Well....I'm fast closing in on 84 in three months....have been a car & motorcycle buff the majority of my life (and as well as a paid mechanic)......and.... I'm somewhat embarrassed by my total lack of knowledge of so many of these various cars....although, motorcycles were my primary interest. As for myself, I have now driven a Pontiac Fiero ever since '89, and currently drive an '88...V6 with 5 speed tranny. In a couple of weeks, I will pilot it to my favorite casino 'town'...Laughlin NV....round trip.....1500 miles....to take advantage of a 'Free' three night's stay there. My 1st two Fieros, with the Iron Duke four cylinder/five speed, I routinely got an honest 40 mpg....but with this V6, I have to drive quite conservatively in order to attain 30 mpg...but it does have a 12 gallon fuel tank versus the 10 gallon of my other two. My main concern....there is a 210 mile stretch of highway in the east CA desert with very few gas stations, and cannot count on ANY of them even being open, so I will carry a full two gallon can along with me through that stretch. My ex-wife's uncle often talked about ALL of the cars he had owned, frequently ending by saying......"Never bought a new car in my life.....Let someone take the beating!", of course, meaning the huge and immediate drop in worth the car morphes into after being driven off the lot. I might also add....I bought a '58 GMC 3/4 ton pick up in 1970, drove it to Fairbanks, AK...and then on to Circle, where the road ended by a very wide Yukon River. Since then a bridge has been built there and one can continue on to the Arctic Ocean, if so desired. At the time, the early settlers named it Circle, becasue they believed they were on the Arctic Circle, but, in reality, they were about 10 miles short. About four months ago, I gave that pick up to my youngest son. Remember the Kaiser? I managed to pick up the 'ultra rare' 54 two door sedan...only 50 made. Someone had tried to install a Studebaker V8 in it, gave up and abandoned the project. I bought the car, (For $10) and, with much work and relocating the steering box, I installed a 58 Pontiac 370 V8. That car proved to be the 'most fun car' I've ever owned, and took many long trips all over the western USA with it. Once while in an isolated stretch of remote highway in Montana, I came up behind a stumble-bum parade of nearly ten cars, all driving well below the speed limit...with NOone attempting to pass. (I had my overdrive set up with a dash on/off switch) I waited for an opportunity of a long clear stretch, dropped it out of overdrive, and then nailed it. It wasn't until I was about to pass the 'lead' car (at Well above the speed limit).....that I suddenly realized it was a Montana Highway Patrol car. I passed, but chopped the throttle without ever touching my brakes, fully expecting to be pulled over. He followed me for over ten miles, but never stopped me...and, I learned MY lesson!....I later reasoned most likely he was already late and way overdue for his mid-afternoon coffee/doughnut break! BHE
I don't know that much about cars just from my childhood and family talking about cars!! I got 8 right!! I'm 70 yrs old. It was very interesting!! It's so nice to see these classic beauties well taken care of and still running!! Wow!
How you remember all that, they didn't show the back seat in any of them? JUST KIDDING MY LADY! I only got 9, 6 of those on multiple choice. You know your cars
SECOND OF TWO COMMENTS: Thanks for developing this "Classic Car Quiz". I subscribed, and anticipate future videos. I was born in the late 1940s, so growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, like the majority of Americans, I loved American cars and still do. The nation's love affair with the automobile was always strong, but became more prominent beginning in September 1945. The nation was starved for cars for four years during World War II in which the availability of cars for 99% of civilians was not possible. Manufacturing halted on February 2, 1942 as the factories switched over to producing war materials. Only a very few (doctors, farmers, police departments) could purchase stockpiled 1942 models due to their "essential" professions. During the 20th Century 40% of all job in the U. S. were directly related to the automobile industry in either production, repair, parts manufacturing, servicing, or sales.
