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Thread: Volvo P1800

  1. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by nota View Post
    Yes the Ponton (Roundy) used mechanical FI which in Mercedes passenger cars dates back to the 1955 300Sc (W188)
    Isn't the Gullwing (from 1954) technically the first Mercedes-Benz with fuel injection?
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  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ferrer View Post
    Isn't the Gullwing (from 1954) technically the first Mercedes-Benz with fuel injection?
    Well I suppose you've just answered your own question haven't you?

    I was attempting to ignore their sport cars via my 'passenger car' proviso. Nor can I speak for the trucks

    But to be absolutely technical it seems that the first fuel injected Mercedes Benz car might be the W10 Mannheim 380 (Diesel ) of 1933

  3. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by nota View Post
    Well I suppose you've just answered your own question haven't you?

    I was attempting to ignore their sport cars via my 'passenger car' proviso. Nor can I speak for the trucks

    But to be absolutely technical it seems that the first fuel injected Mercedes Benz car might be the W10 Mannheim 380 (Diesel ) of 1933
    Well while the 300SL is a sportscar it is a passenger car. So it is the first petrol fuel injected Mercedes-Benz. And the first with direct fuel injection...
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  4. #34
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    I found this pic today and I had to share it with you..
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  5. #35
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    Quote Originally Posted by LotusLocost View Post
    I found this pic today and I had to share it with you..
    nice to see the driver finding time to put his thumbs up.
    "I find the whole business of religion profoundly interesting, but it does mystify me that otherwise intelligent people take it seriously." Douglas Adams

  6. #36
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    Quite an heavy car to fly with. Nice one.
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  7. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by McReis View Post
    Quite an heavy car to fly with. Nice one.
    The wings will keep it steady in air though

  8. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by henk4 View Post
    nice to see the driver finding time to put his thumbs up.
    the nav
    Crying out for a little photoshop


    Great find !!!!!!!!!!
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  9. #39
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    Quote Originally Posted by LotusLocost View Post
    The wings will keep it steady in air though
    No wings needed its an aussie Volvo doing its best kangaroo impersonation



    Btw I hear the P1800 was styled by Virgil Exner Jr, talented son of the famous Chrysler stylist

  10. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by nota View Post
    No wings needed its an aussie Volvo doing its best kangaroo impersonation



    Btw I hear the P1800 was styled by Virgil Exner Jr, talented son of the famous Chrysler stylist
    IIRC it was a Ghia effort. Probably he was at Ghia then.
    Lack of charisma can be fatal.
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  11. #41
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ferrer View Post
    IIRC it was a Ghia effort. Probably he was at Ghia then.
    (Exner had previously designed the successful Volvo P1800 for Ghia and was also involved in the design of the Karmann-Ghia.) The Caravelle is certainly not an American design. It follows the classic Italian designs of the late 1950s which, interestingly enough, Exner (an American) deeply influenced at the time. Exner worked on the design for the Caravelle during the latter part of 1959
    Yes a consultant for Ghia, was also partly resonsible for the Fiat 2300S Coupe
    Last edited by nota; 03-29-2007 at 11:33 AM.

  12. #42
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    Quote Originally Posted by nota View Post
    Yes a consultant for Ghia, was also partly resonsible for the Fiat 2300S Coupe
    Thank you for the info, nota.
    Lack of charisma can be fatal.
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  13. #43
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    Quote Originally Posted by nota View Post
    No wings needed its an aussie Volvo doing its best kangaroo impersonation
    What are you talking about? The car never left the ground.
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  14. #44
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    Quote Originally Posted by McReis View Post
    What are you talking about? The car never left the ground.
    Safari spec or something?
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  15. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by McReis View Post
    he Swedish company was best known for solid, though sometimes unexciting, family transport. But for the 1961 model year it came up with a sexy sports coupe in hopes of altering that image while inexpensively adding to the corporate bottom line. Basic mechanicals – a sturdy 4-cylinder, twin-carb, B18B engine and 4-speed manual transmission – were borrowed from Volvo sedans in time-honored industry fashion.

    The P1800 was perfectly proportioned, the detailing exquisite.

    Shortly after the Volvo P1800 was launched it became Roger Moore's mount in The Saint, a famously-successful British TV series.

    Moore, by the way, liked the P1800 so much that he bought one (no doubt at a huge discount) and used it as his primary transport for many years.

    In 1961 Volvo launched a special version of the P1800, combining the practicality of a station wagon with the style and handling of a sports coupe. Family men with small children finally had a compromise their spouses could live with in the handsome 1800 ES. That 4-cylinder engine was by then producing 140 hp, a figure still respectable today.

    The engine wasn't borrowed from a sedan,Volvo itself said its a completely new engine. Moore was given the p1800 at the same time the makers of the Saint tv show were given one. At the end of production the engine was making 130 hp.

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