Owned this car while in the Navy. 1955_1959. Bought it due to the cheapest car I could find. Drove from San Diego to Los Angeles more times than I can remember. Very comfortable ride and though not a fast ride it was good enough to keep up with traffic. No problems ever and sold the car for more than I paid.
My mother owned a 51' Henry-J ...lot of great memories in that car as a kid. My Grandfather and uncles owned a garage and Gramps had a Hudson Hornet and Gran had a Metropolitan.
I remember them. A family friend drove up from Chula Vista to the Monterey Bay area in the early fifties; father, mother, daughter and son. I think they had an inline flathead six cylinder engine. It was pretty smooth and comfortable. I remember the magazine advertisements that showed how hunters and fishermen could fold the seats back into a bed. Nice.
I love the '49 to '51 Nashes. The aerodynamic cars (Aerosedan, Aiflows, Zephyr's) just have an art-deco charm to them. People might find them quirky, but in their day it was a very modern looking car. They were good, quality cars, but not cheap. That combined with radical styling was always a recipe for trouble.
I had a 1961 Rambler that had over 150,000 miles on it in 1970. I drove it around and put another 75,000 miles on it. When I later sold it the mechanic he wanted it for a parts car. After he drove it awhile he liked it so much he used his original car as a parts car. He drove it until 2012 when he passed. The car had over 300,000 miles on it with only tuneups and oil changes. It is still on the road in New Jersey!! It had a 300 CID straight 6 with an oil bath air cleaner. What a car!!!!!
When I think of slow acceleration, I think of back in the day when a friend of mine had a Volkswagen Beetle with a rebuilt engine. It was dangerously slow, slow accelerating, a slow top speed of about 50-55, depending on the road surface, humidity, etc. Compared to that Volkswagen, this Nash was like the Millennium Falcon of Star Wars.
Back in the late 60's there was one of these Nash's parked leaning over on a bank down the road from my house. It was light faded green and there were weeds grown up around it. I was always fascinated with the old Nash's. Some years later it was gone. Probably taken to a junkyard not too far from my Mom and Dads house. I still think of it every time I go down that road.
How nice that you have kept such great care of that rare old Nash. It's amazing the original motor is still running so well. I'm old enough to remember seeing those old Nash cars on the road and thought they looked ridiculous. Today I can appreciate how special they are. As I remember Nash was an upscale car at the time.
When I was a kid, my Dad owned a 1951 Nash Ambassador 2-door with a Hydromatic transmission. I actually learned to drive on this car. It was fun to drive and I wish I had it today. It was a nice car. I really like your Nash as well.
Flathead six with three on the column is a glorious thing. I love seeing new hoses, battery, etc., but original paint. Got your priorities right! Beautiful car
I rode in one like this as a child. It was a great car, kept up with traffic in the day, and it was safe to be in. It rode very well, and gave the owner good fuel mileage.
My uncle Paul had one of those. He left it at our house for months when it needed a repair. He came back later and fixed it. It was really cool looking. It would be fun to have one of those to drive to car shows.
It's absolutely gorgeous. Saw a two door wagon version in some early 50s noir movie awhile back & fell in love. I think I remember the old Superman series used mostly Nash automobiles...
That would have been the little Nash Rambler. Nash had 3 car sizes back then Ambassador, Statesman, and Rambler. The big-3 automakers wouldn't have 3 sizes until about 10 years later.
On the floor starter, on the steering column manual shifting, I also barely remember the Rambler/Nash Dealerships. Changing a Front Tubed Tyre is insane without the now large opening.
this was the first car I can remember as a child , my mother learned to drive in it and scared my dad to death in the process , I had the whole back seat to myself , and loved it
Thanks for showing us your Nash. A high school buddy drove a 1949 2dr. 600 (mid 1960s ) that had been in the family since new. It had a smooth ride, was roomy with very comfortable seats inside, with the overdrive would cruise easily on the highway . The the small flathead six wouldn’t beat anything in a drag race , and the narrow track of the front wheels allowed more body lean on curves and turns than I had with a Plymouth of that vintage. Overall I thought these Nashes very nice cars.
The Statesman was not bought for speed, it was bought for it's gas mileage combined with it being a full-sized 6 passenger car. The Ambassador, with a larger Overhead 6, was quicker, but it also was not as economical and was more expensive to buy.
One might compare the Nash to the original 1980s Chrysler Mini Van. Both were intended to hold 6 people plus luggage. Both were economy cars. Neither was intended to go anywhere fast. They did well for their purpose. Economical family transportation for budget minded people.
@@michaelbenardo5695 This model also had front seats that released and folded backwards to join the rear seat and actually make a bed. If you were traveling and couldn't find a room for the night, you could sleep fairly comfortably in your car. There was an urban legend going around that some fathers would not let their daughters date a boy who drove a Nash for this reason, ie a "bed" was always handy. The "aero' early 50s Nashes were sometimes referred to as "bathtub" Nashes because their shape was reminiscent of an inverted bathtub. Bathtub Nashes, and the ca. 1950 "airplane nosed" or "bullet nosed" Studebakers had some of the most interesting styling of this era.
When I was a kid, we had a 1949 Nash that looked a lot like that. I don't remember much about it; my strongest memory was me bawling my eyes out because my dad wouldn't take me along when he traded it in. I couldn't have been more than 5 years old, so around 1960-61. In our family, it was always "the old Nash."
The nostalgia for old timers is the sound of that six cylinder engine reving up to the shift point. No tachometer. Just the sound of the engine. No one thought about 0-60 times until people like Tom McCahill of Mechanix Illustrated started using the number as a reference in road tests.
Those old Nashes were built like tanks....and weighed about the same too! My parents had a Nash Rambler when we were kids and my mom actually cried when we had to finally take it to the junkyard.
@@rustyoldchevy1149 Yep. Bessie was her name. The car, not my mom! I was just an infant so I don't remember this, but knowing my mom I can definitely picture it happening. LOL.
I had a 1955 Chevy 6 cylinder with glide transmission. There was no power in my power-glide. I told a kid in high school to time me 0 - 60. When I asked him for my time, he laughed and said he didn't know - he had to wind his watch before I finished. Most cars were meant to provide basic transportation and not the need for speed.
