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Imperial (automobile)

 
Imperial (automobile)

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Imperial (automobile)



 
 
:for Chrysler branded models before 1955 and after 1983 see Chrysler Imperial
Chrysler Imperial

The Chrysler Imperial, introduced in 1926, was the company's top of the range vehicle for much of its history. Models were produced with the Chrysler name until 1954, and again from 1990 to 1993....


Imperial was the Chrysler Corporation's prestige automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
 brand between 1955 and 1975, with a brief reappearance in 1981 through 1983.

The Chrysler Imperial
Chrysler Imperial

The Chrysler Imperial, introduced in 1926, was the company's top of the range vehicle for much of its history. Models were produced with the Chrysler name until 1954, and again from 1990 to 1993....
 had been the company's most luxurious model, and in 1955 when the company decided to introduce a separate luxury brand, Imperial was the natural choice for the nameplate of the new spin off vehicle line.






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1955 Imperial
:for Chrysler branded models before 1955 and after 1983 see Chrysler Imperial
Chrysler Imperial

The Chrysler Imperial, introduced in 1926, was the company's top of the range vehicle for much of its history. Models were produced with the Chrysler name until 1954, and again from 1990 to 1993....


Imperial was the Chrysler Corporation's prestige automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
 brand between 1955 and 1975, with a brief reappearance in 1981 through 1983.

The Chrysler Imperial
Chrysler Imperial

The Chrysler Imperial, introduced in 1926, was the company's top of the range vehicle for much of its history. Models were produced with the Chrysler name until 1954, and again from 1990 to 1993....
 had been the company's most luxurious model, and in 1955 when the company decided to introduce a separate luxury brand, Imperial was the natural choice for the nameplate of the new spin off vehicle line. The Imperial became a separate make and division within the corporation. Imperial would see new body styles introduced every two to three years, all with V8 engine
V8 engine

A V8 engine is a V engine with eight cylinder s mounted on the crankcase in two banks of four cylinders, in most cases set at a right angle to each other but sometimes at a narrower angle, with all eight pistons driving a common crankshaft....
s and automatic transmissions, as well as technologies that would filter down to the lower rungs of Chrysler corporation's sister offerings.

1955-56: A separate make


1955 Imperial Rear
In 1955, the Imperial was launched and registered as a separate make, apart from the Chrysler brand. It was a product of the new Imperial Division of Chrysler Corporation. Chrysler introduced Forward Look
Forward Look

Forward Look was a design theme employed by Virgil Exner in styling the 1955 through 1961 Chrysler Corporation vehicles.When Exner joined Chrysler, the company's vehicles were being fashioned by engineers instead of designers, and so were considered outmoded, unstylish designs....
 Styling by Virgil Exner
Virgil Exner

Virgil Max "Ex" Exner, Sr. was an automobile designer for numerous United States companies, notably Chrysler Corporation and Studebaker. He is known for his "Forward Look" design on the 1955 through 1961 Chrysler products and his fondness of fins on cars for both aesthetic and aerodynamic reasons....
, who would define Imperial's look (and the look of cars from the other four Chrysler divisions) from 1955 to 1963.

The 1955 models are said to be inspired by Exner's own 1952 Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaeton
Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaeton

Three Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaetons were produced in 1952 by the Chrysler Corporation as ceremonial vehicles. They were styled by Virgil Exner and were in many ways a preview of the new "Forward Look" styling that would debut in 1955 on the newly separate Imperial marque and on other full-size Chryslers....
 show cars. The bodyshell was shared with that year's big Chryslers, but the Imperial had a wide-spaced split eggcrate grille (also used on the Chrysler 300
Chrysler 300

The Chrysler 300 is a full-size car. There have been many vehicles using the name, starting in 1955 and continuing to this day....
 "executive hot rod") and "gunsight" taillights mounted above the rear quarters. Models included a two-door Newport hardtop
Hardtop

A hardtop is a term for a rigid, rather than canvas, automobile roof. It has been used in several contexts: detachable hardtops, retractable hardtop roofs, and the so-called pillarless hardtop body style....
 coupe
Coupé

