short by 1948 European standards.

The image at the top of this post is a Panhard publicity photo.  Images below of a 1951 Panhard Dyna X86 are via Bonhams Auctions.

Gallery

General appearance is 1930s, not mid-1940s.

The main Dyna body type was the Berline 4-door sedan.  Four doors was the conformation preferred by French car buyers for many years.  Note how constrained the rear door is, thanks to the short wheelbase.

No trunk lid.  Access was by tipping the rear seat back forward.

The separation of the passenger compartment greenhouse and rear lower body is covered by a chrome strip.

Trunk space was enhanced by placing the spare tire outside.

Fenders are very 1930s.  The greenhouse's side windows are proportionally large, giving the car a lighter appearance.

Headlight assemblies are also typical of the 1930s.  The motor was air-cooled, so the grille opening was scaled to its cooling needs.  Frontal detailing is more decorative than related to body shape details.

By the way, the license plate code 42 signifies France's département Loire.

The instrument package décor echoes the grille's, and ancillary frontal lights framing theme.

Monday, May 25, 2026

General Motors' 1961 Y-Body Coupes

The title above refers to 1961 model year cars, but most 1962 versions had essentially the same styling as the '61s.  So I'll include 1962 examples in the Gallery below.

I compared styling of 1961 generation "compact" (Y-platform) 4-door sedans here.  Today's post deals with coupes.

This platform was noticeably smaller than the "standard" size cars produced by Detroit's three largest automobile makers. For example, Oldsmobile's compact F-85 had a wheelbase of 112 inches (2845 mm) compared to 123 inches (3124 mm) for its standard size 88 models.

This was in response to American Motors Corporation's Rambler compact car line that was rapidly increasing its market share in the late 1950s, while Studebaker introduced its compact Lark model for 1959.

Chrysler Corporation introduced its compact Valiant for the 1960 model year, and Ford Motor Company launches its Ford Falcon and Mercury Comet compact cars for 1961.

As was the case for brands and models sharing the same basic platform, Y-body cars shared many features in the interest of development/production economy as well as brand-specific differences needed for marketing purposes.

Unless noted, images below are of for-sale cars.

Gallery

1961 Pontiac Tempest - BaT Auctions photo
Model year 1961 saw the return of Pontiac's two-segment grille that was introduced for 1959, but abandoned for '60.  Thereafter, two-segment was a visual brand identifier for Pontiac.  The grille design seen here differs from two-segment grilles on 1961 standard size Pontiacs.

1962 Pontiac Tempest LeMans
For some reason, Tempests lost the two-segment theme for 1962, yet returned to it for '63.  An odd repeat of the 1959-1960-1961 pattern of the standard size line.

1962 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass
"Cutlass" was used to denote F-85 coupes.  Later, it was applied across much of Oldsmobile's line.  The car pictured here has fancier trim than the Pontiacs shown above.  That would be expected becuase Oldsmobile was one notch ahead of Pontiac in General Motors' brand portfolio.

1962 Buick Special
Buick Specials featured the same projecting, tapered leading fender profile as standard size '61 Buicks had.  All 1961 Y-body coupes were just that -- Buick added a hardtop (pillarless) version for '62, as did Olds.  There were no compact Pontiac hardtop coupes until the 1964 redesign.

1962 Pontiac Tempest
Fronts and rears differed for reasons of brand identity.  Sides were more uniform.  The bold, near-beltline character sculpting is found on all 1961 Y-body coupes.  Tempests had a faux air exhaust vent abaft of the front wheel opening with an attached character line extending back over the rear wheel opening.

1962 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass
No faux air vent, but the lower character line is the same as Pontiac's.

1962 Oldsmobile F-85 Jetfire - Jay Leno Collection
The Jetfire hardtop coupe was added to the F-85 line for 1962.

1962 Buick Special - BaT Auctions
1962 Specials looked nearly the same as '61s from the side.  The lower character line and side sculpting differs from Tempest's and F-85's.  The line does touch the tops of the wheel openings, however.