@@marshaedwards1328Never been in a Shelby, but have wondered about them. I've longed to drive a Lamborghini....my wife once looked into renting one for my birthday, but couldn't find ANYplace which would rent one. I was born in '40, and learned to drive on a '49 Chevy, when my folks moved from Oregon to central CA in '56. My dad went a few months prior to us, (In a '47 Chevy) my mother rented the biggest two-wheel trailer she could find. Because she had a 'bad' right leg, which often swelled up to three times normal size, at the age of 15, the driving mostly fell upon my shoulders....with a '49 Chevy. Over the years she had canned 1500 quarts of various fruits...mostly Bing cherries. When we loaded up, it quickly became apparent it all wasn't going to fit, so we made the long 800 mile drive to our 'new' home, slept one night and then headed back to Oregon for a 2nd load, with just my mother and I, and with me doing 100% of the driving. Also, and THIS still bothers my wife to this day.....My mother ate every damn one of those cherries, often saying how good they were......DO you think she'd EVER share any? Never, not even once, any prayer of sharing ANY of them! Many times, over the years, I have returned to that area in Oregon, just to stare at where those huge cherry trees once stood.....everything gone now.....just a barren empty field. Because I've many times attended the McMenamins UFO conference in nearby McMinnville, OR (Only six miles away from where I once lived) I've often went by to look just to stir the memories. And, as to cars....I bought my first Pontiac Fiero in '89 (an '86 4 cyl/5 speed) truly a 'mid-engine sport car....and have driven a Fiero ever since '89. Currently drive an '88 V6 5-speed. It had belonged to a car dealership in Mankato, MN....because it was the last year Pontiac made them, he left it on his showroom floor for seven years, then moved it to Florida as his own personal car, where he drove in only while on vacation there. In 2013, I flew to MN, picked up the car and drove it back to my CA home (Only had 19K on it)....has been my primary driver ever since and is now nearing the 90K mark. This car was NEVER designed for a V6....recently my car mechanic (who has made me promise that when I do part with this car, give him first chance)....did a tune up on it and, in order to change one of the rear spark plugs, had to first remove the engine in order to do so! My younger brother also owned an 88 Fiero....in Idaho....when it came time for a tune up, simply took it to the dealership and let them do it. BHE
If you tried this quiz with the cars of today nobody would get many of them, they all look alike now. The only ones kids would get would be the Corvette, the Prowler and the Viper and the PT Cruiser and only because that was dog was unique. The PT Cruiser was a knock-off of the old 1954 chevy flower wagon. And very few would get the model year of any of them.
@@StephenViola-ib8dq sure, but the round marker/signal lights above the bumper say 70 or 71. The grill in the pic for the Camaro here is also the earlier version. It could be a 73, but if it is it has been altered at some point in it's life.
@@Zero-Fox-Garage All RS cars from 1970 to 73 have round marker/signal lights above the bumper, the only ones with split bumpers and lights below the bumper have been altered. Google it, you will see. It's a common mistake since it is done so often.
Excellent choices, since starting my 80 year I was able to identify all the way to 18 as it had similar front end to my 40 Ford business coupe. The last one got me as it was modern looking more alike a late 40’s after the war. The over arching take away as to the individual styling before the 90’s now seems only the taillights are different. Plethora of SUV’s with crashing resale values. Good mix of foreign and domestic. More English, European, and Japanese cars. Seems like the introduction of retro cars has diminished with the 2025 intro of exotic looking street legal cars like PONTIAC AND FORD . GMI ( flint General Motors Institute ) had displays of future proposed prototypes in models build by graduate students in the 50’s,60’s and 70’s ( corvette stingray ) 10 years before 1963 split window. Will watch for future postings.
I love this, guessed 14 of them, I’m 75 young, I sure miss these cars…I had a 1960 2-door Plymouth Sport Fury, I wish I had it today, it was a good car but bad on snowy roads and icy conditions….had to put added weight in back for better traction. I sold it to some dude for about a couple of hundred dollars, but later it ended up in the junkyard after he wrecked it. It was in great condition when I sold it to him, NO torn up seats, etc.,but later on, I found it in front of an apartment complex with busted and ripped apart seats and side panels busted. This was before ending up in wrecking yard. I warned him about its lighter weight issues on snowy roads…it had more power than the car could handle with those conditions, so the wheels spun out and needed more weight in back to offset the weight difference when driving on snowy roads. It was a good car for me, it’s a shame it ended up in a wreaking yard. I also owned an 1960 Oldsmobile Delta 88, which acted like a tank when it ended up being stuck in snow drifts. It could pull itself out when the tires had been cleared and a small path created for it. I loved both cars, but also included, I inherited a 1955 Chrysler New Yorker 4 door sedan after my dad passed away, it had a V8 engine, very powerful, and had only 34,000 original miles on it, but it needed some work on it which I couldn’t afford to do at the time. I sold it to a fellow who collected Chryslers. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🤔
I aced the quiz, but some of the choices were outrageous! Also, the years and models were off on several of them. The '72 Plymouth, for instance, was, in fact, a GTX. That's how you got the 440. The '62 Plymouth was a Sport Fury.