@@rustyoldchevy1149 Even the Powerglide early V8s were liable to be embarrassed by the likes of Rambler 232 Six in 0 - 60 acceleration although with the manual transmission Chevy I don't think the Rambler would stand a chance--
spent a few years driving around in one of these with a friend...roomy, economical and slower than a vw... it was green "the bean" is what we called it..amazing cars of another time and mind set
Airflytes have such a unique, beautiful styling that speed isn't the most important. I'd love to test drive one. Thanks for that cool clip and hello from Switzerland!
My my highshcool teacher Miss Beasly drove a 51 Nash .She was just starting out teaching.After about 6 months she got s 64 Mustang and really impressed us boys.
I remember the Airflyte Nashes as a kid in the '50s. We called them and '48-'50 Packards "bathtubs." When I started driving, I learned the hard way NEVER get behind a bathtub Nash going up Cajon Pass out of San Bernardino on the old US 66-91-395 expressway...you'd wind up with the trucks going up that grade! My '50 Ford Custom (239 flattie) just didn't have enough poop (100 HP) to get out in the fast lane with all the Cadillacs, Chryslers and Oldses that were swooshing around us. So we'd wind up eating diesel smoke. The ultimate embarrassment was when we got passed by a brand new GM SceniCruiser Greyhound.
It's style kinda grows on me. My dad grew up with these cars and said they were a very smooth reliable auto. Your drive showed that was true. It ran pretty darn good for an auto that age.
That was wonderful to watch. I miss the variety of cars that used to be on our roads, today they all look much the same (due to Federal regulations mostly.) It's great that you keep that old car in such good condition, and I love those old 3-speed w/overdrive cars. Some of them would really burn up the road! One thing that maybe you didn't know: (From Wikipedia: Nash Ambassador)-- "Charlotte Speedway on April 1 (1951)- Curtis Turner won the 150-lap NASCAR Grand National race with his Nash Ambassador.[62] This was the only first-place finish for the large-sized Nash Ambassador in the NASCAR Grand National series.[63] The car driven to victory in the 400-lap NASCAR Short Track Grand National race in Lanham, Maryland by Tony Bonadies on July 14, 1951, was the new compact-sized Nash Rambler." My father once had a Nash Rambler, but the car I really liked was my grandmother's Hudson Hornet. What a cool car!
I got to drive one of these about 1970, maybe the smoothest i have ever driven, the stuff they are making today cannot compare to the heavy cars of the 50's.
A lot of people don't understand how to start the car. You might pull the throttle out a little, maybe the choke, turn the key on and the actual starter button was on the floor. In this case, the starter button was on the floor under the clutch. This means you couldn't accidentally engage the starter with it in gear. Now, you could if you tried and it probably would move the car forward a bit.
Was a fun test . I say don’t break it just to go a mph faster . My neighbor’s across the street in Michigan where I grew up had several Nash Rambler models . The Mother loved these cars 🚗. She even had a little convertible once . But didn’t seem to keep that one very long . Probably the short summer season was the reason she got another hard top ?
Awesome. Was shocked to see where you were driving at. I pass the ice house all the time. I live just east of there. We must be living close. My dad had the 1951 2dr Plymouth, flat head six when I was growing up.
Grand Dad had one that he pulled a camper trailer with. And used it for hunting trips!!!!!!!!!!!! Of course i've only got the stories and photo's.....I was born in 58'...great video!!!!!!!😎😎
A Mercedes 240D from the early 80s has about the same 0-60 time. It’s really not a problem. Just be careful when merging onto a highway, and don’t Ty overtaking on a two lane road unless you can see way ahead. Long steep hill will have you going real slow too.
Our neighbor bought one new and my cousin had one. As a petulant 10 year old I thought it was a a cartoon car. Upside down bathtub, I said. Now, of course, it is really interesting, if not ready for the NASCAR track. Thanks, Lloyd!
These cars were not about the 0-60 but about comfort, quiet and dependability. They would get you there comfortably and relaxed. They are great cars. Thanks for the ride along.
Wonderful vehicle and channel. Had one exactly like this one not long ago and of course you sparked a lot of memories. Thank you. I have to subscribe now!
I love these, they have all tbe potential to make a great kustom, so unique. Edit: and btw, that old boat anchor sounds absolutely amazing, I'm quite jealous I must admit! 😅
Thanks for sharing your Nash! Zero to sixty in about Seventy One seconds. Drove my 1948 two door fastback oldsmobile straight six to Pennsylvania and back from Wisconsin. Top speed of 77mph according to Ohio trooper without a sense of humor. At every stop it attracted wrinkle misers to complain I had moved the dummy clutch. "Mine is on the road. Where's yours." Try to be sympathetic to those wishing to reminisce but don't take crap. XP Averaged 22 miles per gallon without regard to speed or conditions. One instance of dieseling in 90 degree plus weather. Probably needed more additive running that hot. Without the back seat on long trips you have plenty of storage. Otherwise get a trailer. Plenty of torque but no passing gear. Thanks for sharing your Nash!
In this day & age all the off brand oddball cars from the past have lost their bad stigma & become historical pieces of automotive evolution. This Nash survivor is just oozing with art deco coolness!😎👍
Nash made some of the coolest cars. If you want to see the ultimate, look up Nash Ambassador Brougham. It has two "theatre" seats in the rear that are like armchairs, turned slightly inward to each other. Fantastic!
Cute car. The chrome patina, almost endearing. 85hp when new, I doubt it would be 30% of the original, not half. But doesn't matter. This car is a timepiece.
Is that with or without the air on? I don't think people bought these cars for speed. Faster definitely doesn't mean better. I do love this Nash! Reminds me of the good old days. How I do hate the twenty-first century. Keep the great videos coming. Always fun stuff.
In a town where I used to live there was someone who kept three old Nashes on blocks in their front yard (I nicknamed the place Airflyte Ranch). Of the 1949-'51 Nashes I think the '51 was the best looking but lacks the Uniscope instrument panel of the earlier years. The AC compressor in the featured car is obviously aftermarket. Was it engaged during the acceleration run?
I drove one of these Nashs to my High School Graduation in 1961 Coral Gables High School Miami, Florida....It belonged to my Mother and Father's best friends parents....