1961 Buick Skylark
Buick's '62 hardtop coupe.

1962 Pontiac Tempest LeMans
Rear quarter views.  This car lacks vinyl roof covering, revealing the crisp metal sculpting.

1962 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass
Similar to the Tempest.

1962 Buick Special - BaT Auctions
Buicks ranked above Oldsmobiles in GM's hierarchy.  So side sculpting takes a scooped-out form.  The backlight window is wider than on the other cars.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

1965 Ford Galaxie Hardtop Coupe Walkaround

In this post I considered that 1965 Ford Galaxie styling was very good, almost at the level of the 1963 Pontiaac Grand Prix.

I stated: "Like the Grand Prix, the Galaxie had a trim, taut look: no visual flabbiness.  Also like the Grand Prix, its quad headlights were stacked and set in angular, "frenched" housings.  I never liked cars with four headlights, but they looked their best on the Galaxie and Grand Prix."

Today's post's subject is a walkaround of a Galaxie 500 hardtop coupe.  The subject car was listed for sale on the Internet.

Gallery

The generally clean appearance.

Aside from the wheel openings and some areas of rounding, the lower body seems almost geometrical with horizontal and nearly-horizontal elements from beltline to rocker panel.  The passenger compartment greenhouse design is carried over from 1963 Galaxie 500s.

The chrome strip separating the roof from the lower body suggests that the roof might be lowered or removed -- though it cannot.

Simple rear end design aside from the tail light assemblies.

Tail lights have notionally six-sided framing that relates to body sculpting.

That character line abaft of the front wheel opening trails off to the rear as it become less strong.  A subtle touch that relieves the otherwise strongly horizontal theme.

A nearly-flat hood.  The upper side character line starts at the level of the gap between the headlights (a professional touch), but does not touch or interact directly with it (another subtlety).

Most of the grille projects forward.  Grille bars are simple -- but the 1966 facelift remade it into heavy, stacked, horizontal elements -- a retrograde touch.

Front quarter high perspective.

Rear quarter high perspective.

The dashboard features rectangularities.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Renault's 1998 Vel Satis Concept Car

Automobile styling has been "internationalized" for several decades.  Back when I was young, American cars looked American, British cars usually seemed British, Italian cars Italian, and so forth.  Those distinctions were fading by the 1960s, in part because Italian designers such as Pinin Farina and Giovanni Michelotti were hired by the likes of Nash and Triumph to style production cars.  By the 1970s the great Giorgetto Giugiaro's ItalDesign firm had its hand in the design of cars from as far away as South Korea.

One rear-guard attempt to preserve a national design feeling was France's Vel Satis executive car by Renault.  In 2013 I wrote "Renault's Not-So Vel Satis Adventure" that dealt briefly with it and its concept version.

The man behind the design was Patrick Le Quément, who became Renault's Vice President, Corporate Design in 1987.  As this Wikipedia link notes, although Le Quément was French-born, he was raised and educated in England.  Much of his early car styling experience was at Ford's British subsdiary as well as in Germany at Volkswagen.

That said, his early efforts are Renault had to do with creating a French look to Régie Nationale des Usines Renault styling.  An important part of that was the Vel Satis concept car's design.

By the way, Wikipedia notes: "The name Vel Satis is a portmanteau of Velocity and Satisfaction."

By the time the concept car appeared, the "Frenchness" of the Citroën Traction Avant and DS 19 was well as Peugeot's 1930s 302s and 402s was long past.  I suppose the concept's 1989 Frenchness lies in the fact that the design was different, distinct, compared to what was common at the time.  And yes, some details seem to be examples of French la logique.

Photos below are all probalby via Renault.

