Saturday AACA car show . . .
Read MoreThe Givenchy edition was one of several Lincoln "Designer Series" cars that became available beginning in 1976. For 1979, four individual Designer Series trim packages were available: Bill Blass, Cartier, Emilio Pucci, and Givenchy. Each was available in only one color combination that changed each year.
In the case of this Givenchy edition, the combination for 1979 was Crystal Blue Metallic exterior paint with a Crystal Blue Valino Grain front-half vinyl roof and Dark Crystal Blue leather interior. This is a rare car, being one of 2,262 produced that year.After Cadillac built, "The Last American convertible" in 1976, the Eldorado convertible returned to the Cadillac lineup for 1984. The Eldorado Biarritz convertible, (and it's platform cousin the 1982 - 85 Buick Riviera convertible), were actually built by American Sunroof Corporation with the full factory backing and warranty coverage.
Introduced for 1960, the Comet was originally to be part of the Edsel lineup. But when Edsel production ceased in November 1959, the Comet was shifted to Lincoln-Mercury dealerships. However, it was sold without any Mercury badging, meaning it was marketed as a Comet. The Mercury designation arrived for 1962.
The Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Company of Buffalo, New York traces its roots back to the early 1870s manufacturing firm of Heinz, Pierce and Munschauer. Company founder George N. Pierce established the company to produce household items such as bird cages, toilet seats, bath tubs, and washing machines.
Pierce soon bought out his partners and changed the company name to the George N. Pierce Company. Bicycles became part of the product line by 1896. His first venture into automobiles focused on building a steam powered car. But that was soon abandoned in favor of gasoline power.
Emphasis was placed on build quality and power. Pierce-Arrow automobiles quickly became powerful, reliable, and expensive status symbols that were owned by celebrities, business tycoons, and royalty around the world. Pierce-Arrow, along with Peerless and Packard, became known as, "The Three Ps of Motordom" due to their reputation for building high quality automobiles.In addition to its reputation for quality, Pierce-Arrow was also known for building powerful cars. In addition to the 288 CID inline 6-cylinder in this entry level Series 80, Pierce-Arrow also offered a more upscale Series 33 that was powered by a twin cam, four valve 414 CID inline 6-cylinder that made 100 hp.
But even that was a far cry from the Model 66 produced from 1910 - 18. For 1913, the already huge 714 CID inline 6-cylinder was bumped to 825 CID, (resulting in a staggering 140 hp), making it the largest production car engine ever produced.Pierce-Arrow introduced its most recognizable styling trait in 1914 when the car's headlamps were moved from the familiar location on either side of the radiator to being integrated into the front fenders. Conventional headlamp arrangement was still offered if the buyer requested it. But not many were produced this way.