Monday, February 23, 2026

1970 Mercury Cougar


Spotted this Deep Gold Metallic 1970 Mercury Cougar on Crawfordsville Road while headed home from the range on a springtime afternoon. I was in the passenger seat of a friend's car and all I had was a 50mm-equivalent lens, so the photo's through a windshield and pretty heavily cropped. Sorry 'bout that.

1970 was the last year of the first generation of Cougars, which started in the '68 model year. These early ones were basically "luxury pony cars"; plusher equivalents of the Mustang, riding on a 111" wheelbase, a three inch stretch over the original pony car. There was the base Cougar, like the one in the photo, as well as the XR7 and the snarly Eliminator.

The base motor was the 351 Windsor V-8 with a 2-barrel carb, rated at 250 SAE gross bhp, with an optional 351 Cleveland 4-bbl. The latter was a decidedly high-performance motor, with an 11.0:1 compression ratio and rated conservatively at 300 gross horsepower. Ordering the "Eliminator" package unlocked the optional 290bhp Boss 302 and the big-block 335bhp 428 Cobra Jet.

After 1970, the Cougar remained on the Mustang platform for the '71-'73 model years. Bulkier than the earlier pony car versions, the Cougar leaned into the size increase and started sliding toward the "Personal Luxury Coupe" mien of cars like the Cutlass Supreme and Chevy Monte Carlo.

This one was photographed in April of 2023 using a Nikon 1 V2 and a 1 Nikkor 18.5mm f/1.8 lens.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Car Links from Around the Blogs...




1989 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am GTA


Here's a 1987-1990 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am GTA in Flame Red Metallic.

1985 had seen a mild styling refresh for the 3rd Gen Firebirds, the most notable part of which was that the aero effects became better blended with the car rather than an add-on. Pontiac hadn't yet fully succumbed to the scoops-and-ribbed-cladding virus, so the cars were busier-looking than the sleek original '83-'84 T/A's, but nothing like the swollen grotesqueries that would follow in the Nineties.

The new-for-'87 Trans Am GTA (Gran Turismo Americano, according to Pontiac) came standard with the WS6 suspension package and the 215-horse L98 Tuned-Port Injection 350cid V-8, which was only available with an automatic transmission, since the Borg Warner T-5 manual used in the F-bodies wouldn't handle the torque from the 5.7L motor. (You could get a 205 horsepower TPI 305 and a five-speed as a three hundred dollar credit delete.) 1988 saw the L98's output bumped to 225 horsepower.

Unfortunately the GTA was also larded up with every luxo option in the GM catalog and it needed every one of those ponies...and still got sand kicked in its face by 5.0L Mustang LX's and kids in strippo Firebird Formulas with 5.0 TPI mills and manual transmissions.

Sorry for the potato-quality photo, but I drive by this car frequently and I'd been meaning to get a pic of it for yoinks and the day I finally got around to it in October of 2023 I had the Nikon 1 V2 & 1 Nikkor 18.5mm f/1.8, which has the equivalent to a 50mm field of view and I was snapping the pic out the rolled-down window of my Mustang, so the photo has the bejeezus cropped out of it.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

1971 Fiat 124 Sport Spider


The Fiat Spider is a hard car to date at a glance. Barring detail changes like side marker lights and bumpers it was sold in the US with its appearance largely unchanged from 1968 through 1985.

How do I know this is a '71? Via the clever detective technique of yelling "Nice car! What year is it?"

These older ones were imported with a 1.6L DOHC and a five-speed manual gearbox which was still pretty exotic stuff in the late Sixties. With twin carbs it put out a bit over a hundred horsepower and could manage a zero-to-sixty time a few ticks under ten seconds, before emissions and the weight of post-'73 bumpers took their toll.

This one was photographed in May of 2017 using a Leica D-LUX 3.

1960 Chevrolet Bel Air


Starting in the 1959 model year, the Bel Air was demoted from its top spot in the Chevrolet lineup by the Impala. The old hierarchy of "150, 210, Bel Air" was replaced with "Biscayne, Bel Air, Impala", which were most easily distinguished by how elaborate the external chrome decor was. The longitudinal spears on the rear fenders quickly distinguish this faded Royal Blue 1960 Bel Air from its plebeian Biscayne sibling.

For 1960 the Bel Air could be had as a hardtop Sport Sedan or Sport Coupe, as well as a pillared sedan and coupe. The base motor was the Turbo-Fire 283 cubic inch V-8 with a two-barrel carb and 8.25:1 compression ratio, rated at 170 horsepower. You could also opt for the Hi-Thrift inline six, as well as more high-performance options like a Super Turbo-Fire 283 making 230 ponies and two versions of the 348 cubic inch Turbo-Thrust big block, putting out either 250 or 280 horsepower. Three- and four-speed manual gearboxes were on offer, as well as the Turboglide or Powerglide automatics.

The one in the picture was snapped with a Nikon D1X and 24-120mm f/3.5-5.6 zoom lens in July of 2015.

Friday, February 20, 2026

1956 Chevrolet Bel Air Sport Sedan


We've had a 1956 Chevy sedan on these pages before, but it was a Chevrolet 210 pillared sedan. Pillarless hardtop styling was becoming all the rage in Detroit in the Fifties, though.

For 1955 you could get a hardtop Sport Coupe, at least in Bel Air form, but all the four door variants had B-pillars. That changed in 1956 when a pillarless Sport Sedan became available for both the mid-market 210 and the top-of-the-range Bel Air.