Pretty impressive....even better than I! I was born in '40 and should have known them all...but didn't. How about a Kaiser? Drove several, starting in 1960, with a '51. I had four, with my last one, the ultra rare 54 two door sedan (Only 50 made) I chucked the anemic Continental flat head six cylinder engine (fantastic boat anchor and also employed in many fork lifts) and, with a lot of effort, including relocating the steering box, Installed a 58 Pontiac 370 V8 engine. I drove that car all over the western USA for several years, taking many trips from CA back to MO, where my 1st wife's folks dwelt....and had more fun with that car than any car I've ever driven, including my current 88 Pontiac Fiero.....V6 5 speed. As my ex-wife's uncle often said when talking about cars....."Never bought a new car in my life....Let someone else take the beating!"....of course, referring to the huge drop in value immediately after being driven off the lot. Also....in an unrelated tale......in the early 60's, I was just becoming aquainted with the term, "Bible Belt" which refers to a swath of highy religious states in the SE corner of the USA. I asked my 1st wife's uncle if MO (Who lived there) is considered to be a part of the bible belt (It is)......he had NO idea of what I was even talking about and thought a bible belt was some kind of special belt one would wear so they could easily tote their bible around with them wherever they went! BHE
When I was stationed in Newburgh, NY, Stewart AFB, I bought a 1957 Chevy Bel Air from the Pharmacy NCOIC. This was in 1967 and the car was in mint condition. He was asking $350 which was a lot of money for an E-2 Airman! I got my mother to cosign on the credit union loan. My monthly auto loan was $35 a month. I'm 77 this year and this was a great memory! Same color as your image.
I did better than I thought I would. I scored 31. Started out hot guessing the first 3 immediately but cooled off quickly. Finished strong with the 914 Porsche.
I got 2 wrong the 1933 wraith and the 1973 Plymouth road runner l thought it was a Dodge charger usually road runners have a decal of a road runner on the rear quarter panel but that would have made it easy, this was fun, lm gonna get my girlfriend to play a drinking game with me and if she gets one wrong she'll have to take a shot, she knows nothing about cars LOL 😂
Got 19 out of 20. Only stumped me on the 1940's Studebaker. You will have to make the next edition much more challenging, was way too easy. But did enjoy it.
Us kids that grew up loving cars during that period nailed that quiz, with the exception of the foreign beasts we didn't care about. Showing just the front view on some of those cars made it tricky. Some of the cars you should of shown were the GTO, Sunbeam Tiger, Roadrunner and the 396 Chevy Chevelle.....but otherwise it was a decent group.
The packard and the Lincoln stumped me but it’s most likely due to growing up middle class . The rest I knew them but really couldn’t get the years. It was fun
This was sooo fun. My point total was 54. I got 18 absolutely without guessing or hesitation, two after the multiple choice. I think that's dang good! I also liked and subscribed. When the channel showed up, the first thing I saw was the '57 Chevy... I knew then that I was in!
I was able to pick out the car brands before the multiple choices answers and I picked the right car once the multiple choice answers were put up. I probable got a lot of this from my dad being a car enthusiast. I am from the vintage of many of these cars at 62 trips around the local star.
I got 5 wrong out of 19, u see I'm 71, so, I grew up with a lot of cars, plus I had a muscle car 1969 Dodge Charge R/T, 440 MAG, 4 SPEED HAURST SHIFTER, POSSY REAR, 2 DOOR BLOOD RED FULL BLACK VINYL, THE GAS CAP, SAT ON TOP OF THE DRIVER'S SIDE BACK FINDER. The only 2 weird things about this car was, 1-the guy who designed it the glove box is upside down, so when it's opened, everything falls out. The original owners, cut the seat belts out, it had the Chrysler mags, long taillights & 2 duel chrome tip exhaust pipes. The answer to your question is no, that car is long gone, yes, I still wish I had it, 1971 I Graduated, that car cost me $1,800.1 sweet machine.
At 73, I got all manufacturers correct, but missed one vehicle year by one year. This wasn't very difficult for anyone who grew up in southern California. I could have named most of the engines that most of these cars could have been ordered with also. Don't ask how well they stopped in the rain or if they overheated on mountain grades, you won't like my answers.
I missed the exact year of the Mercedes, but identified the year, make, and model of all the other cars within 2 - 3 seconds of the photos being displayed. BUT the Camaro Z28 is either a 1970 or a 1971 Generation two (2) Camaro [1970-1972]! It is DEFINITELY NOT A 1973 Generation three (3) [1973-1977] Camaro! The 1970 or 1971 Camaros were the ONLY two years in any of the six (6) Generations of Camaros [1967-2024] that you could either factory order the RPO Z28 SS 396 L78 [1970] "gross" 375 HP; or [1971] "net" 300 HP, or RPO Z27 SS 350 L48 [1970] "gross" 270 HP; or [1971] "net" 210 HP coupe or convertible with the front "Nerf Bars" or a full width front bumper at NO EXTRA CHARGE.
