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Frank Brault | all galleries >> Galleries >> Saratoga Automobile Museum > 1947 Playboy Prototype - 2 of 2
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Frank Brault

1947 Playboy Prototype - 2 of 2

Saratoga Automobile Museum - Saratoga Springs, New York

The Playboy was the brainchild of former Packard dealer Louis Horwitz. Conceived as an “assembled” compact car – meaning it was made from components produced and obtained from a number of outside suppliers - it was to feature a convertible top while maintaining a price tag below $990. In theory, it was the perfect vehicle for those families looking for a stylish-yet-affordable second car. The initial prototype, unveiled in 1947, went a step beyond the compact 90-inch wheelbase chassis. It featured a manual softtop that covered three passengers while being powered by a Continental four-cylinder engine backed by a vacuum-controlled planetary transmission. What made it more unusual was the fact that the engine was rear-mounted a la Corvair (which wouldn’t be introduced for a little over a decade). Immediately after the prototype was assembled, however, the Continental engine was relocated to the industry-standard location in front of the driver. At the same time, the softtop was replaced by a two-piece, manually operated, counter-balanced folding hardtop. Pre-production versions were hand-built through 1949 with a variety of subtle changes, including choice of engine supplier, until a lack of funds prevented the Playboy from entering full production and forced its closure. In all, 97 were made, plus one station wagon prototype. Source: Hemmings Daily

Olympus OM-D EM-1 ,Olympus M.ZUIKO DIGITAL ED 12-40mm f2.8 PRO ,Best at original size.
1/60s f/2.0 at 12.0mm iso800 RAW/PP full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Buz Kiefer29-Mar-2015 17:04
Beautiful old classic. Great B&W photo. vote
Alexander Kazakov29-Mar-2015 09:23
Nice old one! V
Tom LeRoy28-Mar-2015 21:39
Interesting story to your outstanding capture of this beautiful Oldie! V
bill friedlander28-Mar-2015 18:18
Its an attractive car even now. Thanks for the data. V
Walter Otto Koenig28-Mar-2015 14:37
Very nice in b&w. Well photographed from this angle. Thanks for the interesting information about the relocation of the engine. "V"
Jeff Real28-Mar-2015 13:55
Brilliantly captured in sterling monochrome ~V~