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58th Annual Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance
A1 - Antique through 1915
A2 - London to Brighton Veterans
C1 - American Classic Open
C2 - American Classic Open Packard
C3 - American Classic Closed
C4 - Cadillac V-16
E1 - Lancia Prewar
E2 - Lancia Postwar
H - Rolls-Royce Prewar
I - Mercedes-Benz Prewar
J1 - European Classic Open 1922-1934
J2 - European Classic Open 1935-1940
J3 - European Classic Closed
L1 - Prewar Preservation
L2 - Postwar Preservation through 1967
M1 - Ferrari Grand Touring
M2 - Ferrari Competition
M3 - 50th Anniversary of the Ferrari Spyder California
N - Lamborghini
O1 - Postwar Sports
O2 - Postwar Touring
P - General Motors Woodies
Q - Motorama Concept Car GM Centennial
R - GM Powered Sports Cars
S - 20+ Liter Club
V - Open Wheel Race Cars
L1 - Prewar Preservation Vehicles
1905 Royal Model G
1906 Queen Model K
1922 Hispano Suiza H6B
1925 Packard Model 136
1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype
1932 Peerless V-16 Prototype
1937 Horch 835
 
  • Information on the 1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype
  • More photographs of the 1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype
  • 1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype
    1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype
    1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype
    1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 Prototype

    1931 Packard TwinSix FWD V12 PrototypeThe Packard Twelve was the company's top-of-the-line automobile and many people believe the signature car of the Classic Era. It was a conservative automobile with elegant appointments and a refined chassis powered by a quiet 12-cylinder powerplant.

    During this era the cylinder war was in full swing, as was the Great Depression. However, the development of Packard's Twelve began years prior, dating back to the Cord L-29 and the Miller-engines front drive race cars. Packard's management entertained the idea of the front drive vehicle and commissioned the construction of a prototype. A 12-cylinder engine was also created for this new car, as the shorter length of a V-12, compared with Packard's inline eight, allowed more flexibility in packaging the front-drive chassis.

    After testing revealed weakness with the front-drive chassis design, and development costs skyrocketed, Packard decided to abandon the project. Meanwhile, Cadillac had introduced their mighty 16- and 12-cylinder models, igniting a frenzy that would ripple throughout the automotive industry. Packard's response was to install their new 12-cylinder engine into Packard's proven Deluxe Eight chassis. When introduced, Packard dubbed their new creation the Twin Six, in honor of Packard's first V-12 which had been introduced 15 years earlier. By 1933, the name had been changed to the Packard Twelve. 1933 was also the last year for Packards to have flowing fenders and classic lines before switching to the streamlined look.

    This Packard is unique in two respects. It has the prototype L-head, V-12 engine that would evolve into the Twin-Six Packard and it boasts the first front-wheel-drive layout on any Packard. More often found on European cars of the era, this layout used a transaxle. Due to its complexity, this layout never made it into production. The engine, though, was introduced as standard in 1932. The bodywork is reminiscent of that on the Cord L-29; Cord was another company experimenting with front wheel drive. This car was sent to be scrapped by Packard in 1935, but for unknown reasons it was saved. It had various owners before it was bought by the Harrah Collection. It was sold to the Bahre Collection in 1981.

    Also photographed at :
  • 19th Annual Concours d'Elegance of the Eastern United States >> Theme - A Century of Automotive Innovation