Don't forget RPO Z22 which was the Rally Sport package that was available from 1970 1/2 to 1973 which included the split bumper and lights above the bumpers.
Sorry 😢, I only got 11 right. I'm 73 but knows little about cars😊. But I did enjoyed trying to guess. I do know this, that back in the days, those were the best car's made out of the best material.
@StephenViola-ib8dq maybe you should check yours, instead of telling me to. I owned a 1970 for 3 years. I bought it new , color was hugger orange with black top.😛
I did miss two, with most being easy, but those last few getting trickier. There was one that I had owned one of. But yeah, it was a bit on the slow side.
Surprise I knew all the Foreign cars 😳Not into them! Misses four points 😵💫1928 Ford! One of the Plymouth!68yrs. Cars I’ve owned, range from 1941(Plymouth coupe) to 1955(Buick) 😬
those were the best years of the Automobile industry. Actually they were the best years of my life and i’m 86
Well....I'm fast closing in on 84 in three months....have been a car & motorcycle buff the majority of my life (and as well as a paid mechanic)......and.... I'm somewhat embarrassed by my total lack of knowledge of so many of these various cars....although, motorcycles were my primary interest.
As for myself, I have now driven a Pontiac Fiero ever since '89, and currently drive an '88...V6 with 5 speed tranny. In a couple of weeks, I will pilot it to my favorite casino 'town'...Laughlin NV....round trip.....1500 miles....to take advantage of a 'Free' three night's stay there. My 1st two Fieros, with the Iron Duke four cylinder/five speed, I routinely got an honest 40 mpg....but with this V6, I have to drive quite conservatively in order to attain 30 mpg...but it does have a 12 gallon fuel tank versus the 10 gallon of my other two.
My main concern....there is a 210 mile stretch of highway in the east CA desert with very few gas stations, and cannot count on ANY of them even being open, so I will carry a full two gallon can along with me through that stretch.
My ex-wife's uncle often talked about ALL of the cars he had owned, frequently ending by saying......"Never bought a new car in my life.....Let someone take the beating!", of course, meaning the huge and immediate drop in worth the car morphes into after being driven off the lot.
I might also add....I bought a '58 GMC 3/4 ton pick up in 1970, drove it to Fairbanks, AK...and then on to Circle, where the road ended by a very wide Yukon River. Since then a bridge has been built there and one can continue on to the Arctic Ocean, if so desired. At the time, the early settlers named it Circle, becasue they believed they were on the Arctic Circle, but, in reality, they were about 10 miles short.
About four months ago, I gave that pick up to my youngest son.
Remember the Kaiser? I managed to pick up the 'ultra rare' 54 two door sedan...only 50 made. Someone had tried to install a Studebaker V8 in it, gave up and abandoned the project. I bought the car, (For $10) and, with much work and relocating the steering box, I installed a 58 Pontiac 370 V8. That car proved to be the 'most fun car' I've ever owned, and took many long trips all over the western USA with it.
Once while in an isolated stretch of remote highway in Montana, I came up behind a stumble-bum parade of nearly ten cars, all driving well below the speed limit...with NOone attempting to pass. (I had my overdrive set up with a dash on/off switch) I waited for an opportunity of a long clear stretch, dropped it out of overdrive, and then nailed it. It wasn't until I was about to pass the 'lead' car (at Well above the speed limit).....that I suddenly realized it was a Montana Highway Patrol car. I passed, but chopped the throttle without ever touching my brakes, fully expecting to be pulled over. He followed me for over ten miles, but never stopped me...and, I learned MY lesson!....I later reasoned most likely he was already late and way overdue for his mid-afternoon coffee/doughnut break! BHE
I don't know that much about cars just from my childhood and family talking about cars!! I got 8 right!! I'm 70 yrs old. It was very interesting!! It's so nice to see these classic beauties well taken care of and still running!! Wow!
I got 14 of them. And I'm a 73-year-old female.....
Where have you been all my life, says the 72 year old man!😊
How you remember all that, they didn't show the back seat in any of them? JUST KIDDING MY LADY! I only got 9, 6 of those on multiple choice. You know your cars
@jeanbaker, really apologise! Was being stupid, thought be funny till read it. Please forgive an old fool
Really proud, probably can guess all of the cars now!
