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Wilson - As you can see, you had the right range. General Motors had a three to four year cycle on most of their products at that time. The '55, as shown below was in its secnd year of the cycle, and was the first year in which General Motors hid the fuel filler door someplace on the rear of most of their cars. In the case of the Chevrolet, if one pushed the small, round reflector in teh center of the tail light, the entire tail light assembly would swing up revealing the fuel filler cap. Your turn again.

 

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Stuart,

 

Your comment on the fuel filler cap reminds me of when on a family skiing holiday (2 adults + 3 teenage children), we had booked and had fax agreement to supply a Taurus Wagon or larger from Dollar Rental at Los Angeles Airport. We were a little surprised to be taken a long way off airport and things went downhill from then. The vehicle offered was a 900cc Mitsubishi microvan, which had no space in it and was definitely not a star. We could not all physically fit in it, let alone any luggage (we had been in Florida earlier so had warm weather clothes as well as ski gear). After about 20 minutes of argument and while I was calling up my company's lawyer in San Francisco, the manager arrived in his brand new Caprice. I immediately pounced on it and said right - talk to the lawyer or give me this car - your choice. After a one minute conversation with the lawyer we got the Caprice, with a lot a bad language. We drove off right away before he changed his mind, so had no idea how anything worked. Later that day, up in the mountains, I wanted to fill up, so we would be up at Mammoth Lakes with a full tank. The problem was I had no idea where the filler was, neither did the elderly lady at the gas station. There was no manual in the car and we looked behind lights, all over the outside, in the trunk, etc. It was only when a biker came in to fill up, that he pointed out to us, that if you pulled back the spring loaded licence plate, you would reveal the filler cap.

 

Wilson

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I am putting a link to a photo I posted on another tread, showing how the Tilt-Shift Blur tool works on PS CS6. Can anyone ID the car and no, I don't know what it is either. I took the photo at Spa 18 months ago.

 

http://www.l-camera-forum.com/leica-forum/leica-m9-forum/260186-options-shift-lenses-m-240-merged-6.html#post2305563

 

Wilson

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I cheated and poked around online. It looks like a 1952 RGS Atlanta with 3.4 Jaguar engine under the bonnet. And I've never seen one before either, Wilson. :)

 

John,

 

Well done. That looks like it. The nearest I could come was an HWM Jaguar. I suspect the RGS may have started life as an HWM but the fins threw me.

 

Wilson

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John,Well done. That looks like it. The nearest I could come was an HWM Jaguar. I suspect the RGS may have started life as an HWM but the fins threw me. Wilson

 

Wilson, I think the fins would throw anybody! My first thought upon seeing your image was that this was a frogeye Sprite with an aftermarket fiberglass front end, but then this car had door handles so that was out. As far as I can recall, the only other car with double fins in that configuration was one expirimental model of a Porsche RSK in the late fifties.

 

Stuart, will see what I can dig up, but will probably not quite so esoteric / obscure as Wilson's riddle car. :)

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Not very exotic but probably obscure to most.

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So far we have had three guesses of Goggomobil, Goliath and Trabant - all incorrect as it is not German. Think European and a bit larger (five? seater) and more upscale than those other cars. It appears to have been a somewhat special model, only built as a convertible, based on a more mundane and common platform - probably to garner a little prestige for the maker.

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