She does good for an old car! Something that most people don't know is that until the mid Fifties, the NATIONAL speed limit was only 45mph... That's on rural roads and what little freeway there was at the time. If anyone gets the chance to see a pre-1956 movie that features say "hot rods", notice that the kids driving those hotrods only do about 80 while running from the police... Even old movies featuring motorcycle gangs, the clubs only run at about 55 or 60 when traveling... There was an old saying that people used up into at least the Eighties when somebody was talking really fast, or someone was moving around quickly... They'd say "so and so was going like 60"... So apparently actually "going 60" really was MOVING back in the Forties and Fifties. What really boggles my mind THESE DAYS, is how people b*tch about the price of gasoline, but then are compelled to hammer the car as soon as the light turns green, then drive it like they're going to a fire until the last second before they come to the next red light, where they nosedive the damn thing because they're on the brakes so hard... Then floor it as soon as the light turns green again. Over and over and over... But they still squeal about the price of gas😕
City driving: everybody guns it from one stoplight to the next, because all the other traffic is doing the same to jockey for position. Expressway driving: You can't leave a safe interval in front of you because other cars will be filling it up changing lanes in an endless quest to improve their positions. So everybody tailgates to make sure there is never enough room for another car to cut in front of them. They tailgate at any speed and any road condition. You will see this even in light traffic, the cars behind will always go fast as necessary to stay on top of whatever is in front of them. On 2 lane highways they will form pods. The pod will stack up tightly behind something slow like a truck to make sure you can't pass from behind them without having to overtake 7 cars and the truck in 1 maneuver, which means you will have to do 90 in the passing lane, then you become the villain who is driving fast, then everybody curses you and hopes you get a ticket. It is no fun to drive slow when there is nothing behind you. Slowpokes on 2 lane roads will instinctively speed up when the road changes to 4 lanes and everybody can pass easily. Slowpokes are unhappy people who feel better about their miserable existence when they see frustrated traffic in their rear view mirrors. Then there's the drivers who use the brake to regulate speed. Follow one of these drivers and you'll notice unneeded braking several times per mile. Then later they will wonder why the car always needs a brake job.
There was not National Speed Limit. Most mulit-lane highways had a 50 MPH speed limit, until the war. Then a national speed limit of 35 MPH was put in effect for the duration, then it was lifted, and the speed limits soon were as high as 70 out west.
You don't have to ever get out of the Nash,, the front seat fully reclines with the back and turns into a full Double Bed,, like a real bed. really! at least on the 1950 model Airflight,, all you need is some bedding, a drive through restraunte and a good supply of adult diapers & that dashboard with the uniscope vision can be yours 24/7, love these things got one in my front yard without a speck of paint on it. hasnt ran since 62 but i just like looking at it. yard art
I think the *Bonks* on the record are for the salesman to advance the slide in the carousel with every bonk. [My Dad was in PR/Advertising. He had an account with a Chicago Nash/Rambler dealer in the early '60s. He'd take me along on Saturdays. Sometimes my more life-like toys got used as props in local TV commercials.] It's that Air Conditioner that's robbing all your power.
@@desertbob6835 Yeah. You're right. The Kodak Carousel 35mm slide projector system was not developed until 1965. Might as well have been Magic Lantern glass plates.
My older siblings begged my parents for their own car to drive to high school, so one day my dad went to an auction and came home with one of these. My sister cried! I mostly remember the huge back seat and very slow speeds.
Despite their claims, young people back then had an acute vanity, image and personal power problem ( much like today), were very dense & narrow minded to the point of being complete imbeciles and idiots in the 60's & 70's I went to high school on the beach in So- Cal from 1966- 1970 enjoyed both walking and riding bicycles, At 16 the only cool thing i remember besides girls, was surfing and sailing, back then you could buy one of these Nash's or most any vintage car or truck that was built before 1956 & still in good running shape for $50-$100 max, When i was 16, I bought my first '37 Harley Knucklehead in very good to xlnt original shape for $250, and a 1956 porsche speedster with very low mileage for $750, rode and drove the wheels off of both those slow machines, The '56 porsche was alot like the Nash an upside down bathtub looking thing,, Today that Knucklehead is probably worth $60k and the Porsche Speedster upwards of $250k or much more, As a kid i had a dog pile of old cars, trucks and bikes that did'nt cost much because people thought they were old ugly & not cool, of coarse at 16 i had a good $3 per hour job too, when minimum wage was 95 cents an hour and could afford to have fun, today it's just go fast for the brand that owns you, Nothing has class, everything looks like angry little plastic insects from some Sci-Fi movie set.. Still driving my old 1941 Chevy 1.5t short wheel base WW2 truck, and a well beat 1990 Geo metro convertible, 3 cylinder 5spd, that gets 50-60 mpg all day long ( & the newest car i have ever owned),, that's all i have left after nearly 60 years & countless miles and probably 300++ cars, trucks and bikes. though i never hoarded the stuff or kept non running project vehicles & only had 2 or 3 at a time. Though bikes were more my thing & passion i had some really weird and now rare cars back in the day. The Izetta with a 1500 vw transplant and Citroen CV2 were probably my favorite little micro freak cars, The 1950 Nash my all time favorite Tuna-boat. & a 1981 Suzuki Samurai.Jimny my favorite 4x4..
I just counted to myself and had 28 seconds. lol... I love these old cars. They are fun to just cruise around in and heck, they can keep up with traffic once you get them going usually unless you are going up a mountain road. Thanks! Subscribing now.
Suzuki made a 2-cylinder street bike, the RGV250 V23 Gamma, that was only 250cc. It was a water-cooled 2-stroke engine. This was in the mid-1990s, before 2-stroke engines were outlawed. That engine could put out 80 horsepower if tuned correctly. If 2-stroke engines were still being made - in this time, 30 years later - we would have 250cc motorcycles putting out 120 horsepower. This car is for the record books. I believe Nash and Rambler had a connection somewhere in history. .
My grandpa had this one! Most people were sane back then and drove under 50 mph. Only idiots and jet pilots worried about speed back then. However, if you really wanted to see a snail crawl vehicle, look at the 1960s VW van. It could go from zero to 60 in 2 weeks, 8 hours, and 10 minutes (on a good day)!
Keep in mind that 50 mph was the prevailing highway speed in the early 1950s. This car was built to get good gas mileage. Sixty mph was really fast at the time.
There was a little old lady in my home town that had one of these beast and a Nash Metropolitan that she drove until just before she passed in the late 70's .