SECOND OF TWO COMMENTS:
Thanks for developing this "Classic Car Quiz". I subscribed, and anticipate future videos. I was born in the late 1940s, so growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, like the majority of Americans, I loved American cars and still do. The nation's love affair with the automobile was always strong, but became more prominent beginning in September 1945. The nation was starved for cars for four years during World War II in which the availability of cars for 99% of civilians was not possible. Manufacturing halted on February 2, 1942 as the factories switched over to producing war materials. Only a very few (doctors, farmers, police departments) could purchase stockpiled 1942 models due to their "essential" professions. During the 20th Century 40% of all job in the U. S. were directly related to the automobile industry in either production, repair, parts manufacturing, servicing, or sales.
Got them all. Born in 1948. Always been a car guy.
Born in 47. My dad had a model A and the car I learned to drive was a 1947 Chevy. My late husband and our son had a 1969 Shelby 427 CJ.
Good for you 🎉.
@@marshaedwards1328Never been in a Shelby, but have wondered about them. I've longed to drive a Lamborghini....my wife once looked into renting one for my birthday, but couldn't find ANYplace which would rent one.
I was born in '40, and learned to drive on a '49 Chevy, when my folks moved from Oregon to central CA in '56. My dad went a few months prior to us, (In a '47 Chevy) my mother rented the biggest two-wheel trailer she could find. Because she had a 'bad' right leg, which often swelled up to three times normal size, at the age of 15, the driving mostly fell upon my shoulders....with a '49 Chevy. Over the years she had canned 1500 quarts of various fruits...mostly Bing cherries. When we loaded up, it quickly became apparent it all wasn't going to fit, so we made the long 800 mile drive to our 'new' home, slept one night and then headed back to Oregon for a 2nd load, with just my mother and I, and with me doing 100% of the driving.
Also, and THIS still bothers my wife to this day.....My mother ate every damn one of those cherries, often saying how good they were......DO you think she'd EVER share any? Never, not even once, any prayer of sharing ANY of them! Many times, over the years, I have returned to that area in Oregon, just to stare at where those huge cherry trees once stood.....everything gone now.....just a barren empty field. Because I've many times attended the McMenamins UFO conference in nearby McMinnville, OR (Only six miles away from where I once lived) I've often went by to look just to stir the memories.
And, as to cars....I bought my first Pontiac Fiero in '89 (an '86 4 cyl/5 speed) truly a 'mid-engine sport car....and have driven a Fiero ever since '89. Currently drive an '88 V6 5-speed. It had belonged to a car dealership in Mankato, MN....because it was the last year Pontiac made them, he left it on his showroom floor for seven years, then moved it to Florida as his own personal car, where he drove in only while on vacation there. In 2013, I flew to MN, picked up the car and drove it back to my CA home (Only had 19K on it)....has been my primary driver ever since and is now nearing the 90K mark. This car was NEVER designed for a V6....recently my car mechanic (who has made me promise that when I do part with this car, give him first chance)....did a tune up on it and, in order to change one of the rear spark plugs, had to first remove the engine in order to do so!
My younger brother also owned an 88 Fiero....in Idaho....when it came time for a tune up, simply took it to the dealership and let them do it.
BHE
me too, got em all, born in 48 too
I was able to get 17 correct.thanks Larry Carroll
If you tried this quiz with the cars of today nobody would get many of them, they all look alike now. The only ones kids would get would be the Corvette, the Prowler and the Viper and the PT Cruiser and only because that was dog was unique. The PT Cruiser was a knock-off of the old 1954 chevy flower wagon. And very few would get the model year of any of them.
100%! But it takes forever for them to give the answer
Got them all but that 39 Studebaker. Car guy all my life, born in 54. 😊
loved the quiz…..but I love these wonderful old gems…truly amazing! ❤
I got all of them, but that Camaro wasn’t a 73, it was a split bumper 70-71 Camaro, fun game, oh, I’m 67 yrs old
Split bumper means it is a Rally Sport Z/28, from 1970 to 1973.
@@StephenViola-ib8dq sure, but the round marker/signal lights above the bumper say 70 or 71. The grill in the pic for the Camaro here is also the earlier version. It could be a 73, but if it is it has been altered at some point in it's life.
Exactly ! about that Camaro , l knew it was a Camaro but the year he said threw me
@@Zero-Fox-Garage All RS cars from 1970 to 73 have round marker/signal lights above the bumper, the only ones with split bumpers and lights below the bumper have been altered. Google it, you will see. It's a common mistake since it is done so often.
I got them all right But 3 were a total guess So Not sure how i should rate myself. Maybe i should score myself 17 right and 3 wrong or not sure.
