Friday, December 12, 2025

1988 Porsche 928 S4


Building on the original 928, the 928 S4 was the first major update of the design. By the mid 1980s, it was probably becoming apparent that the 911 wasn't, in fact, going anywhere, and so the big front-engine four-seater car with its water-cooled V8 really leaned into its high speed grand tourer role.

Like the final year models of the 928 S it replaced, the S4 packed a 32V 5.0L all-alloy motor, but it was now tweaked to put out 316 SAE net horsepower. This was eye-watering output for the era and more than enough to motivate 3,525 pounds of Porsche with alacrity.


In a test of a 1987 model with a five-speed manual, Road & Track recorded a 5.5 second zero-to-sixty time and a 13.9 second quarter at 101 through the traps. The price as tested was $62, 261, which comes to roughly $178k in current dollars.

The Grand Prix White example in the photos was snapped with an Olympus OM-D E-M1X and a Panasonic Leica 12-60mm f/2.8-4 zoom lens in September of 2024.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

2020 Alpina B7


Alpina began as a maker of aftermarket performance parts for BMW cars but is now recognized as an actual auto manufacturer by the German government. Its cars are assembled alongside BMW's own cars, and avoid competing head-to-head with the maker's own M-cars by placing more of an emphasis on high-speed touring than wild-eyed redline performance.

At the top of the Alpina lineup is the B7, their riff on BMW's big 7-series luxury sedan. Whereas the peak of the G12 7-series was the M760Li, powered by a 599hp twin-turbo 6.6L V-12, Alpina's version comes with a 4.4L twin-turbo V-8 that sends 600 horsepower to all four wheels via an eight-speed automatic transmission.


Car and Driver tested one of these 4,940-pound beasts and it roared to sixty miles per hour in 3.2 seconds and through the quarter in 11.4 seconds at 123mph. Unlike BMW, Alpina doesn't have any sort of gentleman's agreement with anybody regarding top speeds and claims the B7 has a terminal velocity of 205mph. The number I found eye-popping was the braking distance from seventy, which was only 151 feet, which is pretty amazing for two and a half tons of fun.

Price as tested was $153,195 for an Alpina Green car that looked just like the one in the photos, which were snapped in November of 2025 using a Pentax K7 and an 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 zoom lens.

Monday, December 8, 2025

1994 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme SL


Oldsmobile moved the Cutlass Supreme nameplate to a front-wheel drive W-body car for the 1998 model year. Initially available only as a coupe, it spent that first year being sold alongside its G-body RWD predecessor, which was known as the Cutlass Supreme Classic.

For 1990, a sedan version was added, as well as a convertible. Due to the oddball "beer tap" door handles being located in the B-pillars, the convertible had a fixed hoop or roll bar. A 1992 restyle saw the coupe and convertible get squinty little miniature quad headlamps, which were also used on its W-body stablemate, the Pontiac Grand Prix.

This Bright White coupe is a 1994 model. For that year the Cutlass Supreme could be had in the base "S" trim level or the more upmarket SL. The SL package got sporty body cladding, fog lamps, dual power mirrors, and standard 16" alloy wheels.

The base motor was the GM corporate 3.1L pushrod V-6 with sequential port fuel injection, rated at 160 SAE net horsepower, with an optional 3.4L DOHC V-6 making 210 horses. Both motors were backed by a four-speed automatic transmission.

While they're no sports cars (a 3.1L Cutlass SL would turn in 0-60 times in the mid nine second range) I've always liked the styling of the W-body GM coupes, and this one's no exception.

I turned my car around on a cold December morning in 2025 to photograph this one using a Nikon D2H and 17-55mm f/2.8 zoom lens. 

Sunday, December 7, 2025

1993 Honda Civic del Sol Si


"Del Sol" means "Of the Sun" in Spanish, and when Honda replaced the beloved little Civic CR-X two seater hatchback, it was with a two seater coupe that had a lift-off targa panel for a roof to let the sun shine in on those perfect summer driving days, as well as a power-retractable rear window for the full in-the-breeze driving experience.

It gave up a bit of pure sports car performance to the MX-5 roadster from Mazda, but the cockpit could be sealed up to make year-'round foul weather commuting a more pleasant experience.