Fyi, You might try mediun and fine steel wool on the chrome on that dash. I had good luck bringing out the luster and shine of the chrome trim. Works on bumpers too!
Must of been nice to have such a wide variety of good American cars to buy back in the day. I am 61 and I have witnessed the demise of to many companies Oldsmobile, Plymouth Mercury Pontiac even Saturn and others. I don't blame the Japanese cars though they forced American cars to get better. It just makes me wonder what a 2023 Studabaker would have been like or can you imagine a 2023 Duesenberg or Cord?
Keep in mind, in the late 50’s and into the 1960’s, US manufactures considered 0 to 60 mph times of 19 seconds as acceptable performance. And V8 cars often had 0 to 60 time of 12 to 16 seconds right off the showroom floor. Up until into the 1980’s, many economy cars still had 19 or 20 second 0 to 60 times for the 4 and 6 cylinder cars and trucks. It was not uncommon for 0 to 60 mph times to be the same as the time to reach 1/4 mile. Many V8 equipped cars had 1/4 mile times in the 15 to 18 second range. This old Nash still had some decent acceleration up to about 50 mph. I’d did slow down quite a bit between 50 and 60 mph. Remember, the top speed of a flathead equipped statesman was about 78 to 82 mph. And it took quite a while to get there.
They were great to get laid in at the drive in movies as the front passenger seat folded down into a bed😊 Sales men used them and wouldn’t have to pay for a motel room. Fun and practical for the times.
Best time was around 27 seconds!
Just think how much more it would have been if it wasn't "aerodynamic"!
I noticed that in the description box.
Can the stoping time, beat that?
Gotta love a car when you can measure it's 0-60 with a sundial.
The test wasn't really fair. Like you said, the engine is old and tired. I'll bet when the car was new it could have done 0-60 in 25 seconds.
Owned this car while in the Navy. 1955_1959. Bought it due to the cheapest car I could find. Drove from San Diego to Los Angeles more times than I can remember. Very comfortable ride and though not a fast ride it was good enough to keep up with traffic. No problems ever and sold the car for more than I paid.
I'm glad to hear it! This car has been good to me as well.
My uncle had a1954 Nash,and it was a horse!
Who did ?
Did it have the bench seats which laid flat to use as a bed? Jay Leno covered this on the Ambassador, I think.
Who owned?
Smooth, quiet, dignified and air-conditioned. With the rear seat legroom of a stretch limousine, all in 1951. Quite incomparable.
I agree! (I did add the a/c though)
@@rustyoldchevy1149 And a new aluminum radiator
I grew up with these old cars. Rode to school in a packard, and owned a studebaker. I love ‘em, but the ⛽️ mileage was terrible.
My mother owned a 51' Henry-J ...lot of great memories in that car as a kid. My Grandfather and uncles owned a garage and Gramps had a Hudson Hornet and Gran had a Metropolitan.
@@mauricepowers8079 Such sweet memories you must have my friend?
I'm mostly amazed by how dignified the car sounded even while flooring it!
I remember them. A family friend drove up from Chula Vista to the Monterey Bay area in the early fifties; father, mother, daughter and son. I think they had an inline flathead six cylinder engine. It was pretty smooth and comfortable. I remember the magazine advertisements that showed how hunters and fishermen could fold the seats back into a bed. Nice.
I'm an O-L-D Gearhead(80 yrs old). I think that was pretty respectable. And, that ole flat head is pretty quiet. thanks for sharing.
Hey Bruce. I liked your comment. Hope you're having a good day.
Thanks for watching!
I'm also an old gear head(82 yrs young)I'd love too have it as a daily driver.🗽👍
For an engine with less than 200 cubes in a full-size car, it was.
In case anyone was curious about the actual times, it looks like 27 seconds for the first run and 30 seconds for the second run.
I was close I thought 25 seconds
I'm amazed that the cinderblock could reach 60 at all!!!!!
That's about what I got. But, yes, that's pretty bad.
A good driver, meaning somebody who knows how to shift gears, can do it in about 25 seconds.
@@Marc816 All American-made cars can reach at least 80 MPH. It is some small foreign 4 cylinder cars that may not be able to reach 60.
I love the '49 to '51 Nashes. The aerodynamic cars (Aerosedan, Aiflows, Zephyr's) just have an art-deco charm to them. People might find them quirky, but in their day it was a very modern looking car. They were good, quality cars, but not cheap. That combined with radical styling was always a recipe for trouble.
Thanks for watching! It seems that such modern styling in cars always ages very quickly.
These were raced with some success.
Great comfort, like riding on a cloud. Also easy to repair.
@@rustyoldchevy1149 Yup, what is ultra modern today is not so tomorrow.
@@johnreitz5676 The Ambassador, yes, but not this Statesman.
I had a 1961 Rambler that had over 150,000 miles on it in 1970. I drove it around and put another 75,000 miles on it. When I later sold it the mechanic he wanted it for a parts car. After he drove it awhile he liked it so much he used his original car as a parts car. He drove it until 2012 when he passed. The car had over 300,000 miles on it with only tuneups and oil changes. It is still on the road in New Jersey!! It had a 300 CID straight 6 with an oil bath air cleaner. What a car!!!!!
Ramblers were very good economy cars! They seem to be mostly forgotten these days.
I love these cars! When I was little I used to wonder how they could turn with the fenders coming down over the wheels!
They had a pretty wide turning circle and a narrow front track.
What a great piece of American automobile history. Thanks a lot for the video. Colin UK 🇬🇧
Glad you enjoyed it!
When I think of slow acceleration, I think of back in the day when a friend of mine had a Volkswagen Beetle with a rebuilt engine. It was dangerously slow, slow accelerating, a slow top speed of about 50-55, depending on the road surface, humidity, etc. Compared to that Volkswagen, this Nash was like the Millennium Falcon of Star Wars.
Worse yet try a diesel Rabbit- even slower than a Beetle.
Back in the late 60's there was one of these Nash's parked leaning over on a bank down the road from my house. It was light faded green and there were weeds grown up around it. I was always fascinated with the old Nash's. Some years later it was gone. Probably taken to a junkyard not too far from my Mom and Dads house. I still think of it every time I go down that road.
How nice that you have kept such great care of that rare old Nash. It's amazing the original motor is still running so well.
I'm old enough to remember seeing those old Nash cars on the road and thought they looked ridiculous. Today I can appreciate how special they are.
