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  • Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 77; Creating Car Colors, 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Creating Car Colors

    Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

    Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

    Episode: 77

    Broadcast date: April 19, 2021

    Guest: La Shirl Turner

    Creating Car Colors, 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the recently unveiled 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz–a genre-bending compact SUV/pickup “Sport Adventure Vehicle” that is slated to go on sale this summer. La Shirl Turner, Director of the Advanced Color and Materials Design Studio at Stellantis, joins us to discuss how she and her team develop paint colors and interior trim for Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram vehicles. Damon has a Mopar car-color quiz for Tom and Jill, and Tom runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including test-drive reviews of the 2021 GMC Yukon AT4 and Nissan Leaf SL Plus.

    The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

    Discussed this week:

    First Look: 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Consumer Guide color fun

    Quick Spin: 2021 GMC Yukon AT4

    Test Drive: 2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus



  • 1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    Alfa Romeo 1900C

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    Note: The following story was excerpted from the June 2011 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

    When Alfa Romeo wanted to make a splash at the 35th Turin Automobile Show, it asked six coachbuilders to build a custom body on the Alfa 1900 chassis. They were Bertone, Castagna, Boneschi, Pinin Farina, Vignale, and Turin’s own Ghia.

    More from Collectible Automobile Magazine

    Giacinto Ghia started building car bodies on a small scale during World War I and then prospered during the Twenties and Thirties. Ghia did its best work with sporting bodies and Ghia coachwork graced Alfa Romeo, Lancia, and other exclusive Italian sports cars. Ghia also built sport coupes and spiders on Fiat’s reasonably priced 508 S Balilla chassis. (Balilla was named for Mussolini’s Fascist youth group.)

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    The Fiat business expanded Ghia’s output, but the factory was flattened by Allied bombing during World War II. Giacinto Ghia died soon after the war and his widow sold the firm. Carrozzeria Ghia returned to health, but at a much lower volume. 

    American automakers were good for Ghia in the Fifties. Chrysler Corporation discovered that Ghia could build show cars faster and cheaper than it could in-house. The Chrysler K-310, Dodge Firebomb, and DeSoto Adventurer, among other Ghia-built concept cars, adorned the Chrysler stand at Fifties’ auto shows. Chrysler tapped Ghia to build Crown Imperial limousines between 1954 and 1964. Ghia also built 50 Chrysler Turbine cars in 1963—as well as the prototype. A series of Dodge Firearrow show cars led to a contract to build the Italian-American Dual-Ghia. Although popular in Hollywood (particularly with the Rat Pack), fewer than 150 were built between 1956 and 1963.

    Photo Feature: 1951 Jowett Jupiter Convertible

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    For the 1955 auto-show circuit, Ghia built Lincoln’s bubble-topped Futura, which was later turned into the Batmobile. Packard’s last show car, the Predictor, was constructed by Ghia for the 1956 Chicago Auto Show. Ghia didn’t neglect the Italian exotic cars, building bodies for Ferrari and Maserati.

    Although Ghia was successful building show cars and sports car bodies in small numbers, it didn’t have facilities to build in volume. Ghia created the Volkswagen Karmann-Ghia by scaling down the Chrysler D’Elegance show car, but couldn’t build in VW quantity. Karmann got the job that totaled more than 400,000 cars. 

    Photo Feature: 1959 Fiat Abarth 750 Zagato

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe

    Ford acquired Ghia in 1970, and it was Ford’s Italian design house for a while, as well as a new trim-level name applied to Ford Motor Company cars. The De Tomaso Pantera sold through Lincoln-Mercury dealers was a result of the Ford buyout. Today, the Ghia name has disappeared from American Ford cars, but there are still Ghia badges on a few Asian Fords.

     The Alfa Romeo seen here is on the 1900C Sprint chassis. The 1900 was Alfa’s moderately priced postwar sedan. The 1900C Sprint was a short-wheelbase version bodied by coachbuilders and served to revive some of Alfa’s prewar glamour. Only 1796 coupes were built between 1951 and ’58 compared to 17,243 sedans made during 1950-55. This is the Ghia coupe built for the Turin show. (At least one copy of this style was also built.) When photographed, it was owned by The Blackhawk Collection of Danville, California.

    Click below for enlarged images.

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    1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Ghia Coupe Gallery


  • Forgotten Concept: Nissan Alpha-T

    Nissan Apha-T Concept

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Forgotten Concepts, Forgotten Concepts

    This is an installment in a series of posts looking back on show cars that we feel deserved a little more attention than they got. If you have a suggestion for a Forgotten Concept topic, please shoot us a line or leave a comment below.

    Nissan Alpha-T

    First Seen: 2001 Detroit Auto Show

    Description: Full-size pickup truck

    Sales Pitch: “Nissan is serious about entering the full-size truck market in a big way.”

    More Forgotten Concepts

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Details:

    First seen at the 2001 Detroit Auto Show, the Nissan Alpha-T served to broadcast the Japanese automaker’s intentions to enter the North American large pickup-truck market–which it soon did, with the introduction of the Nissan Titan for the 2004 model year. The angular concept truck featured a crew-cab design and V8 power–traits popular with pickup shoppers then and now. Exterior features included a power-extending bed floor and a novel articulating tailgate design which acted as a step when fully deployed.

    The Alpha-T’s rear doors opened “suicide” style, allowing for easy ingress to the four-place seating. The orange-leather-lined cabin featured suede and brushed-aluminum accents. Power came from a 300-horsepower 4.5-liter V8 mated to a 4-speed automatic transmission.

    Forgotten Concept: GMC Centaur

    2004 Nissan Titan

    2004 Nissan Titan

    CG Says:

    It took moxie for Nissan to enter the big-truck market when it did, especially since Toyota–having rolled out its full-size Tundra in 2000–was already scaling back its pickup ambitions. But for all of the Alpha-T’s bold, futuristic angularity, the production 2004 Nissan Titan that followed was depressingly conventional.

    The first-generation Titan ran through the 2015 model year, and a redesigned second-generation model debuted for the 2016 model year. Despite the addition of a heavier-duty “XD” version with an available Cummins turbodiesel engine, the second-gen Titan didn’t make significant inroads in the domestic full-size-pickup market.

    With the Titan’s future currently in question, looking back on this concept seems especially poignant. The Alpha-T may forever serve as a reminder that it takes more than moxie to sell big pickups in the United States.

    Forgotten Concept: GMC Terradyne

    Nissan Alpha-T

    Nissan Alpha-T

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    Nissan Alpha-T

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