Showing posts with label 1939. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1939. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

1939 Chevrolet Coupe 1:24 Scale Racing Champions.










One of the significant changes seen on the 1939 Chevrolet Master Series JB's included a longer hood. The headlights also sat atop the front fenders. Many thought the new fender and grill design of the 1939 models gave it a look similar to the Cadillac of its time. By means of its 1939 production line, Chevrolet truly attempted to attract the business class buyer. The model offered luxurious and top-of-the-line designs and accessories. The 1939 Chevy JA and JB models both met with excellent sales success.
Here we proudly present to you a 1939 Chevrolet Coupe in street rod form. While it does have a high horsepower V8, it doesn't have ridiculously wide rear tires and wheels, a wild color scheme or even any flames. What it also does have is heartbreakingly beautiful original lines, all steel panels, a perfect stance, and a Chevrolet crate engine with definite tricks added, and a gorgeous interior made for travel, and that's what this car did. 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

1939 Ford De Luxe Maisto 1/18












De Luxe Ford fue una marca de automóviles perteneciente a Ford Motor Company creada en 1938 como una alternativa intermedia entre su modelo básico (normalmente llamado Standard)​ y la gama de lujo bajo su marca Lincoln. El término "Deluxe" fue usado de forma intermitente tanto antes como después para especificar una gama de mayor escala, pero la línea De Luxe Ford se diferenció como una "marca dentro de una marca" con un estilo y precio diferentes hasta 1940. Durante 1939, Ford disponía de 5 gamas de vehículos: Ford, De Luxe Ford, Mercury, Lincoln-Zephyr, y Lincoln. Tras la Segunda Guerra Mundial, estas fueron simplificadas en Ford, Mercury, y Lincoln. La línea del Ford 1941 incluía la gama "De Luxe" y "Super De Luxe", pero dichos vehículos no fueron comercializados como una línea separada. Cuando las ventas de Mercury se incrementaron, la gama De Luxe fue cancelada.
Esta estrategia comercial tuvo su origen como respuesta a las diferentes marcas de General Motors (Cadillac, Buick, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, y Chevrolet), y Chrysler (Chrysler, DeSoto, Dodge, y Plymouth).
Los De Luxe Fords de 1938 tienen un capó más sinuoso y una parrilla ornamental con forma de corazón. Esta estética fue incorporada a la línea estándar en 1939, cuando los De Luxe Fords cambiaron a parrillas con forma de uve y barras verticales. La gama estándar de nuevo incorporó la forma de De Luxe en 1940, esta vez con barras coloreadas. El De Luxe Ford de 1940 tenía una parrilla en tres zonas con barras horizontales.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

1939 Chevrolet Coupe Police Motormax 1:24 American Graffiti











The Chevrolet Master and Master Deluxe are American passenger vehicles manufactured by Chevrolet between 1933 and 1942 to replace the 1933 Eagle. It was the more expensive model in the Chevrolet range at this time, with the Mercury and Standard providing a cheaper and smaller range between 1933 and 1937. Starting with this generation, all GM cars shared a corporate appearance as a result of the Art and Color Section headed by Harley Earl. From 1940 a more expensive version based on the Master Deluxe was launched called the Special Deluxe. This was the last Chevrolet that was exported to Japan in knock down kits and assembled at the company's factory in Osaka, Japan before the factory was appropriated by the Imperial Japanese Government. When Toyota decided to develop their own sedan called the Toyota AA, a locally manufactured Master was disassembled and examined to determine how Toyota should engineer their own cars. In May of 1925 the Chevrolet Export Boxing plant at Bloomfield, New Jersey was repurposed from a previous owner where Knock-down kits for Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick and Cadillac passenger cars, and both Chevrolet and G. M. C. truck parts are crated and shipped by railroad to the docks at Weehawken, New Jersey for overseas GM assembly factories.