| The Chrysler New Yorker has been a constant in the Junkyard Find series, from this genuinely luxurious '64 to this Slant Six-powered New Yorker-ized Dodge Diplomat. The most recent New Yorker used the good-looking but shoddy LH Platform, but between the Diplomat and the LH were the K-Car-based New Yorkers. By 1989, the K platform had been stretched out, huge contracts with the largest diamond-tucked velour upholstery company Chrysler could find had been written up, and truckloads of "crystal pentastar" hood ornaments and steering-wheel emblems were being unloaded at Chrysler assembly plants. Yes, the 1989 Chrysler New Yorker with landau roof! This one smells like an ashtray inside a Porta-Potty inside a potato-chip factory that's on fire, but imagine the class when it was new. I am very tempted to remove this exquisitely dated Digital Instrument Panel™, with its Electronic Voice Alert™ system, rigging it up to function on my garage wall, but I'm already behind on doing the same thing with this even more 1980s Mitsubishi Cordia digital cluster. The low humidity in Denver means that most cars don't rust, but the high-altitude sun is murder on vinyl tops. This once-stately Landau roof isn't looking so sharp today. The integration of the center brake light was done pretty well by late-80s standards. I seem to recall that a certain Japanese car company whose name starts with the letter M was the true source for this engine, but Chrysler decided to badge it with their own name. New Yorker!
from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com |
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