Excellent choices, since starting my 80 year I was able to identify all the way to 18 as it had similar front end to my 40 Ford business coupe. The last one got me as it was modern looking more alike a late 40’s after the war. The over arching take away as to the individual styling before the 90’s now seems only the taillights are different. Plethora of SUV’s with crashing resale values. Good mix of foreign and domestic. More English, European, and Japanese cars. Seems like the introduction of retro cars has diminished with the 2025 intro of exotic looking street legal cars like PONTIAC AND FORD . GMI ( flint General Motors Institute ) had displays of future proposed prototypes in models build by graduate students in the 50’s,60’s and 70’s ( corvette stingray ) 10 years before 1963 split window. Will watch for future postings.
I love this, guessed 14 of them, I’m 75 young, I sure miss these cars…I had a 1960 2-door Plymouth Sport Fury, I wish I had it today, it was a good car but bad on snowy roads and icy conditions….had to put added weight in back for better traction. I sold it to some dude for about a couple of hundred dollars, but later it ended up in the junkyard after he wrecked it. It was in great condition when I sold it to him, NO torn up seats, etc.,but later on, I found it in front of an apartment complex with busted and ripped apart seats and side panels busted. This was before ending up in wrecking yard. I warned him about its lighter weight issues on snowy roads…it had more power than the car could handle with those conditions, so the wheels spun out and needed more weight in back to offset the weight difference when driving on snowy roads. It was a good car for me, it’s a shame it ended up in a wreaking yard. I also owned an 1960 Oldsmobile Delta 88, which acted like a tank when it ended up being stuck in snow drifts. It could pull itself out when the tires had been cleared and a small path created for it. I loved both cars, but also included, I inherited a 1955 Chrysler New Yorker 4 door sedan after my dad passed away, it had a V8 engine, very powerful, and had only 34,000 original miles on it, but it needed some work on it which I couldn’t afford to do at the time. I sold it to a fellow who collected Chryslers. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🤔
Great quiz...I missed 3 of them but learned my mistakes. Thank you!
I'm a 53 yrs. old female, I got 37 points!
Good show
Got 16 , a couple tricked me and two older ones had me stumped.
I aced the quiz, but some of the choices were outrageous! Also, the years and models were off on several of them. The '72 Plymouth, for instance, was, in fact, a GTX. That's how you got the 440. The '62 Plymouth was a Sport Fury.
I did pretty good I thought I only got 2 wrong, thank you that was fun. James Stone
got all correct . most early. need more odd models . ie: Nash arflight, Sudebaker commander, any Crosley, Willis anything, Bantam etc
Pretty impressive....even better than I! I was born in '40 and should have known them all...but didn't.
How about a Kaiser? Drove several, starting in 1960, with a '51. I had four, with my last one, the ultra rare 54 two door sedan (Only 50 made) I chucked the anemic Continental flat head six cylinder engine (fantastic boat anchor and also employed in many fork lifts) and, with a lot of effort, including relocating the steering box, Installed a 58 Pontiac 370 V8 engine. I drove that car all over the western USA for several years, taking many trips from CA back to MO, where my 1st wife's folks dwelt....and had more fun with that car than any car I've ever driven, including my current 88 Pontiac Fiero.....V6 5 speed. As my ex-wife's uncle often said when talking about cars....."Never bought a new car in my life....Let someone else take the beating!"....of course, referring to the huge drop in value immediately after being driven off the lot.
Also....in an unrelated tale......in the early 60's, I was just becoming aquainted with the term, "Bible Belt" which refers to a swath of highy religious states in the SE corner of the USA. I asked my 1st wife's uncle if MO (Who lived there) is considered to be a part of the bible belt (It is)......he had NO idea of what I was even talking about and thought a bible belt was some kind of special belt one would wear so they could easily tote their bible around with them wherever they went! BHE
Really enjoyed this quiz! I got more correct than I thought I would. I was once into cars a lot. At 71, not so much. 😢
I’m 74 years old and I got them all correct but had to wait for the selection on two of them.
17 out of 20 hahaha not bad for an old man to guess😅
Lol, ONLY an old man could guess. At least, that's why I was successful.
When I was stationed in Newburgh, NY, Stewart AFB, I bought a 1957 Chevy Bel Air from the Pharmacy NCOIC. This was in 1967 and the car was in mint condition. He was asking $350 which was a lot of money for an E-2 Airman! I got my mother to cosign on the credit union loan. My monthly auto loan was $35 a month. I'm 77 this year and this was a great memory! Same color as your image.