A coup? or coupe is a closed car body style, the precise definition of which varies from manufacturer to manufacturer, and over time. Coup?s are often hardtopped sports cars or sporty variants of sedan body styles, with doors commonly reduced from 4 to 2, and a Close-coupled sedan interior offering either two seats or 2+2 seating ....
 (3,418 built) and a four-door sedan (7840 built). The engine was Chrysler's first-generation Hemi
Chrysler Hemi engine

A Chrysler Hemi engine, known by the trademark Hemi, is an internal combustion engine built by Chrysler that utilizes a Sphere combustion chamber....
 V8 with a displacement of and developing .

The 1956 models were similar, but had small tailfins, a slightly longer wheelbase, a larger engine displacement of with , and a four-door Southampton hardtop sedan was added to the range.

1957–1959


1957 saw a redesigned and larger bodyshell available, based to an even greater degree on Virgil Exner's "Forward Look" styling (also used on other full-size Chryslers of the period). It featured a complicated front end (very similar to Cadillacs of the period) with a bulleted grille and quad headlights, tall tailfins, and Imperial's trademark gunsight taillights. The Hemi engine was available for the first two years that was enlarged to . For 1959, the third and final year of this bodystyle, a Wedge-head engine replaced it. A convertible was available for the first time on an Imperial and available in the mid-range Crown series. Sales were helped by Exner's "ahead of the competition" styling, with 1957 becoming the best-selling Imperial year ever.

Starting from 1957, Imperials were available in three levels of trim
Trim package

A trim package is an automotive package composed by a set of cosmetic embellishments to a vehicle. In some cases the trim package may include a specific model or ending name....
: standard Imperial, (also known as Imperial Custom) Imperial Crown, and the new, super-luxury Imperial LeBaron (the latter named after a coachbuilder, bought out by Chrysler, that did some of the best work on prewar Chrysler Imperial chassis, and not to be confused with the later, cheaper Chrysler Le Baron). Through the late 1950s and into the early 1960s styling would continue to become "Longer, Lower, Wider", with the addition some of the wildest fins ever put on a car.

The 1958 version is credited with the introduction of cruise control
Cruise control

Cruise control is a system that automatically controls the rate of motion of a motor vehicle. The driver sets the speed and the system will take over the throttle of the car to maintain the same speed....
, which was called "Auto-Pilot", and was available on the Imperial, and on Chrysler New Yorker and Windsor models.

The 1959 version introduced the swivel out front seats that were part of the six way electric front bench seat. Originally the seats would automatically swivel when the front door was opened activated by a cable but was soon removed and only could be activated manually by a handle.

For the largest collection of 1959 Imperial photographs go to http://www.1959imperial.shutterfly.com

1960-1963


The 1960 Imperial is in many ways the most emblematic and iconic Imperial ever made. The 1960 look featured a very "1950s" front fascia with a swooping front bumper, gaping mesh grille, giant chrome eagle, and hooded quad headlights, and tall rear fins. Some models had the optional simulated spare tire bulge on the trunklid, though this once-popular feature was largely shunned by Imperial buyers after it was made available on Plymouths in 1959. Its fins were wider, bigger than anything ever made, with the exception maybe of the 1959 Cadillac. These fins had bullet style tail lamps at the peak of the fin, with a halo of a chrome ring surrounding it. The grill and bumper on the front of the 1960 used large pieces of heavy chrome, and the 'furrowed brows' of the fenders over the double sets of headlights gave the car a ponderous look. The push-button transmission and elaborate use of chrome on the dash also made this car stand out.