The base version of the Civic-based two seater, the del Sol S, had front discs and rear drums, 13" steel wheels, and a 1.5L SOHC 16V four cylinder making 102 SAE net horsepower.


Spring for the del Sol Si, like this Samba Green Pearl Metallic 1993 model, and you got 14" alloy wheels, four-wheel discs, and a 1.6L 16V motor with variable valve timing that was rated at 125 ponies.

In a Car and Driver comparison test of '93 two-seater droptops, the del Sol Si finished behind the Mazda MX-5 Miata and ahead of the Mercury Capri XR2 and Alfa Romeo Spider Veloce. It did the sprint to sixty in 8.9 seconds and managed a 16.9 quarter at 82 mph. It circled the skidpad at 0.81g and stopped from 70 in 204 feet. Price as tested was $16,460, which comes to about $37k when adjusted for inflation.

The one in the photos was snapped in October of 2025 using a Nikon D2H and a 17-55mm f/2.8 zoom lens. 
 

Saturday, December 6, 2025

1985 Merkur XR4Ti


For the 1985 model year, a new nameplate showed up on the lots of Lincoln-Mercury dealerships: Merkur. This wasn't entirely without precedent. As a global automaker, FoMoCo had previously used Mercury dealerships to move Americanized versions of their overseas models. From the '70 through '78 model years, the sporty Capri and Capri II coupes from Ford of Europe were sold, without any divisional branding at all, on Lincoln-Mercury lots.

The Merkur XR4Ti was a federalized variant of the German-built Sierra XR4i. The addition of the "T" to the moniker was due to the fact that the German car's V-6 was replaced with a turbocharged version of the 2.3L SOHC "Lima" inline four.

The result was a sub-3000 pound RWD sedan with 170hp that delivered fairly sprightly performance, at least for the era. Car and Driver clocked a zero-to-sixty time of seven seconds flat and a 15.5 second quarter mile at 90mhp on the way to a top end of a buck twenty nine.

The Diamond White example in the photo, a 1985 model, was photographed using a Nikon Coolpix P7000 in Hooksett, New Hampshire back in April of 2015.

Friday, December 5, 2025

1962 Ford Falcon


1962 was the third model year for Ford's compact Falcon line. Still riding on a 109.5" wheelbase, the '62 models received styling refreshes to the snout and taillights as well as a chrome fake hood scoop, all of which brought the appearance in line with the larger Fords of the era.

By its third model year, the Falcon lineup had expanded to twelve different distinct models: Tudor and Fordor sedans, a Sports Futura coupe, and a variety of wagons and vans, many of which could be had in Standard or Deluxe forms. The Baffin Blue example in the photos is the Standard Tudor Sedan. This model would have had a base price of $1,985 in period dollars, which adjusts to $21,350 today. Bear in mind that things like two-speed wipers, a windshield washer, seat belts, and safety padding on the dashboard were all extra cost options.


The base engine would have been the 85 horsepower 144 cubic inch Falcon Six, with the 170cid Special Six, rated at 101 ponies. Three- and four-speed manual transmissions could be had, as well as the two-speed Fordomatic.

The one in the photos was snapped with an Apple iPhone 6s in June of 2016. 

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

1940 Ford De Luxe


The 1940 model year brought the ultimate version of the Ford that had first debuted in '37. It could be had in Standard or De Luxe trim levels and debuted several new features for Ford. New with this model was a column-mounted gear selector, touted as "Finger-Tip Gearshift", as well as sealed beam headlights, and Controlled Ventilation, which featured side windows that could be rolled down all the way with a crank, combined with a pivoting vent window in front of them.

The base engine in the Standard models was a 136 cubic inch (2.2L) version of Ford's Flathead V-8. With a 6.6:1 compression ratio and a single-throated carb, it made sixty SAE gross horsepower and wasn't very popular. Optional was a larger 221cid (3.6L) Flathead V-8 with a two-barrel carb and 85 horsepower.

The larger engine came standard in the De Luxe, along with such luxuries as a spare tire, floor mounted high-beam control, ash trays, sun visors, a clock in the dash, and a locking glove compartment.

