1955
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Predecessor to the Cobra; elegant two-seater in Bristol-6 or Ford-Zephyr form.
sports car
Postwar Armstrong Siddeley saloon; one of the first UK cars with optional automatic transmission.
sports car
sports car
small family car
Luxury touring car produced by Bentley Motors Ltd.
Full-size luxury sedan sharing its 'Baroque Angel' (Barockengel) body with the six-cylinder 501, distinguished by BMW's first postwar V8. Germany's…
Bubble-window microcar; one of the most successful post-war microcars.
luxury car
sports car
Chapron-bodied Delahaye 180, considered one of his finest postwar designs.
luxury car
Small car manufactured by Citroën from 1948 to 1990
supermini
front-engine, front-wheel-drive executive car (1955-1975)
DKW two-stroke survivors, eventually merged into Auto Union/Audi.
Facel Vega — Chrysler-V8-powered French grand tourisme cars.
Rear-engined small city car by Fiat
eleventh generation of the Ford Thunderbird
Post-war BMW-derived chain-drive Frazer Nash — cult British sports car.
Polish Syrena — two-stroke family car from FSC Bielsko-Biała.
Goliath two-stroke light cars — Borgward group.
Hotchkiss postwar saloons — licensed Grégoire design for the Anjou.
Saloon manufactured by Rootes Group
from 1963
USA Model, Jensen Interceptor Mark 11 (Mark 2)
Borgward group's Lloyd — small air-cooled two-stroke cars.
Formula One works racer driven by Fangio and Moss to 9 of 12 races and both 1954-55 drivers' championships; built in closed-wheel 'streamliner' and…
Sports coupé manufactured by British Motor Corporation and British Leyland
Italian coachbuilder and small-volume car maker.
British car model (1948–1971)
Moto Guzzi briefly built a 4-wheeled prototype — 'the Guzzino 4R'.
Nash/AMC Metropolitan — Anglo-American small coupé, built by Austin.
1936 car
brand of Porsche automobile
three-wheeled automobile
Ransom E. Olds' REO — Speed Wagon pickups and Royale luxury cars.
brand name applied to various car models
1950s automobile
British luxury car
Salmson — aero-engine maker that turned to small sporting cars.
One-off and short-series bodies built on Porsche 356 chassis in Paris.
Siata built tuned Fiats and small-series sports cars in Turin.
Standard-Triumph post-war saloons; predecessor of the Triumph Herald.
Two seat automobile built 1953–1975
Long-running British coachbuilder of Rolls-Royce and Daimler bodies.
1960s/1970s mid-size executive car
Saloon car made by the Triumph Motor Company division of British Leyland Corporation between October 1972 and August 1980
British sports car produced between 1955 and 1962
Volkswagen-made car produced from 1938 to 2003
Polish state-built Warszawa — based on Soviet GAZ-M20 Pobeda.
lightweight saloon car
ZIS — pre-war and postwar Soviet luxury sedans; predecessor to ZIL. ZIS was the same factory's name before its 1956 renaming to ZIL.
Soviet Politburo limousines built in Moscow by ZIL.