The 1960 year has been portrayed in several notable movies: in Blade Runner
Blade Runner

Blade Runner is a 1982 in film Cinema of the United States science fiction film, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, and Sean Young....
, the 1960 Imperial can be seen on several occasions driving with a mix of exotic, old and post-apocalyptic contraptions on the road. In the movie Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events

Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events is a 2004 film, film director by Brad Silberling. It is based on the first three novels, The Bad Beginning, The Reptile Room, and The Wide Window, in Lemony Snicket's book A Series of Unfortunate Events....
, the 1960 Imperial is prominently displayed, being driven by the character Count Olaf
Count Olaf

Count Olaf is the primary villain of the children's book series A Series of Unfortunate Events . He is a stage and film actor as well as impresario....
. He abandons the children in the movie on railroad tracks, locked inside the 1960 Imperial. A black 1960 Imperial Crown (Limousine) was used to transport Jacqueline Kennedy during the funeral proceedings of John F. Kennedy.
Imperial Crown
Imperial Crown Rear
1961 brought a wholly new front end with "freestanding" headlights on short stalks in cut-away front fenders, and even taller "wings" at the rear. In 1962, the fins were replaced by straight-top rear fenders, and as in 1955, free-standing taillights atop them—but these were elongated, streamlined affairs. The front grille was once again split, and a large round Eagle hood ornament was fitted for the first time. The engineering team delivered as well, giving the 1962 models a new, slimmer TorqueFlite
TorqueFlite

TorqueFlite was the registered trademark name of Chrysler Corporation's three-speed automatic transmission, which was introduced late in the 1956 model year....
 automatic transmission, which allowed for a smaller transmission tunnel "hump" in the floor. This provided greater comfort for the passenger in the center seat up front. 1962 also marked the closing of Imperial's dedicated assembly plant; all later Imperials were built in the same facilities as standard Chrysler-brand models. 1963 saw the split grille disappear again, replaced by a cluster of chromed rectangles, and the taillights were now inside the rear fenders, in ordinary fashion, for the first time. In addition, the designers redesigned the rooflines of the two-door hardtops, giving them a similar appearance to the four-door models. 1963 models were the last Virgil Exner–styled Imperials. While most critics of automobile styling rate the 1955 through 1959 Imperials highly, the styling in this period was more questionable, which was reflected in Exner's increasing struggles with the Chrysler president and board.

Imperial frames through the mid-1960s

The main advantage of Imperials in the 1960s was their strength; their crashworthiness got them banned from demolition derbies
Demolition derby

Demolition derby is a motorsport usually presented at county fairs and festivals. They originated in the United States and quickly spread to other western nations....
 for being too hard to take down. Unlike the rest of the Chrysler Corporation makes (Plymouth, De Soto, Chrysler, and Dodge), that went to unibody construction in 1960, the Imperial retained separate full perimeter frames
Frame (vehicle)

A frame is the main structure of an automobile chassis. All other components fasten to it....
 for rigidity through the 1966 model year. These substantial frames were in the form of a full box with crossmember
Crossmember

A crossmember is a section of steel, usually boxed, that is bolted across the Body-on-frame of a vehicle, to support the engine and/or Transmission ....
s forming an "x". The drive shaft passed through a hole in the "x" frame. Interestingly, the emergency brake, in the traditional Chrysler manner, was in the form of a clamp that would take hold of the drive shaft, and was not connected to the rear drum brakes.

1964-1966


1966chryslerimperial
1966 Imperial
1966chryslerimperialrear
Chryslerimperialeaglecirca60s
In 1961, Chrysler scored a coup by hiring Elwood Engel
Elwood Engel

Elwood Engel was Chrysler Corporation's design chief from 1961 until 1974....
 away from Ford, where he had designed the 1961 Lincoln Continental
Lincoln Continental

The Lincoln Continental, an automobile produced by the Lincoln division of Ford Motor Company, began for the 1939 model year. Over the next 63 years, despite these cars sharing underpinnings with less-expensive Ford automobiles, Continental was usually a distinctively styled, highly equipped luxury car....
 (the same type of car in which President Kennedy was assassinated). Engel's design themes at Chrysler were a far cry from the fins of Virgil Exner, and instead featured the more familiar "three-box" design with more rectangular, angular cars with straight-line styling. The 1964 Lincolns and 1964 Imperials bear many of the same design hallmarks. A split grille returned, and the fake spare tire bulge moved from the trunk lid to the rear, incorporating the rear bumper in a very squared-off lump. A large boss in the center of it was actually the fuel filler door, covered with a large Imperial Eagle, with chromed bars going outward that terminated in the taillights. The base Imperial Custom model was now gone; the cars were now available as Imperial Crown or Imperial LeBaron levels of trim in four-door hardtop sedan, two-door hardtop Crown Coupe, or convertible versions. The LeBaron during this period had a formal rear window—reduced in size.

