DeSoto Airstream
DeSoto Airstream | |
---|---|
1936 DeSoto Airstream Custom sedan | |
Overview | |
Manufacturer | DeSoto (Chrysler) |
Production | 1934-1936 |
Model years | 1935-1936 |
Assembly |
Los Angeles (Maywood) Assembly Lynch Road Assembly |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Full-size |
Body style |
2-door coupe 4-door sedan 2-door convertible |
Layout | FR layout |
Related |
Chrysler Airstream Dodge Model DU Plymouth Model PJ |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 241.5 cu in (4.0 L) I6 |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 1935-1936: 118 in (2,997 mm)[1] |
Chronology | |
Successor |
DeSoto Custom DeSoto Deluxe |
The Desoto Airstream is an automobile that was built DeSoto during model years 1935 and 1936. During both years, the car was sold along with the streamlined DeSoto Airflow. The DeSoto Airstream 4-door sedan sold for $220 less than a 4-door DeSoto Airflow.[2] Chrysler fielded its own Chrysler Airstream model concurrently; visual cues separated the two automobiles.
More successful than Airflow
The Airstream was created to capture market share lost during the 1934 season when DeSoto only offered the Airflow. In 1935, there were 20,784 Airstream cars sold, as compared to 6,797 Airflow models.[3] Airstream sales nearly doubled the units of Airflows, 13,940, sold in 1934. While streamlined and aerodynamic, the Airflow was not embraced by the public, and the more mainstream Airstream was introduced as a stopgap measure until a fully redesigned DeSoto could be introduced in 1937.
In reviewing the Airstream, conventionality was its best attribute. Solidly built, and more conservatively styled, the 241.5CID 6-cylinder[4] Airstream did away with the Airflow's integrated headlights, broad grille work and monocoque construction. While the super structure of the Airstream was all-steel (as opposed to wooden framing - a practice still followed by some US automakers in the mid-1930s), the car rested on its frame, while Airflow's unibody build qualities placed the passenger compartment within the frame structure. It has a 118" wheelbase.[4]
Design, options, and pricing
Body styles for 1935 included 2-door business coupe, convertible coupe, roadster coupe, 5-passenger coupe and trunkback sedan. Four-door offerings included a base sedan and a trunkback sedan. The cars featured Chrysler’s vaunted “Floating Power” rubber engine mounts which isolated engine vibration from the chassis. Optional features included carpeting for the front seat area, radio, twin windshield wipers and a heater.[5]
Airstreams were priced about $200 less than the DeSoto Airflow. That, plus the more traditional styling, made the car a success.
1936 features and sales
In 1936 the Airstream was split into two trim levels, Deluxe and Custom. Deluxe models had one piece windshields while Customs (exp. the convertible) had two piece units which were quickly becoming the industry standard. The senior series also gained a Custom Traveller model, built on a stretched 130" wheelbase. Custom travellers were popular with limousine conversion companies and marked the beginning of DeSoto's long standing, and profitable relationship with the Taxicab industry.
For 1936 total sales improved to 38,938 units, of which the Airstream accounted for 33,938 units compared to the reduced Airflow offerings with returned 5,000 units for the Airflow's final year.[6]
See also
- DeSoto Airflow
- Chrysler Airstream
- Fahlin SF-2 Plymocoupe aircraft made from 1935 Plymouth coupe
References
- ↑ "Directory Index: DeSoto/1936_DeSoto/1936_DeSoto_Airstream_Folder". Oldcarbrochures.com. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
- ↑ The Complete History of the Chrysler Corporation 1924 - 1985, Beekman House, 1985, pg. 79.
- ↑ Riding the roller coaster: a history of the Chrysler Corporation, Charles K. Hyde, Wayne State University Press, 2003, pg. 98.
- 1 2 "Directory Index: DeSoto/1936_DeSoto/1936_DeSoto_Airstream_Folder". Oldcarbrochures.com. Retrieved 2011-11-08.
- ↑ Kimes, Beverly (1996). standard catalog of American Cars 1805-1942. Krause publications. ISBN 0-87341-428-4.
- ↑ The Standard Catalog of American Cars: 1805 - 1945, Beverly R. Kimes and Henry A. Clark, Kraus Publications, 1996.
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