As I remember Nash was an upscale car at the time.
Thanks! They were a truly forward thinking and economical to drive car at the time!
A pretty cool car if you ask me.
The streamlined design, the nice panel gaps.
Looks like a high quality product .
Thanks! I love this era in car design.
@rustyoldchevy1149 I do too. I'm glad you gave us a good look at the dashboard, too. It's very nice looking.
The panel gaps stood out to me too
This encapsulates in a tangible way why things were better in the past.
When I was a kid, my Dad owned a 1951 Nash Ambassador 2-door with a Hydromatic transmission. I actually learned to drive on this car. It was fun to drive and I wish I had it today. It was a nice car. I really like your Nash as well.
Thanks! I wouldn't mind having an Ambassador as well!
Flathead six with three on the column is a glorious thing. I love seeing new hoses, battery, etc., but original paint. Got your priorities right! Beautiful car
Thanks!
I rode in one like this as a child. It was a great car, kept up with traffic in the day, and it was safe to be in. It rode very well, and gave the owner good fuel mileage.
My uncle Paul had one of those. He left it at our house for months when it needed a repair. He came back later and fixed it. It was really cool looking. It would be fun to have one of those to drive to car shows.
It's absolutely gorgeous.
Saw a two door wagon version in some early 50s noir movie awhile back & fell in love.
I think I remember the old Superman series used mostly Nash automobiles...
Thanks for the memory. The "Lois Lane" Convertible was uniquely beutiful.
That would have been the little Nash Rambler. Nash had 3 car sizes back then Ambassador, Statesman, and Rambler. The big-3 automakers wouldn't have 3 sizes until about 10 years later.
On the floor starter, on the steering column manual shifting, I also barely remember the Rambler/Nash Dealerships. Changing a Front Tubed Tyre is insane without the now large opening.
this was the first car I can remember as a child , my mother learned to drive in it and scared my dad to death in the process , I had the whole back seat to myself , and loved it
Thats a great story! These are really easy to drive too!
Thanks for showing us your Nash. A high school buddy drove a 1949 2dr. 600 (mid 1960s ) that had been in the family since new. It had a smooth ride, was roomy with very comfortable seats inside, with the overdrive would cruise easily on the highway . The the small flathead six wouldn’t beat anything in a drag race , and the narrow track of the front wheels allowed more body lean on curves and turns than I had with a Plymouth of that vintage. Overall I thought these Nashes very nice cars.
Thank you, I think they are very interesting and fun cars!
The Statesman was not bought for speed, it was bought for it's gas mileage combined with it being a full-sized 6 passenger car. The Ambassador, with a larger Overhead 6, was quicker, but it also was not as economical and was more expensive to buy.
One might compare the Nash to the original 1980s Chrysler Mini Van.
Both were intended to hold 6 people plus luggage. Both were economy cars.
Neither was intended to go anywhere fast. They did well for their purpose.
Economical family transportation for budget minded people.
Those old Nashes were indeed full sized. There was an enormous amount of room in them, and the back seat felt big enough to hold a square dance in.
@@jsat5609 They had as wide a front seat as a Cadillac .
@@michaelbenardo5695 This model also had front seats that released and folded backwards to join the rear seat and actually make a bed. If you were traveling and couldn't find a room for the night, you could sleep fairly comfortably in your car. There was an urban legend going around that some fathers would not let their daughters date a boy who drove a Nash for this reason, ie a "bed" was always handy. The "aero' early 50s Nashes were sometimes referred to as "bathtub" Nashes because their shape was reminiscent of an inverted bathtub. Bathtub Nashes, and the ca. 1950 "airplane nosed" or "bullet nosed" Studebakers had some of the most interesting styling of this era.
When I was a kid, we had a 1949 Nash that looked a lot like that. I don't remember much about it; my strongest memory was me bawling my eyes out because my dad wouldn't take me along when he traded it in. I couldn't have been more than 5 years old, so around 1960-61. In our family, it was always "the old Nash."
The nostalgia for old timers is the sound of that six cylinder engine reving up to the shift point. No tachometer. Just the sound of the engine. No one thought about 0-60 times until people like Tom McCahill of Mechanix Illustrated started using the number as a reference in road tests.
I used to read his articles all the time!
I'm 54 and I used to read old copies of Mechanix Illustrated my dad had, loved the Tom McCahill articles.
One of the best cars of it's time. My Dad had a few and they were very dependable.
I think so too!
Those old Nashes were built like tanks....and weighed about the same too! My parents had a Nash Rambler when we were kids and my mom actually cried when we had to finally take it to the junkyard.
It sure is easy to bond with the old cars! The Rambler must've been like a member of the family!
@@rustyoldchevy1149 Yep. Bessie was her name. The car, not my mom! I was just an infant so I don't remember this, but knowing my mom I can definitely picture it happening. LOL.
I had a 1955 Chevy 6 cylinder with glide transmission. There was no power in my power-glide. I told a kid in high school to time me 0 - 60. When I asked him for my time, he laughed and said he didn't know - he had to wind his watch before I finished. Most cars were meant to provide basic transportation and not the need for speed.
Yep those automatics really don't help when you are low on power to begin with!
@@rustyoldchevy1149 Even the Powerglide early V8s were liable to be embarrassed by the likes of Rambler 232 Six in 0 - 60 acceleration although with the manual transmission Chevy I don't think the Rambler would stand a chance--
I was hitchhiking in Montana a long time ago and a guy picked me up in a sea foam green Nash. The thing I remember most is how smooth the ride was.
Thats something not many people can say!
spent a few years driving around in one of these with a friend...roomy, economical and slower than a vw... it was green "the bean" is what we called it..amazing cars of another time and mind set
Airflytes have such a unique, beautiful styling that speed isn't the most important. I'd love to test drive one. Thanks for that cool clip and hello from Switzerland!
Glad you liked it!
My my highshcool teacher Miss Beasly drove a 51 Nash .She was just starting out teaching.After about 6 months she got s 64 Mustang and really impressed us boys.