Changes for 1965 were largely confined to the front fascia and to trim. The split grille was gone, replaced by a large chromed cross and surround, and the headlights were inset into the grill behind glass covers (similar to that year's Chrysler 300
Chrysler 300 letter series

The Chrysler 300 "letter series" were high-performance luxury cars built in very limited numbers by the Chrysler Corporation in the United States between 1955 and 1965....
 and New Yorker models. 1966 saw a change to an egg-crate grill. Also introduced was the engine
Chrysler RB engine

The RB engine is a big-block V8 engine from Chrysler. It first appeared in 1959 and was a raised-deck version of the Chrysler B engine. The big-block RB lasted until 1978....
 instead of the that was standard from 1960.

Due to its large size and exceptional sturdiness, the Imperial is banned from many demolition derby
Demolition derby

Demolition derby is a motorsport usually presented at county fairs and festivals. They originated in the United States and quickly spread to other western nations....
 events.

1967-1968


1967 saw a completely new Imperial under the skin, as the car changed from a separate chassis to unibody construction to match the rest of the Chrysler Corporation makes. The styling kept the overall straight-line, sharp-edged Engel theme, but there were many detail changes intended to take Imperial away from Lincoln and into its own territory. The spare tire bulge was completely gone from the rear, although the boss remained. The practically full-width taillights spread out from it, straight, but ended before chrome-tipped rear wings. The front end was somewhat similar to 1966's, although the glass lamp covers were gone.

New this year was a new entry-level Imperial Sedan, with full frames around the windows unlike the hardtop frameless style of the other cars. A TNT version of the 440 engine was available as an option, delivering more power.

1968's Imperial was little changed from the previous year. The grille changed to a brightly chromed one with thin horizontal bars, split in the middle by vertical chrome and a round Imperial Eagle badge. At the rear, the horizontal bars over the taillights were gone. This was also the last year for the Imperial convertible.

1969-1971


The Fuselage Look was how Chrysler described the new styling in 1969. Instead of the square lines of 1964 through 1968, 1969's Imperial featured rounded "tumblehome" sides, bulging at the belt line, and tucking in down to the rocker panels. Unlike the 1960-1968 Imperials, it shared a basic body design with Chrysler's full-size line of that year to reduce costs. In keeping with the times, the look was sleeker, with a reduced, more subtle level of trim. For the first time, the lights were hidden behind doors, giving a fashionable at the time full-width grille look. The final year of the Imperial Sedan was in 1969, and it was also the first year for the 2-door Imperial LeBaron.

Under the skin, little had changed; construction was still the same unibody, the engine and transmission were the same, and the torsion bar front suspension was still used.

1970 models differed only in minor ways. The grill pattern changed to a larger eggcrate design; the front cornering lamps were now rectangular instead of the "shark gill" pattern of 1969. A wide chrome strip was added at the rocker panels, vinyl side trim was made optional, and (for this year only) the fender skirts were gone. The Imperial was the longest car available in 1970, at just over long, except the Cadillac Fleetwood Series 75. It was the final year for the Imperial Crown series; only the LeBaron would continue.

In 1971, there were only two models left, the Imperial LeBaron in two-door or four-door hardtop form. The Imperial Eagle at the front of the hood was gone, replaced by the word IMPERIAL; the deck lid badge said, for the first time, "IMPERIAL by Chrysler". The 1971 Imperial is notable for being the first production car in America with a 4-wheel Anti-lock braking system
Anti-lock braking system

An anti-lock braking system, or ABS is a safety system which prevents the wheels on a motor vehicle from locking while brake.A rotating road wheel allows the driver to maintain steering control under heavy braking by preventing a skid and allowing the wheel to continue interacting Traction with the road surface as directed by driver...
(ABS) from Bendix, a rarely selected option at that time. The 1966 Jensen FF
Jensen FF