Gallery

Frontal air intakes seem too small, and I don't notice a chin-level intake.  That said, it was powered by a transverse-mounted V-6 motor that required a radiator.  Perhaps it wasn't driven long enough to overheat.  Or else there was a hidden source of air to cool the radiator.

Rear styling has a completely different theme from the frontal.

Simple fender line.  Largely flat sides.  Round wheel openings.  Very basic design components.

This profile image shows the rather odd (French?) proportions.  Long, slanted hoodline and frontal overhang.  Minimal rear overhang and a chopped-off roofline at the rear that contrasts with a rounded lower rear body.  That rounding corresponds to the round aft wheel opening.

This shows the passenger greenhouse sculpting.  The crease begins at the fender front, becomes the A-pillar, then flattens and transitions to side window upper framing, and finally wraps around to become upper framing of the backlight window.  Interesting, maybe French la logique.

The short, rounded aft body is echoed by the curved backlight with its contrasting flat roof.  The trunk lid is necessarily tiny.

View of the car in fairly normal lighting.  An interesting design, more intellectual than attractive.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Similar Mid-Late 1970s Standard-Size American Sedans

When I see photos taken or films or TV programs set, say, 1900 to 1970, I can often pin down the date to within a few years simply by observing women's clothing, hairstyles, and perhaps makeup.  I'm less knowledgeable regarding earlier periods, so my guesses would be less accurate.

It's all a matter of fashion, of course.  But since the early 1970s, women's fashions are more eclectic, and harder to pin down by date -- though there are some exceptions.  Fortunately for this blog, automobile styling fashions have been fairly easy to identify by period.  Again, in more recent times, that task has become more difficult.  That's because car body designs remain in production far longer than they did in, say, 1934-1980 America.

Today's post presents some upper-middle priced cars from the period 1974-1978 or so.  They are of the so-called "three-box" variety common in the years leading up to wind tunnel influenced shaping.  The cars shown are four-door sedans or hardtop (pillarless) sedans from each of America's Big Three automakers.  Ford Motor Company and Chrysler Corporation examples are surprisingly similar.

Gallery

1977 Mercury Grand Marquis Brougham - car-for-sale photo
This Marquis generation was launched for the 1973 model year.  Headlights were rectangular-shape, here hidden behind retractible doors when not in use.  The hood is sculpted to blend into the rectangular grille frame.

1975 Dodge Monaco Royal Brougham - BaT Auctions photo
Exactly the same things could be said about this Dodge.  Monacos were redesigned for 1974, but develop[ment was probably largely set when the '73 Marquis appeared.

1978 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight Regency - BaT Auctions
Introduced for model year 1977 as a down-sized car -- shorter, with flatter sides.  That makes it less comparable to the larger cars shown above.  That said, its general appearance is similar to the others.

1978 Mercury Grand Marquis - car-for-sale photo
Compare passenger compartment greenhouse, fenderline, door cut-lines, etc. to those of the Dodge below.

1975 Dodge Monaco Royal Brougham - BaT Auctions
Monaco's Wheelbase is 121.5 inches (3086  mm), the Marquis' is 124 inches (3150  mm).  The difference can be seen in the relationships of C-pillar zones to rear wheel openings.

1978 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight Regency - BaT Auctions
Wheelbase is 119 inches (3023  mm), down from 127 (3226  mm).  It resembles the other cars most closely in side-view from the B-pillar forwards.

1978 Mercury Grand Marquis - car-for-sale photo
Rear-quarter views.

1976 Dodge Monaco Royal Brougham - car-for-sale photo
I couldn't find a closer perspective view, but note the tail light placement is below the trunk lid on both cars.

1978 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight Regency - BaT Auctions
Backlight window is more vertical than on the other designs.  Rear-end detailing has a more delicate look.

1976 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight Regency - BaT Auctions
The previous, much-longer Olds 98.  Backlight is slanted like those on the Dodge and Mercury above.  Note the tail end detail carryover to the 1977 redesign shown in the previous image.