I loved my 55 chevy 2 dr hardtop, wish I still had it.
I got 10. This must be too easy for real car buffs.
Did you see all 20 cars ???
I GOT them ALL.
Missed 3. Loved '30s to' 70s. Knew them by heart. Grills, fenders and emblems dead give a ways.
Cool I only missed the Studebaker and the last Lincoln. Interesting stuff!!
clue, stude given away by the "S" badge
@@gigeo48 The '39 Champion grille was a bit clumsy, looked a lot cleaner by '41.
Got all the answers. Most of these cars were on the road as daily drivers when I was young, plus I am a car nut like my father was.
I got 3 wrong out of 20.
That was fun 😊
I missed 2 completely, got 12 before the choices came up.
Not bad for a 70 yr. old chevy guy!! 👍
18/20. Surprised myself.
Born in 1947 and have always loved cars. Got them all except I said Ford Model T instead of the A.
I did better than I thought I would. I scored 31. Started out hot guessing the first 3 immediately but cooled off quickly. Finished strong with the 914 Porsche.
well that was interestig. I did get all 20 although some I had to think about. Multi choice made it easier.
I got 17 right. My parents had 50’s drive Inn and I knew most of the cars that came on our drive. Best years of my life. I am 78 years young!
Thank yo sooo much i just love seeing all thise beautiful cars i miss them but i got 13 right which shocked me ohoo thank you
Loved the “PIMP” mobile
I got 2 wrong the 1933 wraith and the 1973 Plymouth road runner l thought it was a Dodge charger usually road runners have a decal of a road runner on the rear quarter panel but that would have made it easy, this was fun, lm gonna get my girlfriend to play a drinking game with me and if she gets one wrong she'll have to take a shot, she knows nothing about cars LOL 😂
I did 16 out of 20 that’s not bad at all
Got 19 out of 20. Only stumped me on the 1940's Studebaker. You will have to make the next edition much more challenging, was way too easy. But did enjoy it.
That was fun, i should have done better,lol. 17 on the score..
Us kids that grew up loving cars during that period nailed that quiz, with the exception of the foreign beasts we didn't care about. Showing just the front view on some of those cars made it tricky. Some of the cars you should of shown were the GTO, Sunbeam Tiger, Roadrunner and the 396 Chevy Chevelle.....but otherwise it was a decent group.
Missed the Studebaker! 19 out of 20 before the multiple choice answers!
i got 35 points. don’t know much about the English cars.🇺🇸🚗👍
I was born in 1942, so I am an 81 year old female. I found the test easy . . . 20 out of 20. I actually owned 4 of the cars shown.
I ended up with 15 points! I was close on a couple of them I missed. Thank you it was fun😉
Loved it,got 19 out of 20.missed on#18.
Got them all but 1 and that is the wrong camaro
I'M 73 AN I GOT 18 RIGHT...BROUGHT BACK A LOT OF MEMORIES..I USE TO HAVE A 1965 FORD MUSTANG....WISH I STILL HAD IT!!
Some very sweet cars! I missed three. The video was a bit slow, I either knew or I didn't. Again, beautiful automobiles. Thank you for sharing.
I did 43 .
I had 3 and 1 points answers.
Good clip.
I enjoyed this, I am sorry to say that I missed one of the group.
The packard and the Lincoln stumped me but it’s most likely due to growing up middle class . The rest I knew them but really couldn’t get the years. It was fun
I'm a 71 yr old female and I got 18 right!
I got 19 out of 20. Missed the Studebaker.
I got 18 right. Missed the Tudor and the Porche. I am a 71 year old classic car nut.😁
In one of your quizzes, including the Tucker, the correct answer for question 6 is a 57 FordFairlane, not 56. The 56 had round parking lights.
This was sooo fun. My point total was 54. I got 18 absolutely without guessing or hesitation, two after the multiple choice. I think that's dang good! I also liked and subscribed. When the channel showed up, the first thing I saw was the '57 Chevy... I knew then that I was in!
Thanks for the quiz. I only did so-so.
I got 15 of them. Not bad for a 61 year old woman! Beautiful cars. They sure don't make them like that any longer!!!
I've only missed five.
I was able to pick out the car brands before the multiple choices answers and I picked the right car once the multiple choice answers were put up. I probable got a lot of this from my dad being a car enthusiast. I am from the vintage of many of these cars at 62 trips around the local star.
