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Chrysler Cordoba de Oro (1970) |
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Thursday, 03 November 2005 |
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At the July
club meeting, one of Chrysler’s more unusual show cars was mentioned, the
Cordoba de Oro.
Chrysler has
displayed quite a number of show cars over the years. In 1970 Chrysler showed a
very wedge shaped car, the Cordoba de Oro. It was styled by Elwood Engel and
featured a cantilevered roof with no A pillars. In this fashion it harked back
to the Norseman of 1956, which also featured a cantilevered roof. The Norseman
was a Virgil Exner creation, Engel’s predecessor as styling chief at Chrysler.

The Cordoba de
Oro had some unusual features with a thermostatically controlled air intake and
experimental headlights. It was built on the standard Chrysler wheelbase of 124
inches. The production 1975 Chrysler Cordoba
was quite a different car, being an intermediate with a 115 inch wheelbase.
The Norseman
was built by Ghia in Italy,
who had a long association with Chrysler that was only terminated when Ford
purchased Ghia. Exner had wanted to do rollover tests on the car, but it
suffered a much more dramatic fate. Unfortunately the Norseman never made it
across the Atlantic. It was shipped on the
Italian liner, Andria Doria. That liner collided with a freighter off the coast
of Long Island and took the Norseman to the floor of the Atlantic.
This must be one of the most bizarre ends for an experimental car.

I don’t believe
that the elimination of the A pillar has been attempted in any production motor
car since.
John G Huntington
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