Crawling From The Wreckage
Saturday, February 14, 2026
1971 Ford Torino 500 - Imitation is the Sincerest Form of Flattery
Thursday, February 12, 2026
1962 Plymouth Fury - Context is Everything
The origin story of full-size 1962 Plymouth and Dodge models has it that in May or June of 1960, Chrysler executives received intel that General Motors was downsizing their full-size cars for 1962. And just-like-that, Chrysler rebooted their planned 1962 full-size models chopping nearly a foot off their length, made them five-inches less wide and dropped six-hundred-pounds off their curb weight. Big Dodge models got zapped too; the Chrysler division models remained as big as they were. While critics lauded the smaller and lighter models for their performance and efficiency, buyers stayed away and sales for 1962 big Plymouth's and Dodge's were down significantly from 1961.
Turns out tough that that GM wasn't downsizing but, in fact, introducing a new compact car called the "Chevy II" in 1962. Whoops! Everyone involved in the debacle eventually got fired and Chrysler has been a dumpster fire since. Not that it wasn't prior to that.
That's the old wives' tale although having worked inside the skunk works of big companies, it's too pat-and-dry to believe any auto maker would react to what could have amounted to conjecture at a cocktail party let alone get the entire job done in what, less than 15-months by some accounts.
What probably happened was, intel or not, Chrysler gambled on where the full-size market was going. While they were correct with their assessment that buyers wanted smaller, more maneuverable cars, GM did in fact come with somewhat smaller full-size models in 1961, in addition to injecting the automotive equivalent of Ozempic into these cars, stylists took things a step or two too far for a conservative buying public.
Styling that I've never seen what buyers didn't see in it; save for the paint scheme, I don't think there's a bad line on this car. Then again, I wasn't there to see the whole debacle through the eyes of American's that had seen automobile design change seismically in the years following World War II. Context is everything. Same is true of the Edsel; I don't see what the big deal about it was. Looks like another big, old, ugly, 1950's Ford to me.
In any event, I'm glad the Chrysler Corporation came out with these cars in 1962 as they've always been favorites of mine. I get that some may construe them as weird, and they are, but they're weird in a cool, mid-century design ethos kind of way as opposed to the "what-the-hell-is-that"? bizarre many an American Motors design was.
I know I'm not alone seeing this one is listed on Facebook Marketplace with a $40,000 asking price. Yes, friend-oh, forty-thousand-dollars.
Wait, it gets better. Not only are they asking forty-large for it, but it's also not "original and unrestored". The paint, again, its shade makes me sad, while in nice shape, is an older respray and under the hood, the "Slant-Six" it was born with has been tossed for a god's-green-earth, 413-cu. in, "Max Wedge" V-8. Say what you will that an original and unrestored '62 Fury with the 413 would sell for twice the asking price, $40,000 is a ton of money to blow on a clone. And a clone that's not a clone of Chevrolet Impala SS.
Explains why the listing is nearly six-months old. I might get my head around dropping half the asking price on this; that would be an impulsive purchase, and not a rational one. Not that buying any 64-year-old car would be a rational decision but it's best to hedge your bets if you do.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
1981 Lancia Beta Zagato - A Bad Day at the Office
This 1981 Lancia Beta Zagato popped up for sale on my Marketplace feed the other day not far from the Old Triple Wide here on the far west side of Cleveland, Ohio. Excuse me, a what? A Lancia, Beta...Zagato. Lean on each syllable of Za-ga-to to make yourself sound even more suave. I've heard Lancia pronounced LAHN-chah, Lahn-CHIA, or Lahn-see-yah depending on how sophisticated or cultured someone's trying to be. Ham-fisted as I can be, I drop the "d" from land and pronounce it, Lan-seeyah.
You're not alone if you've never heard of these cars, few people have although many who have are ribald fans. Like blue cheese, coffee, dark beer, raw oysters and Vienna sausage, they're an acquired taste; their proportions are, choosing my words carefully, different. A Fiat X 1/9 or Lancis Stratos they are not. They're kind of a mashup between a 1979-1993 Fox-body Ford Mustang and mid-'80's Nissan Sentra. And then given a haircut of questionable quality.
Prior to becoming part of Fiat in 1969, Lancia built beautiful, hand-built cars that were expensive and, no surprise, they weren't profitable. After taking over the cash strapped company, Fiat attempted to mainstream the brand with the front-wheel-drive Lancia "Beta", in 1972. The Beta was available as a sedan, wagon, coupe and a 2+2, retractable roof two-door known as the "Spyder" in Europe. It was known as the "Zagato" over here to help differentiate it from the Alpha Romeo Spyder. As if the Alpha Romeo Spyder wasn't for sale in Europe at the time but, I digress.
Fiat chose the name "Beta" to highlight a new beginning for Lancia, the founder of Lancia, Vincenzo Lancia, was fond of using letters from the Greek alphabet to name his cars. They avoided using "Alpha" to avoid confusion or legal issues with Alpha Romeo. Lancia, along with Fiat, has been part of Stellantis since 2021.
The Beta Zagato's started out at the Lancia plant in Turin, Italy as Beta coupes. The unpainted bodies were shipped to the Zagato coachbuilding plant in Milan where their craftsman sliced, diced and hacked them into convertible form using blueprints drawn up by the legendary Italian design house Pininfarina; seems everyone has a bad day at the office every now and then. The semi-completed cars were then shipped back to Turin for final assembly.
Built from 1973 to 1984, designed by Pinnanfarina, built by Zagato. ? total of 9390