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1912 Rambler 73 Cross Country Appeared in the movie "Titanic" (in the dock scenes prior to the ship's departure). From the web site of the National Automobile Museum, The Harrah Collection, Reno, Nevada. |
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1912 Rambler 73-4CC Endurance sold cars during this period. Three veterans of the road were photographed in front of Chicago's Blackstone Hotel, just before they departed "in the early morning of September 27 for the 320-mile run to Toledo in one day." The car is the famous Rambler Cross Country. |
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1912 Rambler 76LimK This $4,200 "Knickerbocker" limousine weighed 4,000 pounds and carried seven passengers "in luxurious, spacious comfort." It had a 32-horsepower engine with four cylinders, and, at no estra cost, "electric cigar lighter, bouquet holder, silk hat rack, umbrella holder, toilet case, card and cigar cases, clock, whisk broom and holder and megaphone chauffeur signal." |
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1912 Rambler 76-7-M Metropolitan This swank touring car was known as the "Metropolitan." Note the auxiliary seats which permitted a maximum of seven passengers. This model weighed 3,400 lbs., cost $2,850. |
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1912 Rambler 73-RD4 Roadster This snappy roadster with the smart colonial lamps had a price tag of $1,650. It had a four-cylinder 28-horsepower engine capable of speeds up to 45 miles per hour. |
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1912 Rambler Suburban This picture is interesting for two reasons: It shows how the "demountable wheel," pioneered by Jeffery, was mounted; and the car was called the Rambler "Suburban," a name given to a Nash Rambler station wagon model introduced in the 1950's. |
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