The Onyx Black 1956 Bel Air Sport Sedan in the photo was snapped in May of 2017 using a Leica D-LUX 3.

1959 Cadillac Sedan de Ville (Six Window)


The styling on the 1959 Cadillacs is eye-catching, iconic, and instantly recognizable with its enormous rakish tail fins, each tipped by dual bullet-shaped taillight lamps.

New for '59, the deVille line was no longer a trim level on the Series 62 but was moved to its own series, the Series 6300. It was available as a Coupe as well as Four Window and Six Window Sedans, with the Ebony example in the photo being an example of the latter.

These were large cars, riding on a 130" wheelbase with an overall length of 225". Under the hood was the new 390 cubic inch version of Cadillac's 331 Series overhead valve V-8, with a single four-barrel carburetor and a 10.5:1 compression ratio, rated at 325 gross horsepower. The Hydra-Matic was the only transmission offered.

Base price in 1959 was $5,498, which works out to $60,800-ish in current dollars.

This one was photographed in November of 2016 using a Nikon Coolpix P7000.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

1970 Dodge Super Bee


The Super Bee was Dodge's budget priced muscle car in the late Sixties and early Seventies. Essentially a stripped-down version of the Coronet R/T, it was a slightly more upscale answer to Plymouth's Road Runner. The name was derived from the fact that, like the Coronet R/T and Charger, it was based on Mopar's midsize B-body platform.

While the Coronet R/T came with the four-barrel 440 Magnum as the standard engine, the cheaper Super Bee's base powerplant was the 383 Magnum. The hood badges on the Plum Crazy 1970 model in the photos indicate it has the 383, which had a 9.5:1 compression ratio and was rated at 335 gross horsepower. Transmission choices were the four-speed A833 manual or a Torqueflite 727 three-speed auto.

Car and Driver tested a 1969 Super Bee with a 383 Magnum, Torqueflite slushbox, and 3.55:1 limited slip rear end and recorded a 5.6 second zero-to-sixty blast, while a trip down the quarter mile took 14.04 seconds at 99.55 miles per hour. Price as tested was $3,858 on the fairly well-optioned test car (in addition to the limited slip rear and automatic, it had power front discs, power steering, styled steel wheels, and more), which is almost $34k in current dollars.


The one in the picture was photographed with a Hasselblad Lunar and 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 zoom lens outside of Trinidad, Colorado in October of 2016.

1970 Ford Thunderbird


1967 saw the launch of the fifth generation of Ford's Thunderbird. Having started out as a sporty two-seat convertible, it got plusher with the addition of a back seat in the second generation. With the launch of the Mustang pretty much taking over the sporty niche at Ford, the T-bird swelled up yet again, becoming almost Lincolnesque in its level of luxury appointments.

Unlike the previous unibody 4th gen cars, the new 'Birds were of body-on-frame construction. The convertible model was axed from the lineup, but you could now get a four-door version with some small rear-opening "suicide doors" to allow better access to the rear seat.

The 5th generation cars got a styling makeover that included a prominent beak-like protrusion in the center of the grille. Ad copy played up the luxe aspect, with sales brochures offering a glimpse inside "the rare and private Thunderbird world".


The only engine available was the 429 cubic inch Thunder Jet V-8 with a four-barrel carburetor and 10.5:1 compression ratio, conservatively rated at 360 gross horsepower. It was backed with a three-speed SelectShift Cruise-O-Matic.

This Wimbledon White coupe with added aftermarket stripes was photographed in rural southwest Washington state in June of 2015 using a Nikon Coolpix P7000.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

1964 Chevrolet Corvair Monza Club Coupe


1964 was the last model year for the first generation Corvair. While its external styling was largely unchanged, there were significant differences beneath the sheet metal.

The Corvair Monza was the highest trim level, above the Corvair 700 and the bargain basement Corvair 500.

The Turbo-Air flat six that came standard in the Corvair Monza had the stroke increased to bring the air-cooled motor's displacement to 164 cubic inches from the previous year's 145. With an 8.25:1 compression ratio, the base motor put out 95 horsepower, nearly 20% bump from the previous year, while the optional motor had a hotter cam re-jetted carbs, and made 110 ponies. You could get three- or four-speed manual transaxles or a Powerglide auto.


A transverse leaf spring was added to the swingarm rear suspension, and a front anti-roll bar was now standard rather than optional.

Sales had continued to crater, and the introduction of the more conventional Chevy II/Nova in 1962 ate away at Corvair's market, and the launch of Ford's Mustang didn't help.

This Silver Blue Iridescent example was snapped with a Nikon Coolpix P7000 in Alliance, Ohio back in July of 2015. 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

1972 Ford F-250 Custom


1972 was the last model year for this fifth generation of Ford's F-series trucks. They'd been released as 1967 models and got a mild styling refresh for '70, but the new sixth generation trucks were already waiting in the wings.


This one has a blacked-out '71 grille and aftermarket striping over its Grabber Blue paint.

The lone drinking straw exhaust outlet makes me suspect it has the base motor, a 4.9L (300 cid) inline six rated which had been rated at 165 SAE gross horsepower, but was now advertised as 119 net ponies.

It was photographed in February of 2026 using a Nikon 1 V1 and a 10-100mm f/4.5-5.6 VR zoom lens.

1970 Mercury Cougar

Spotted this Deep Gold Metallic 1970 Mercury Cougar on Crawfordsville Road while headed home from the range on a springtime afternoon. I was...