I remember the Airflyte Nashes as a kid in the '50s. We called them and '48-'50 Packards "bathtubs." When I started driving, I learned the hard way NEVER get behind a bathtub Nash going up Cajon Pass out of San Bernardino on the old US 66-91-395 expressway...you'd wind up with the trucks going up that grade! My '50 Ford Custom (239 flattie) just didn't have enough poop (100 HP) to get out in the fast lane with all the Cadillacs, Chryslers and Oldses that were swooshing around us. So we'd wind up eating diesel smoke. The ultimate embarrassment was when we got passed by a brand new GM SceniCruiser Greyhound.
That's a great story! I guess it can't be helped, cars keep getting more power and make the older ones look slower.
Wow, 0 to 60 in 5 minutes! Nash really was ahead of it's time. No seriously, I've owned Nash's, and I love them.
I can imagine the filmstrip being pulled through the projector *ding!*
It's style kinda grows on me. My dad grew up with these cars and said they were a very smooth reliable auto. Your drive showed that was true. It ran pretty darn good for an auto that age.
Very true!
My 59 Rambler American had that flat-six...it ran so smooth at idle, that I could balance a nickel, on edge, on the top of the engine!
@@curbozerboomer1773 I have heard similiar comments about well they ran. Also how reliable they were. It's a shame that they were lost to history.
That was wonderful to watch. I miss the variety of cars that used to be on our roads, today they all look much the same (due to Federal regulations mostly.) It's great that you keep that old car in such good condition, and I love those old 3-speed w/overdrive cars. Some of them would really burn up the road!
One thing that maybe you didn't know: (From Wikipedia: Nash Ambassador)--
"Charlotte Speedway on April 1 (1951)- Curtis Turner won the 150-lap NASCAR Grand National race with his Nash Ambassador.[62] This was the only first-place finish for the large-sized Nash Ambassador in the NASCAR Grand National series.[63] The car driven to victory in the 400-lap NASCAR Short Track Grand National race in Lanham, Maryland by Tony Bonadies on July 14, 1951, was the new compact-sized Nash Rambler."
My father once had a Nash Rambler, but the car I really liked was my grandmother's Hudson Hornet. What a cool car!
Thats very interesting! These cars don't really make you think NASCAR, times have certainly changed!
I got to drive one of these about 1970, maybe the smoothest i have ever driven, the stuff they are making today cannot compare to the heavy cars of the 50's.
They used to speak of road hugging weight . In terms of contact with the road's surface per square inch, there is a lot to that
Very nice Nash! The 600 destination stood for 600 miles on a tank of gas. They were very good on gas. Around 30 mpg highway.
A lot of people don't understand how to start the car. You might pull the throttle out a little, maybe the choke, turn the key on and the actual starter button was on the floor. In this case, the starter button was on the floor under the clutch. This means you couldn't accidentally engage the starter with it in gear. Now, you could if you tried and it probably would move the car forward a bit.
Very nice old girl. Love the fact that yours is actually used as intended after all these years. Air Condition noted...keep her going!
It's a good feeling to put the old cars to use again!
Was a fun test . I say don’t break it just to go a mph faster .
My neighbor’s across the street in Michigan where I grew up had several Nash Rambler models . The Mother loved these cars 🚗. She even had a little convertible once . But didn’t seem to keep that one very long . Probably the short summer season was the reason she got another hard top ?
I'm sure I will do different tests in the future! People seem to like them, and it raises awareness of these neat cars!
Awesome. Was shocked to see where you were driving at. I pass the ice house all the time. I live just east of there. We must be living close. My dad had the 1951 2dr Plymouth, flat head six when I was growing up.
You might see me driving around then! It's certainly the only one on the road around here, I take it to the church car shows usually
I guessed 18, and for a change was smart enough to know where to look for the answer… Thanks for posting!
Love the upside-down bathtub styling!
You were spot on with the shifts. That's all that old girl has. Nothing wrong with that she wasn't built for speed.
Agreed!
Grand Dad had one that he pulled a camper trailer with. And used it for hunting trips!!!!!!!!!!!! Of course i've only got the stories and photo's.....I was born in 58'...great video!!!!!!!😎😎
That would be neat to have a small Airstream behind one of these!
A Mercedes 240D from the early 80s has about the same 0-60 time. It’s really not a problem. Just be careful when merging onto a highway, and don’t Ty overtaking on a two lane road unless you can see way ahead. Long steep hill will have you going real slow too.
Our neighbor bought one new and my cousin had one. As a petulant 10 year old I thought it was a a cartoon car. Upside down bathtub, I said. Now, of course, it is really interesting, if not ready for the NASCAR track. Thanks, Lloyd!
These cars were not about the 0-60 but about comfort, quiet and dependability. They would get you there comfortably and relaxed. They are great cars. Thanks for the ride along.
Well said! Thanks for watching!
Yes! comfort and relaxation! that's the missing element it cars today. Especially the seats.
Wonderful vehicle and channel. Had one exactly like this one not long ago and of course you sparked a lot of memories. Thank you. I have to subscribe now!
Thanks very much! I'm glad people are enjoying this!
All the cars looked like this when I was a little kid. I loved them.
I have two of those exact hub caps. They are in excellent condition. They are art deco to the max. Coolest hub caps ever!
They are still very nice, but I did repaint the logo since it had faded out.
I love these, they have all tbe potential to make a great kustom, so unique.
Edit: and btw, that old boat anchor sounds absolutely amazing, I'm quite jealous I must admit! 😅
Thank you very much!
Thanks for sharing your Nash!
Zero to sixty in about Seventy One seconds.
Drove my 1948 two door fastback oldsmobile straight six to Pennsylvania and back from Wisconsin. Top speed of 77mph according to Ohio trooper without a sense of humor.
At every stop it attracted wrinkle misers to complain I had moved the dummy clutch.
"Mine is on the road. Where's yours."
Try to be sympathetic to those wishing to reminisce but don't take crap. XP
Averaged 22 miles per gallon without regard to speed or conditions. One instance of dieseling in 90 degree plus weather. Probably needed more additive running that hot.
Without the back seat on long trips you have plenty of storage. Otherwise get a trailer. Plenty of torque but no passing gear.
Thanks for sharing your Nash!
My bad math
3:31 to 4:02 is 31 seconds.
Thanks! There are a lot of good old stories out there.
In this day & age all the off brand oddball cars from the past have lost their bad stigma & become historical pieces of automotive evolution. This Nash survivor is just oozing with art deco coolness!😎👍
Very true! There are all sorts of strange old cars I would love to own still!