The Jensen FF was a four-wheel drive Grand tourer automobile produced by the United Kingdom manufacturer Jensen Motors between 1966 and 1971. Far preceding the Audi Quattro, it was the list of automotive superlatives equipped with 4WD and an anti-lock braking system — the Dunlop Rubber Maxaret electro-mechanical system used hitherto...
 from England was the first production car in the world to have ABS. Both had ABS for almost a decade before the Mercedes-Benz S-Class
Mercedes-Benz S-Class

The Mercedes-Benz S-Class is a series of the largest sedans produced by Mercedes-Benz, a division of Daimler AG. The S-Class, a product of nine lines of Mercedes-Benz models dating since the mid-1950s, is the world's best-selling luxury flagship sedan....
 which claims to be the first production car with ABS1978.

Although the vinyl top was standard, for a short time a unique patterned vinyl top in a burgundy color was available as an option on burgundy-painted cars. It has been rumored that this top had actually been overprinted on waste "Mod Top" patterned vinyl, which had been available on some Dodge and Plymouth models in 1969 and 1970, but, according to Jeffrey Godshall, a Chrysler designer and frequent contributor to the magazine Collectible Automobile, this was not the case. With exposure to the elements, the burgundy overprint faded, and the pattern began to show through in a purple pattern. Chrysler replaced many affected tops with either white or black standard vinyl, but some survive.

1972-1973

1972's sheetmetal was completely new, although the styling was an evolution of the previous Fuselage style, somewhat less rounded. The front fascia was all new and imposing-looking, and the back featured vertical teardrop taillights for the first time, while the rear side marker lights were in the form of shields with eagles on them.

New federal bumper standards for 1973 meant large rubber over-riders front and rear, which added six inches (152 mm) to the car's length, making it the longest production car in North America for that year.

1974-1975


1974, Chrysler's 50th anniversary, saw the final redesign of the full-size Imperial. The new car had Chrysler's new trademark 'waterfall' grille, which started on top of the nose and flowed down. It was a shorter, lighter car than the previous year's, built on the Chrysler New Yorker
Chrysler New Yorker

The Chrysler New Yorker was a premium automobile built by the Chrysler Corporation from 1939 to 1996, serving for several years as the brand's flagship vehicles model....
 chassis. The 1974 Imperial was the first regular American passenger car to offer 4-wheel disc brakes since the 1949-1952 Crosley
Crosley

The Crosley was an automobile manufactured by the Crosley Corporation and later by Crosley Motors Incorporated in the United States from 1939 to 1952....
 and the Chrysler Imperial
Chrysler Imperial

The Chrysler Imperial, introduced in 1926, was the company's top of the range vehicle for much of its history. Models were produced with the Chrysler name until 1954, and again from 1990 to 1993....
s of the early 1950s; only the Chevrolet Corvette
Chevrolet Corvette

The Chevrolet Corvette is a sports car that has been manufactured by General Motors since 1953. The car was originally designed by Harley Earl, and named by Myron Scott after the fast corvette....
 had recently offered them previously. The ignition system was electronic, another first in the market, as was the optional burglar alarm
Burglar alarm

Burglar , Fire alarm, and safety alarms are all electronic today. Sensors are connected to a control unit via a low-voltage hardwire or narrowband RF signal which is used to interact with a response device....
. As well as the two regular LeBaron models, a 50th Anniversary 2-door LeBaron Crown Coupe was also produced, finished in Golden Fawn; only 57 were built.

For 1975, little changed but for the waterfall grill and the front bumper was enhanced, as well as a few detail improvements. This was to be the last year of the independent Imperial marque; instead, the same car was sold, rather more cheaply, for three more years as the Chrysler New Yorker
Chrysler New Yorker

The Chrysler New Yorker was a premium automobile built by the Chrysler Corporation from 1939 to 1996, serving for several years as the brand's flagship vehicles model....
 Brougham. Justifying the price differential over the full-size Chrysler had become increasingly hard to do as the cars became (to save costs) more and more similar over the years, and the costs of maintaining and marketing a separate, poorly selling marque were possibly just too high.

