Packard - Packard Automobile Models

Packard Automobile Models

  • Packard Single-Cylinder models:
    • Packard Model A (1899–1900)
    • Packard Model B (1900)
    • Packard Model C (1901)
    • Packard Model E (1901)
    • Packard Model F (1901–1903)
    • Packard Model M (1904)
  • Packard Twin-Cylinder model:
    • Packard Model G (1902)
  • Packard Four-Cylinder models:
    • Packard Model K (1903)
    • Packard Gray Wolf (1903)
    • Packard Model L (1904)
    • Packard Model N (1905)
    • Packard Model 24 (Series S) (1906)
    • Packard Model 18 (Series NA-NC) (1905–1907)
    • Packard Model 30 (Series U) (1907–1912)
  • Packard Six-Cylinder models:
    • Packard Dominant Six (1912–1915)
    • Packard Single Six (1921–1924)
    • Packard Six (1925–1929)
    • Packard 110
    • Packard 115 (1937)
    • Packard Six (1937–1949)
  • Packard Eight
    • Packard Single Eight & Eight (1924-)
    • Packard Custom Eight
    • Packard Light Eight
    • Packard 120 (1935–1942)
    • Packard 160
    • Packard 180
    • Packard Super Eight
  • Packard V-12:
    • Packard Twin Six (1916–1923)
    • Packard 905 (1916–1923)
    • Packard Twin Six (1932)
    • Packard Twelve (1932–1939)
  • Post War Packards (including Clipper)
    • Packard 400, see Packard Four Hundred
    • Packard Caribbean
    • Packard Cavalier
    • Packard Clipper
    • Packard 200
    • Packard 250, see Packard 200
    • Packard 300
    • Packard Executive
    • Packard Four Hundred
    • Packard Hawk (1958)
    • Packard Mayfair
    • Packard Pacific
    • Packard Patrician (including Patrician 400)
    • Packard Single Six & Six (1921-1929)
    • Packard Station Sedan (1949–1950)
    • 1957 and 1958 Packards

Read more about this topic:  Packard

Famous quotes containing the words automobile and/or models:

    The westerner, normally, walks to get somewhere that he cannot get in an automobile or on horseback. Hiking for its own sake, for the sheer animal pleasure of good condition and brisk exercise, is not an easy thing for him to comprehend.
    State of Utah, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Today it is not the classroom nor the classics which are the repositories of models of eloquence, but the ad agencies.
    Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980)