Nash made some of the coolest cars. If you want to see the ultimate, look up Nash Ambassador Brougham. It has two "theatre" seats in the rear that are like armchairs, turned slightly inward to each other. Fantastic!
What a joyful and characterful car. I love it.
Thank you!
I had a friend in high schools who had one of these. A bunch of us would get in that thing, it was a beast.
We called them Schicks, they looked like electric razor.
0~60MPH- Take a calendar, not a stop watch.
I love these Nashes! Wouldn't mind finding one of my own. Great video!
You should! They are still out there being scrapped unfortunately.
Lovely, Kenosha's finest.
Cute car. The chrome patina, almost endearing. 85hp when new, I doubt it would be 30% of the original, not half. But doesn't matter. This car is a timepiece.
Is that with or without the air on? I don't think people bought these cars for speed. Faster definitely doesn't mean better. I do love this Nash! Reminds me of the good old days. How I do hate the twenty-first century. Keep the great videos coming. Always fun stuff.
I left the a/c off for the test, I'm sure it would've made things much worse! Thanks for watching!
In a town where I used to live there was someone who kept three old Nashes on blocks in their front yard (I nicknamed the place Airflyte Ranch). Of the 1949-'51 Nashes I think the '51 was the best looking but lacks the Uniscope instrument panel of the earlier years. The AC compressor in the featured car is obviously aftermarket. Was it engaged during the acceleration run?
I wouldn't mind having more in my yard! The a/c was off for the test, otherwise things would have been even slower.
Summer of ,61 - Used to double date in a Nash Ambassador, I think it was a ‘52, my buddies car - huge back seat to play in.
I drove one of these Nashs to my High School Graduation in 1961 Coral Gables High School Miami, Florida....It belonged to my Mother and Father's best friends parents....
That's great! I'm sure it was not a cool car at that time.
She does good for an old car!
Something that most people don't know is that until the mid Fifties, the NATIONAL speed limit was only 45mph... That's on rural roads and what little freeway there was at the time.
If anyone gets the chance to see a pre-1956 movie that features say "hot rods", notice that the kids driving those hotrods only do about 80 while running from the police... Even old movies featuring motorcycle gangs, the clubs only run at about 55 or 60 when traveling...
There was an old saying that people used up into at least the Eighties when somebody was talking really fast, or someone was moving around quickly... They'd say "so and so was going like 60"... So apparently actually "going 60" really was MOVING back in the Forties and Fifties.
What really boggles my mind THESE DAYS, is how people b*tch about the price of gasoline, but then are compelled to hammer the car as soon as the light turns green, then drive it like they're going to a fire until the last second before they come to the next red light, where they nosedive the damn thing because they're on the brakes so hard... Then floor it as soon as the light turns green again.
Over and over and over... But they still squeal about the price of gas😕
I always say similar things about the way people drive now! These old cars with overdrive didn't do too badly on gas as well.
The phrase I remember is "going a mile a minute" which is why the number 60 is relevant.
City driving: everybody guns it from one stoplight to the next, because all the other traffic is doing the same to jockey for position.
Expressway driving: You can't leave a safe interval in front of you because other cars will be filling it up changing lanes in an endless quest to improve their positions. So everybody tailgates to make sure there is never enough room for another car to cut in front of them. They tailgate at any speed and any road condition. You will see this even in light traffic, the cars behind will always go fast as necessary to stay on top of whatever is in front of them.
On 2 lane highways they will form pods. The pod will stack up tightly behind something slow like a truck to make sure you can't pass from behind them without having to overtake 7 cars and the truck in 1 maneuver, which means you will have to do 90 in the passing lane, then you become the villain who is driving fast, then everybody curses you and hopes you get a ticket.
It is no fun to drive slow when there is nothing behind you. Slowpokes on 2 lane roads will instinctively speed up when the road changes to 4 lanes and everybody can pass easily. Slowpokes are unhappy people who feel better about their miserable existence when they see frustrated traffic in their rear view mirrors.
Then there's the drivers who use the brake to regulate speed. Follow one of these drivers and you'll notice unneeded braking several times per mile. Then later they will wonder why the car always needs a brake job.
There was not National Speed Limit. Most mulit-lane highways had a 50 MPH speed limit, until the war. Then a national speed limit of 35 MPH was put in effect for the duration, then it was lifted, and the speed limits soon were as high as 70 out west.
Please someone tell me how big the TURNING CIRCLE IS?
Its about 40 feet, which is terrible these days but not uncommon back then.
The front track was made 6-1/2” more narrow than the rear track to keep the turning radius comparable with other cars.
That car has one the one thing modern cars dont have, a dash so fantastic to look at you would never want to get out.
You don't have to ever get out of the Nash,, the front seat fully reclines with the back and turns into a full Double Bed,, like a real bed. really! at least on the 1950 model Airflight,, all you need is some bedding, a drive through restraunte and a good supply of adult diapers & that dashboard with the uniscope vision can be yours 24/7, love these things got one in my front yard without a speck of paint on it. hasnt ran since 62 but i just like looking at it. yard art
I think the *Bonks* on the record are for the salesman to advance the slide in the carousel with every bonk. [My Dad was in PR/Advertising. He had an account with a Chicago Nash/Rambler dealer in the early '60s. He'd take me along on Saturdays. Sometimes my more life-like toys got used as props in local TV commercials.]
It's that Air Conditioner that's robbing all your power.
You are correct about the sounds! I was sure to leave the a/c off for best results, it could've been worse!
That's not a slide. It's a filmstrip.
@@desertbob6835 Yeah. You're right. The Kodak Carousel 35mm slide projector system was not developed until 1965.
Might as well have been Magic Lantern glass plates.
I am SOOO tickled you left the chimes in the film strip narration!
Looks like the same engine that was in my '62 Rambler American. Carb bolted to the head, and a tube with holes for the exhaust manifold.
Yes indeed, it was pretty much the same engine!
My older siblings begged my parents for their own car to drive to high school, so one day my dad went to an auction and came home with one of these. My sister cried! I mostly remember the huge back seat and very slow speeds.
I would've been thrilled! haha
These were a lot more common in the 70s. I had a friend who drove a Nash in high school. He was ridiculed but he wasn't walking!
