by local | Sep 10, 2024 | Automotive History News
Ford began selling the Ford Crown Victoria in the 1992 model year, and its incredible two decades of sales success with law enforcement organizations and taxi companies tended to overshadow its popularity as a civilian vehicle. Naturally, plenty of Crown Vics have...
by local | Sep 9, 2024 | Automotive History News
The Wagoneer name came back to life recently, nearly three decades after being used for about ten minutes on a trim-level designation for a woodie-fied first-year Grand Cherokee, but the vehicle we’re supposed to think of when we see the word Wagoneer is the...
by local | Sep 8, 2024 | Automotive History News
Chrysler sold PT Cruisers in the United States for the 2001 through 2010 model years, with sales strong at first and then gradually diminishing as the 21st century got rolling and the initial retro-styling novelty wore off. Because it was based on the Dodge/Plymouth...
by local | Sep 8, 2024 | Automotive History News
For those collectors with vested interests in German machines — and who may have a stash of frequent-flyer miles they’re able to cash in — consider attending a high profile auction of stunning cars to be held from RM Sotheby’s in Munich in November. The event, the...
by local | Sep 7, 2024 | Automotive History News
American fans of the Mitsubishi Chariot family enjoyed a gratifying range of badging choices for their vehicles during the middle 1990s, with the shortened three-door version available here with Mitsubishi, Dodge, Plymouth and Eagle badging. Of those, the one sold as...
by local | Sep 4, 2024 | Automotive History News
Genuinely cheap economy cars seldom get the kind of meticulous care needed to get past the 300,000-mile mark, in part because they tend to depreciate to near-scrap values by the time they hit age 15 or so. During my junkyard travels, I’ve found just a handful...