I got 5 wrong out of 19, u see I'm 71, so, I grew up with a lot of cars, plus I had a muscle car 1969 Dodge Charge R/T, 440 MAG, 4 SPEED HAURST SHIFTER, POSSY REAR, 2 DOOR BLOOD RED FULL BLACK VINYL, THE GAS CAP, SAT ON TOP OF THE DRIVER'S SIDE BACK FINDER.
The only 2 weird things about this car was, 1-the guy who designed it the glove box is upside down, so when it's opened, everything falls out.
The original owners, cut the seat belts out, it had the Chrysler mags, long taillights & 2 duel chrome tip exhaust pipes. The answer to your question is no, that car is long gone, yes, I still wish I had it, 1971 I Graduated, that car cost me $1,800.1 sweet machine.
I got 56 cars!
My score was 42 I love old cars. I have a 1956 T-Bird in Fesita Red
A real beauty.
What beauties! I missed 8, but that's ok for a girl. Enjoyed this.
At 73, I got all manufacturers correct, but missed one vehicle year by one year. This wasn't very difficult for anyone who grew up in southern California. I could have named most of the engines that most of these cars could have been ordered with also. Don't ask how well they stopped in the rain or if they overheated on mountain grades, you won't like my answers.
I missed the exact year of the Mercedes, but identified the year, make, and model of all the other cars within 2 - 3 seconds of the photos being displayed.
BUT the Camaro Z28 is either a 1970 or a 1971 Generation two (2) Camaro [1970-1972]! It is DEFINITELY NOT A 1973 Generation three (3) [1973-1977] Camaro! The 1970 or 1971 Camaros were the ONLY two years in any of the six (6) Generations of Camaros [1967-2024] that you could either factory order the RPO Z28 SS 396 L78 [1970] "gross" 375 HP; or [1971] "net" 300 HP, or RPO Z27 SS 350 L48 [1970] "gross" 270 HP; or [1971] "net" 210 HP coupe or convertible with the front "Nerf Bars" or a full width front bumper at NO EXTRA CHARGE.
Don't forget RPO Z22 which was the Rally Sport package that was available from 1970 1/2 to 1973 which included the split bumper and lights above the bumpers.
I got 4 wrong 😜. A lot better than I expected I was going to guess
Got anything hard ? These are easy….I missed one…..maybe
Got them all!!
I got 19 of 20 correct.
One out of 20 I guessed incorrectly. The 23 model Ford
I got 19 out of 20. I am 68 , and I was a mechanic for 50 years.
Thank you 🙏 I liked them all & I did good 👍 on the answer and ☝️a lots of cars 🚙 name 🤷🏻♂️
I got 16 right out of 20
I got all of them correct
76 yo male, 18 right. But I guessed on several. Haha.
I scored 43 points, not bad for an old gut of 73.
drag it out, nice and slow. Better yet, use an appropriate medium.
The Tucker 48 was also known as the Tucker Torpedo
Tucker Torpeedee.
I got 60%, 78 years and I'm South African.
I got most all the makes & Models correct, but was off a year or 2 on most.
Sorry 😢, I only got 11 right. I'm 73 but knows little about cars😊. But I did enjoyed trying to guess. I do know this, that back in the days, those were the best car's made out of the best material.
Be careful the 73 Z28 didn't have a spit bumper,
Thats what I seen too, looked more like a 70.
It does if it is a Rally Sport Z/28 like this one.
Yes it was a 1970 camaro.. not z28.
@@Darrell-su2hr It is a 19701/2, Z28 with the Rally Sport package!! Check your facts!! you will see.
@StephenViola-ib8dq maybe you should check yours, instead of telling me to. I owned a 1970 for 3 years. I bought it new , color was hugger orange with black top.😛
I got all except no. 3 before the option . Which I believe gave me 369 points . I am 83.
39 points. I’m a 79 yr old wife of a carcoholic.
ThT was fun. I'm a woman 86 and got several correct
Got all 20 right
Got em all right.
Did better than I expected
I did miss two, with most being easy, but those last few getting trickier. There was one that I had owned one of. But yeah, it was a bit on the slow side.
Studebaker fooled me, 19/20.
Surprise I knew all the Foreign cars 😳Not into them! Misses four points 😵💫1928 Ford! One of the Plymouth!68yrs. Cars I’ve owned, range from 1941(Plymouth coupe) to 1955(Buick) 😬
I got 18 right. I’m 64
That Caddy ElDorado is so "customized" (to be nice), it's more like a..... nothing.
UGLY!!!!!!!!!
17 out of 20 for 44 points. Missed 3 completely. 75yo male
Missed 1. The 39 Studebaker Champion. Thought it was a Ford.
Charp,chevy
The Rolls Royce is not 1933, 1938 or later