Despite their claims, young people back then had an acute vanity, image and personal power problem ( much like today), were very dense & narrow minded to the point of being complete imbeciles and idiots in the 60's & 70's I went to high school on the beach in So- Cal from 1966- 1970 enjoyed both walking and riding bicycles, At 16 the only cool thing i remember besides girls, was surfing and sailing, back then you could buy one of these Nash's or most any vintage car or truck that was built before 1956 & still in good running shape for $50-$100 max, When i was 16, I bought my first '37 Harley Knucklehead in very good to xlnt original shape for $250, and a 1956 porsche speedster with very low mileage for $750, rode and drove the wheels off of both those slow machines, The '56 porsche was alot like the Nash an upside down bathtub looking thing,, Today that Knucklehead is probably worth $60k and the Porsche Speedster upwards of $250k or much more, As a kid i had a dog pile of old cars, trucks and bikes that did'nt cost much because people thought they were old ugly & not cool, of coarse at 16 i had a good $3 per hour job too, when minimum wage was 95 cents an hour and could afford to have fun, today it's just go fast for the brand that owns you, Nothing has class, everything looks like angry little plastic insects from some Sci-Fi movie set.. Still driving my old 1941 Chevy 1.5t short wheel base WW2 truck, and a well beat 1990 Geo metro convertible, 3 cylinder 5spd, that gets 50-60 mpg all day long ( & the newest car i have ever owned),, that's all i have left after nearly 60 years & countless miles and probably 300++ cars, trucks and bikes. though i never hoarded the stuff or kept non running project vehicles & only had 2 or 3 at a time. Though bikes were more my thing & passion i had some really weird and now rare cars back in the day. The Izetta with a 1500 vw transplant and Citroen CV2 were probably my favorite little micro freak cars, The 1950 Nash my all time favorite Tuna-boat. & a 1981 Suzuki Samurai.Jimny my favorite 4x4..
I just counted to myself and had 28 seconds. lol... I love these old cars. They are fun to just cruise around in and heck, they can keep up with traffic once you get them going usually unless you are going up a mountain road. Thanks! Subscribing now.
Thanks! Lucky for me there are no mountains around where I live!
Suzuki made a 2-cylinder street bike, the RGV250 V23 Gamma, that was only 250cc.
It was a water-cooled 2-stroke engine. This was in the mid-1990s, before 2-stroke engines were outlawed.
That engine could put out 80 horsepower if tuned correctly.
If 2-stroke engines were still being made - in this time, 30 years later - we would have 250cc motorcycles putting out 120 horsepower.
This car is for the record books. I believe Nash and Rambler had a connection somewhere in history.
.
I love these. I bought one in 1968 for $35. Sold it only to but a 1959 Rambler cross country wagon. Great video
Thanks!
My grandpa had this one! Most people were sane back then and drove under 50 mph. Only idiots and jet pilots worried about speed back then. However, if you really wanted to see a snail crawl vehicle, look at the 1960s VW van. It could go from zero to 60 in 2 weeks, 8 hours, and 10 minutes (on a good day)!
Its funny you mention that, I also have a 1962 vw bus! It will exceed 60mph, but not with me driving!
That was great! I was just a little tyke when I rode in one my father had! The next car he had was a Buick.
Keep in mind that 50 mph was the prevailing highway speed in the early 1950s. This car was built to get good gas mileage.
Sixty mph was really fast at the time.
Great point!
I’d gladly go back to those speeds. It would save lives, and fuel!
As a kid I used to hear the phrase; "Going like 60!" to express an observation of extreme speed.
Now I feel like watching the old Superman TV show. You go Inspector Henderson!
There was a little old lady in my home town that had one of these beast and a Nash Metropolitan that she drove until just before she passed in the late 70's .
1:00 ~ I hear that's how they used to load the Seattle/Bremerton ferry run here in Washington State.
I guess they must not have been very careful with people's cars!
Fyi, You might try mediun and fine steel wool on the chrome on that dash. I had good luck bringing out the luster and shine of the chrome trim. Works on bumpers too!
Ok I might try that, not much chrome left on my bumpers though!
I loved the intro. The beeps where there to advance the film projector to the next still frame. (Beep)
Nice video 👍🏻
Glad you liked it!
that's a very sweet and stylish little car
Jake Blues: "Car's got good pick up. Fix the cigarette lighter."
Must of been nice to have such a wide variety of good American cars to buy back in the day. I am 61 and I have witnessed the demise of to many companies Oldsmobile, Plymouth Mercury Pontiac even Saturn and others. I don't blame the Japanese cars though they forced American cars to get better. It just makes me wonder what a 2023 Studabaker would have been like or can you imagine a 2023 Duesenberg or Cord?
love how the gauges just snap to attention when you turnn the key!
Whats the hurry when crusin in that much style
Thats a good way to look at it!
Keep in mind, in the late 50’s and into the 1960’s, US manufactures considered 0 to 60 mph times of 19 seconds as acceptable performance. And V8 cars often had 0 to 60 time of 12 to 16 seconds right off the showroom floor. Up until into the 1980’s, many economy cars still had 19 or 20 second 0 to 60 times for the 4 and 6 cylinder cars and trucks. It was not uncommon for 0 to 60 mph times to be the same as the time to reach 1/4 mile. Many V8 equipped cars had 1/4 mile times in the 15 to 18 second range.
This old Nash still had some decent acceleration up to about 50 mph. I’d did slow down quite a bit between 50 and 60 mph. Remember, the top speed of a flathead equipped statesman was about 78 to 82 mph. And it took quite a while to get there.
Unless it had Overdrive, then it could do a little over 85.
That's true! It doesn't actually feel like a long time either when you are sitting in the car!
I'm jealous! Going to look at getting one of these in the future.
I hope you do!
Really interesting nice car i enjoy seeing cars like this around still.
Same here!
How can we tell how fast if no method of timing over a measured distance was not employed.
Best time was around 27 seconds, distance isn't measured in a 0-60 test
They were great to get laid in at the drive in movies as the front passenger seat folded down into a bed😊 Sales men used them and wouldn’t have to pay for a motel room. Fun and practical for the times.
0 to 60......Tuesday
the last car my dad drove was a 1950 Nash Statesman , i really like the 51 better except for he grill. love the dash on the 51
Had a 51 olds 98 automatic Manuel steering,303.8 V8,a tank in the 1970s,put snow tires on it,never got stuck in the snow,in Chicago! A TANK!