The final bow of the Imperial as a separate division of Chrysler came in 1975, brought on by rising oil prices that made the Imperial's weight and poor fuel economy a luxury that fewer people could logically embrace.

1981-1983


This generation represented a fairly radical attempt to reinvent the Imperial as a personal luxury car
Personal luxury car

A personal luxury car is a marketing term used to describe highly styled, luxury vehicle intended for the comfort and satisfaction of its owner/driver, sacrificing passenger space, cargo capacity, and other practical concerns for the sake of style....
. It is probably not coincidental that this came about after Lee Iacocca
Lee Iacocca

Lido Anthony "Lee" Iacocca is an United States businessperson most commonly known for his revival of the Chrysler Corporation in the 1980s, serving as President and CEO from 1978 and additionally as chairman from 1979, until his retirement at the end of 1992....
 took the helm at Chrysler, since he had been instrumental in creating the successful Lincoln Mark series for this market while he was at Ford in the late 1960s. Although the company was facing bankruptcy, Iacocca decided that "a new flagship would assure the public that Chrysler had a future."

The new Imperial was a smaller, two-door only package, sharing its 112.7" wheel base chassis with the second generation Chrysler Cordoba
Chrysler Cordoba

Chrysler Cordoba was the name of an intermediate personal luxury car coupe sold by Chrysler Corporation in North America from 1975 to 1983. It was the company's first model produced specifically for the personal luxury market and the first Chrysler-branded vehicle that was less than full-size....
 and Dodge Mirada
Dodge Mirada

The Dodge Mirada was released in 1980 as the replacement for the Dodge Magnum until its end in 1983. It was a mid-sized, rear-wheel drive coupe, and was one of the three cars based on the Chrysler J platform, with the other models being the second generation Chrysler Cordoba and the Imperial ....
. These were designated the J-bodies. The Imperial was so well-equipped that there were virtually no options, other than a choice of wheels and sound systems. The V8 was the only engine, but in a fuel-injected version. This particular generation of Imperial (1981-83) also did not bear the Chrysler name.

Unlike all other modern Imperials, it did not use the Imperial eagle logo, as that had been moved to the Chrysler LeBaron
Chrysler LeBaron

The Chrysler LeBaron was introduced in 1977 as Chrysler's lowest priced model, and the name was used on various Chryslers until 1995. The name originates from a 1930s coachworks bought out by Chrysler....
 model in 1977. Instead it bore the Chrysler Pentastar, as did all the company's products of that era. The Imperial and the Mark Cross Edition of the LeBaron Convertible were the only vehicles, however, which wore it as a jewel-like, cut crystal, stand-up hood ornament. Rather astoundingly, several of the cars raced (despite the absence of any Chrysler factory support) on the NASCAR
NASCAR

The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing is the largest sanctioning body of stock cars in the United States. The three largest racing series sanctioned by NASCAR are the Sprint Cup Series, the Nationwide Series and the Camping World Truck Series....
 circuit from 1981 thru 1985 (driven by Buddy Arrington
Buddy Arrington

Buddy Arrington is a retired NASCAR Grand National/Winston Cup driver....
, Rick Baldwin, Cecil Gordon
Cecil Gordon

Cecil Gordon was a NASCAR driver. He is not related to Sprint Cup driver Jeff Gordon although the two drivers drove in car number 24.He began in the Grand National series in 1968 and raced until 1985....
, Phil Goode, and Maurice Randall) and finished as high as sixth place in the summer 1982 race at Brooklyn, MI. NASCAR enthusiasts were probably surprised seeing a luxury car raced on the circuit. The reason for drivers racing an Imperial was that it was far more aerodynamic than the Dodge (Mirada) made at the time. Arrington's Imperial currently (as of fall 2008) resides in the Talledega (AL) NASCAR museum.

