Vehicle Owner

Member ID: rick_rawker

Location: Flower Mound, TX

Vehicle Info

1930 Willys Americar

Bragging Rights

  • 1/4 Mile0 sec @ -1 mph
  • 0-600sec
  • Top Speed-1mph
  • HP-1
  • Weight-1lbs

Major Upgrades

  • turbo
  • nitrous
  • bore increase
  • port and polish
  • supercharger
  • extrude honed
  • stroke increase
  • engine swap

Ratings

    • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.

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Last updated: Oct 01, 2009

Hits: 2,108

Rick’s Willys Americar
“" OLD-SRATCHY "”

  • Currently 3.6137931034482 /5 Stars.
25 guestbook comments

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

 

 

" OLD- SCRATCHY " will be featured in HEMMINGS CLASSIC CARS issue # 52 !

{REVISION}

THE ISSUE IS OUT !

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

 

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarThis is another toy my Dad's letting me keep in 'my garage'. It is a 1930 'WHIPPET' by Willys Motor Co.,but,there was no listing available.
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarStraight six
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarIn 1908, John North Willys bought the Overland Automotive Division of Standard Wheel Company and in 1912 renamed it Willys-Overland Motor Company. From 1912 to 1918, Willys was the second largest producer of automobiles in the United States behind only the Ford Motor Company.

In 1913, Willys acquired a license to build the Charles Knight's sleeve-valve engine which it used in cars bearing the Willys-Knight nameplate. In the mid 1920s, Willys also acquired the F.B. Stearns Company of Cleveland, Ohio and assumed continued production of the Stearns-Knight luxury car as well.

Factory in Toledo, Ohio, about 1915John Willys acquired the Electric Auto-Lite Company in 1914 and in 1917 formed the Willys Corporation to act as his holding company. In 1915, they acquired the Russell Motor Car Company of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, by 1917 New Process Gear, and in 1919 acquired the Duesenberg Motors Company plant in Elizabeth, New Jersey. The New Jersey plant was replaced by a new, larger facility and was to be the site of production for a new Willys Six, but the 1920 recession brought the Willys Corporation to its knees. The bankers hired Walter P. Chrysler to sort out the mess and the first model to go was the Willys Six. Deemed an engineering disaster, Chrysler had auto engineers Owen Skelton, Carl Breer and Fred Zeder to begin work on a new car - the Chrysler Six. -Wikpedia

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarALL ORIGINAL
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarInnovative 'finger tip control' on steering column............A pic of another 96-A BELOW
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarNice coach
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarLots of fun
rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarExtra wooden spoke wheels

But in order to raise cash needed to pay off debts, all of the Willys Corporation assets were on the auction block. The Elizabeth plant and the Chrysler Six prototype were sold to one William C. Durant, then in the process of building a new, third empire. The plant would build Durant's low priced Star, while the Chrysler Six prototype would be improved and modified, becoming the 1923 Flint.

Walter Chrysler moved on to Maxwell-Chalmers, where in January of 1924 he launched his own version of the six-cylinder Chrysler he had been working on, one still based partially on elements originally developed at Willys. (In 1925 the Maxwell car company would become the Chrysler Corporation).

In 1926, production of the Overland ended and was replaced by the Whippet brand of small cars. Following the stock-market crash of 1929 and the economic depression that soon followed, a number of Willys automotive brands began to falter. Stearns-Knight was liquidated in 1929. Whippet production ended in 1931, its models replaced by the Willys Six and Eight. Production of the Willys-Knight ended in 1933.

At this point Willys decided to clear the boards and produce two new models - the 4-cylinder Willys 77 and the 6-cylinder Willys 99 - but the firm was on the verge of bankruptcy again, so only the 77 went into production. They were forced to sell their Canadian subsidiary, itself in weak financial shape, and started a massive reorganization. In it, only the main assembly plant and some smaller factories remained property of Willys-Overland. The rest were sold off to a new holding company that leased some of the properties back to W-O. The company was thus able to ride out the storm.

In 1936 the Willys-Overland Motor Company was reorganized as Willys-Overland Motors. In the 1920s and 1930s, Willys was an unremarkable automaker based in Toledo, Ohio, one of dozens in the U.S. It was one of several bidders when the War Department sought an automaker who could begin rapid production of a lightweight truck based on a prototype designed by American Bantam. - Wikpedia

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys AmericarExtra reserve fuel tank

 

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

 

rick_rawker's 1930 Willys Americar

Check Out My Other Ride Here

http://www.cardomain.com/ride/3109753

 

 

Guestbook

Displaying entries 1-5 of 25

comatoza  

Posted by: comatoza

06/24/2009 12:07PM

Hi, just popping in to remind myself. It has been a while, since you checked out my site. Come over and see lots of new picks.

1GirlCarClub  

Posted by: 1GirlCarClub

05/06/2009 09:50PM

wow very nice!

NSXTurbo03  

Posted by: NSXTurbo03

03/13/2009 10:42PM

real nice ride, gave you 5 stars, come checkout my acura nsx

KylesMalibu  

Posted by: KylesMalibu

02/16/2009 07:13PM

HEY, congrats on being featured in HCC. I have that issue. I was featured in the December 08 issue myself. I was in the "Next Generation" article in the back with my 74 Monte Carlo. Very cool!

peelerboy  

Posted by: peelerboy

01/16/2009 08:35AM

Super interesting stuff. Great cars.

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Vehicle Owner

Member ID: rick_rawker

Location: Flower Mound, TX