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1947
- 1951 Playboy Convertible
Provided by Hemmings
This
endearing little convertible was a creation offered by two enterprising
New Yorkers who formed the Playboy Motor Corporation in the years immediately
following the end of World War II. At the time, Playboy was one of many
small car companies going up against the major automakers for an entirely
unproven market—the sub-$1,000 car. The majority of these efforts
featured tiny cars with small engines that were cheap to buy, run and
maintain. Though sound reasoning, the economic reality of the time was
that if a person or family couldn’t afford a car that cost more
than $1,000, then it couldn’t afford one at all. The lack of an
interested market, combined with a scarcity of materials, caused nearly
all companies that attempted car production based on this theory to fail,
many before even a single car had been sold. Perhaps the lone exception
to the rule was the King Midget Company, the story of which can be found
in the “Oddies But Goodies” archives.
Louis Horowitz, Charles D. Thomas and Norman Richardson originally
founded the Playboy Motor Corporation as the Midget Motor Car Company.
Horowitz, a former Packard dealer, and Thomas, a onetime Pontiac engineer,
came up with a very affordable lightweight convertible for fun motoring.
It seated three, had a manually activated retractable metal top that stowed
behind the seat and was powered by an inline four-cylinder engine.
It is reported that some 97 prototypes were hand-built at
the old Brunn body factory in Buffalo and later at Playboy’s factory
in North Tonawanda, New York. Its initial price of $985 must have made
it very attractive to those who could afford a second car for leisure-time
drives or household errands. In fact, its intended market was as a second
car for the suburban housewife. Weighing just a little over one ton, it
was powered by Continental Fours of 40 hp, and later by Willys Fours of
72 hp linked to a three-speed manual gearbox. Later, overdrive was offered
as an option. With a 90-inch wheelbase and 155-inch overall length, it
was a cute little looker and it received widespread acclaim from both
the news and automotive press, thanks to the company’s hired promotion
agency.
Much like the Tucker, the Playboy was financed by dealer
franchise sales and stock offerings, which unfortunately arose at the
same time that Preston Tucker was under investigation by the Securities
Exchange Commission. From there, the company’s assets were sold
off to a holding company that was run by a group of Chinese Nationalists.
Enter another failed stock offering and Connecticut businessman Alvin
Trumbull who picked up the pieces. In 1952, Trumbull attempted to revive
the Playboy, with Preston Tucker’s aid—without success. During
those final years, the incomplete dies for stamping the Playboy’s
body panels that would have made mass production possible were hanging
in limbo because no one came forward with the money to put everything
into production. They were finally destroyed in 1959. After shopping the
Playboy around to various companies in a fiberglass-bodied sports roadster
form, Trumbull finally gave in to the inevitable and sold off his remaining
Playboy inventory to a collector in 1965.
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