Competing models such as the Cadillac Eldorado
Cadillac Eldorado

The Eldorado model was part of the Cadillac line from 1953 to 2002. The Cadillac Eldorado was the longest running American personal luxury car as it was the only one sold after the 1998 model year....
 and the Lincoln Continental Mark VI had been downsized by 1981, so the Imperial was about the right size for its intended market, and the market was certainly there, since the Eldorado was at that time rising to the peak of its success. Considerable marketing was put behind the new model as well, including commercials and magazine ads featuring singer Frank Sinatra
Frank Sinatra

Francis Albert "Frank" Sinatra was an United States singer and actor.Beginning his musical career in the swing era with Harry James and Tommy Dorsey, Sinatra became a solo artist with great success in the early to mid-1940s, being the idol of the "bobby soxers"....
 (who convinced several of his Hollywood friends to buy them), a personal friend of Iacocca.

Nevertheless, the car did not take off. Other than its troublesome fuel injection system, it offered no technological advances, and the company's reputation for quality was still suffering from the disasters of the 1970s. Dealers often replaced the fuel injection system with carburetors. The rear styling, which had an odd, bustle-backed look vaguely similar to Cadillac's controversial 1980 Seville
Cadillac Seville

The Cadillac Seville is a luxury car that was manufactured by the Cadillac division of United States automaker General Motors as a limited production specialty model in the 1950s and 60s....
, was a styling hindrance. Competition from the much cheaper and mechanically similar (and more reliable) Cordoba, which was sold in the same showrooms, could have been a factor as well.

Perhaps most importantly for the prestige-driven top of the market, by the 1980s the well-publicized misfortunes of Chrysler had simply rendered the name unable to compete in the same class as Cadillac and Lincoln
Lincoln (automobile)

Lincoln is a brand of Ford Motor Company. Founded in 1917 by Henry M. Leland and acquired by Ford in 1922, Lincoln has manufactured vehicles since the 1920s....
. A marque which was most often associated in the press with the word bankruptcy was unlikely to attract buyers shopping for a car that symbolized affluence. The Imperial also failed because of its tremendously poor reliability. It was known to stall, suffer from premature engine failure, the electronics were known to fail rather continuously, and its overall reliability was just not up par with its competitors.

Today, due to their lack of success, these cars have some rarity value. Examples that did not have the fuel-injection system replaced are as apt to be troublesome now as they were then, though, and parts are scarce. Reportedly some Chrysler dealers used a carbureted
Carburetor

A carburetor or carburettor , is a device that blends Earth's atmosphere and fuel for an internal combustion engine. It was invented by Karl Benz before 1885 and patented in 1886....
  V8s instead of converting the 318s when making the switch, so this configuration can probably be considered "factory", even though the factory catalog does not show it.

Production figures


1981: 7,225 1982: 2,329 1983: 1,427

Imperial "FS" (Frank Sinatra Edition)

Despite the shortcomings of the car for this period, it did offer one very unusual distinction-a special edition named after a celebrity. The Imperial "FS" was a rare example of automotive history as it was one of only a handful of cars bearing a celebrity's name. Sinatra was a friend of Lee Iacocca and this version of Imperial certainly lauded this relationship. The car was available in Glacier Blue Crystal color only (said to be made to match the color of Sinatra's eyes) and had special "fs" (lowercase) external badging. Inside, 16 cassettes of Sinatra titles were presented in a specially-made Mark Cross leather case. Lee Iacocca had a 1982 Imperial converted into a limousine with a ) stretch and presented it to Sinatra as a gift. Sinatra was very fond of it and it remains (as of spring 2008) with the Sinatra family in Palm Desert CA.

Crown Imperial long-wheelbase limousines


During 1955 and 1956, a Crown Imperial limousine
Limousine

A limousine is a luxury car sedan or saloon car, especially one with a lengthened wheelbase or driven by a chauffeur. The chassis of a limousine may have been extended by the manufacturer or by an independent coach builder....
 model was also offered. With an extra of wheelbase, and seating eight (three in the front including the driver, three in the rear, and two on rearward-facing fold-down jump seat
Jump seat

A jump seat , officially known as an auxiliary crew station, is a seat in an aircraft Cockpit for individuals not operating the aircraft. These might include training pilots, off-duty crew in transition to another airport, government officials , or other airline staff....
s), these replaced the long-wheelbase offerings in all Chrysler marques. Only 172 were built in 1955 and 226 in 1956. They were the last Chrysler-branded limousines built entirely in Detroit.

