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The Nash 600 is an automobile manufactured by the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation of Kenosha, Wisconsin, for the 1941 through 1949 model years, after which the car was renamed the Nash Statesman. The Nash 600 was the first mass-produced unibody-constructed car in the United States and the era's most advanced domestic car design and construction. [ 5 ]
The three best sales years for Nash up to that time were 1949, 1950, and 1951. Nash Rambler Convertible "Landau" Coupe, c.1950, fixed profile convertible with retracting roof and rigid doors, the featured car of Lois Lane of the series Adventures of Superman [23] [24] [25] Nash Metropolitan. Nash-Kelvinator's president, George Mason, felt Nash ...
Nash 600 (1946–1949) Nash Ambassador (1946–1948) Oldsmobile 98 (1946-1947) Oldsmobile Series 60 (1946-1948) Oldsmobile Series 70 (1946-1948) Plymouth De Luxe ...
"173" L-head engine in a 1949 Nash 600. Introduced in the autumn of 1940 for the 1941 Nash 600, it was originally designed to be an economy engine by Nash Motors, who initially called it the "Flying Scot" engine. [1] Nash went on to merge with Hudson to form AMC in 1954.
Two-door models included Nash's exclusive "Airliner Reclining" front seat, which was optional on the four-door sedans. These seats could be converted to form a bed. Statesman engine designs were based on the L-head Nash Light Six engine that was designed in the 1920s and continued into the 1940s in the Nash LaFayette and Nash 600. It is ...
1937 Nash Ambassador Six sedan 1939 Nash Ambassador Eight sedan 1941 Nash Ambassador sedan Line drawing of 1942 Nash Ambassador 600 sedan. The 1935 model year saw yet another complete re-styling known as "Aeroform" with a further trimming of body styles. A new two-door sedan was added to the Ambassador Eight series.
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The Nash-Kelvinator/Hudson deal was a straight stock transfer (three shares of Hudson listed at 11 + 1 ⁄ 8, for two shares of American Motors and one share of Nash-Kelvinator listed at 17 + 3 ⁄ 8, for one share of American Motors) and finalized in the spring of 1954, forming the fourth-biggest auto company in the U.S. with assets of US$355 ...