The car is a favorite of hot-rudders, and the Coupe in the picture is lightly and tastefully modified and repainted in a vibrant red that was nowhere to be found in the 1940 Ford catalog. The De Luxe could be had as a Businessman's Coupe, Coupe, Tudor or Fordor Sedan, or Convertible, and the convertible version even had a vacuum-operated power top.

This one was photographed using an Olympus OM-D E-M1X and an M. Zuiko Digital 12-200mm f/3.5-6.3 zoom lens in September of 2024.

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

1987 Porsche 911 Carrera Cabriolet


Introduced as an entirely new model for 1964, it didn't take long for the 911 to become the Porsche. The Carrera 3.2 version, introduced twenty years later, was a directly-evolved successor to that original car.

Displacement of the rear-mounted SOHC air-cooled flat six was bumped to... as one might surmise from the name ...3164cc. Fitted with Bosch LE-Jetronic injection, the output of the swole motor rose to 200 SAE net horsepower in North American trim.

This was enough to propel a 911 Cabrio to sixty in 5.7 seconds when Road & Track tested one in their January 1986 issue. It managed to zip through the quarter mile in 14.3 seconds at 97mph and circled a skidpad at 0.80g. Price as tested was $41,301, which comes to about $122,400 when adjusted for inflation.


The 1987 Cabriolet in the uncommon Summer Yellow color was photographed in September of 2025 using a Canon EOS R and an RF 24-105mm f/4-7.1 IS zoom lens.
 

Monday, November 24, 2025

1955 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery


Here's a style of car that died out a while ago, largely replaced by small vans. The "sedan delivery" style was a two-door wagon with no side windows into the cargo area and no back seat. They were more maneuverable on crowded city streets than truck-based delivery vans, and generally cheaper and more fuel efficient.

This one's a '55 Chevy that's obviously been hot-rodded. The chrome trim on the rockers is pure Bel Air, but the vast majority of sedan deliveries were done on the spartan Chevrolet 150. Things like "passenger side sun visor", "passenger seat", "heater", and "oil filter" were fripperies that cost extra money.


Base price for a '55 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery was $1,699 in those pre-inflation dollars, or about twenty grand in current money.

Those expanses of sheet metal enclosing the cargo area made a handy place to paint the company name, in this case "Paul's Garage & Speed Shop" which, alas, does not appear to have a web presence under that name that I can find.


This one was photographed in May of 2024 using a Canon EOS-1D Mark IV and an EF 24-105mm f/4L IS.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

1971 Triumph TR6


The lack of grotesque rubber bumper warts and Signal Red paint job mark this Triumph TR6 as an earlier car, unlike the later one we've previously seen on these pages.

Other than the Spitfire, the TR6 is the Triumph you're most likely to spot here in the Unites States, since over 83,000 of the roughly 92,000 built were shipped over here.

This one was photographed in September of 2022 using a Canon EOS-1D Mark IV and my trusty EF 24-105mm f/4L IS zoom lens.

Friday, November 21, 2025

1987 BMW M6


Introduced in '83 and known in its home market as the M635CSi, for 1987 BMW of North America imported the Motorsport-tuned performance version of the E24 6-series coupe as the M6, keeping the name in line with the M3 and M5 already being sold in US showrooms.

This Henna Red example in my neighborhood is just crazy hot. Quite the rara avis, too, as only about 1,677 were imported to the North American market out of a global production run of 5.855.


It used a DOHC version of BMW's 3.5L inline six that put out a claimed 256bhp in US trim at the time, which isn't a lot by modern standards but back then the tuned-port 350 in a 'Vette was only rated at something like 245. The 150+ mph M6 was legitimately big iron in its time, the second fastest production car from BMW up to that point, second only to the M1.

In Car and Driver's testing, it laid down a 14.7 second quarter at 94mph and sprinted to sixty in 6.1 seconds. Slower than the Euro version, due to fewer ponies and big, clunky bumpers, top speed was measured at 144mph. Price as tested was $58,720 in 1987 dollars, which comes to $168k in current money.


The lower two photos were taken with a Nikon D7100 and a 16-80mm f/2.8-4E VR zoom lens in June of 2022, while the upper was snapped in May of 2025 using the same camera and lens.

1988 Porsche 928 S4

Building on the original 928 , the 928 S4 was the first major update of the design. By the mid 1980s, it was probably becoming apparent that...