From 1957 until 1965, long-wheelbase Crown Imperial cars would be finished by Ghia in Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
. Two-door hardtop bodies mounted on the more rigid convertible chassis would be shipped across the Atlantic, cut apart, lengthened generally by and reworked. Each took a month to build, and cost a fortune for the time; they sold poorly against similar Cadillacs, which were cheaper, had a more established reputation among limousine buyers, and were built by both Cadillac itself and a variety of competing coachbuilders on Cadillac commercial chassis.

In President John F. Kennedy's funeral procession in November 1963, at the front of the motorcade, carrying Jackie Kennedy and her children, was an Imperial limousine.

While the "Crown Imperial" limousines ended in 1965, Imperial Limo's continued to be made by other coach builders. Between 1967 and 1975 another 30 or so Imperial limousines were produced. The 1981-83 cars were also produced, two of which were stretched and five were lengthened .

In culture

  • In Point Blank (film)
    Point Blank (film)

    Point Blank is a 1967 in film crime film directed by John Boorman and starring Lee Marvin and Angie Dickinson, adapted from the classic pulp novel The Hunter by Donald E....
    , Lee Marvin
    Lee Marvin

    Lee Marvin was an United States film actor. Known for his gravelly voice, white hair and 6'2" stature, Marvin at first did supporting roles, mostly villains, soldiers, and other hard-boiled characters, but after winning a Academy Award for Best Actor for his dual roles in Cat Ballou, he landed more heroic and sympathetic leading roles....
     drives and repeatedly smashes a 1967 Imperial convertible.
  • In Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
    Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events

    Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events is a 2004 film, film director by Brad Silberling. It is based on the first three novels, The Bad Beginning, The Reptile Room, and The Wide Window, in Lemony Snicket's book A Series of Unfortunate Events....
    , Count Olaf
    Count Olaf

    Count Olaf is the primary villain of the children's book series A Series of Unfortunate Events . He is a stage and film actor as well as impresario....
     drives an Imperial Crown Limousine.
  • In the TV series The Green Hornet
    The Green Hornet

    The Green Hornet is a masked fictional crime fighter. Originally created by George W. Trendle and Fran Striker for an United States old-time radio in the 1930s, the character has appeared in other media as well, including Serial films in the 1940s, a network television program in the 1960s, and multiple comic book series from the 1940s to th...
    , Kato
    Kato (The Green Hornet)

    Kato is a fictional character from The Green Hornet series. This character has also appeared with the Green Hornet in film, television, book and comic book versions....
     (Bruce Lee
    Bruce Lee

    Bruce Jun Fan Lee was a Chinese people martial artist, philosopher, instructor, martial arts actor and the founder of the Jeet Kune Do combat form....
    ) drives the "The Black Beauty" rolling arsenal which is based on an Imperial LeBaron sedan.
  • In the TV series Mission Impossible Season 6 episode "Encore" (1971), William Shatner guest stars as a crime syndicate boss the IMF must convince has traveled back to 1937. An entire 1937 period set is constructed. In the final scene, a 1972 Imperial stops nose first just short of Shatner collapsed on the street. The Imperial, with its modern concealed headlights, dramatically shows he'd been tricked.
  • In Cannonball Run II
    Cannonball Run II

    See also Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy DashCannonball Run II is a 1984 comedy film released by Twentieth Century Fox....
    , J.J. Mclure and Victor Prinzi drive a 1982 Imperial Stretch 36" and disguise it as a "Nuke Tac Team" vehicle.


See also

  • Chrysler Imperial
    Chrysler Imperial

    The Chrysler Imperial, introduced in 1926, was the company's top of the range vehicle for much of its history. Models were produced with the Chrysler name until 1954, and again from 1990 to 1993....


External links