As a mechanical engineer in my 40's I can't help but watch this and think how much we have regressed as a country. All components made in the US including the textiles, workers are all well dressed, etc.
@nick21289 ай бұрын
That is a matter of opinion. Obviously depending on the field , I’m sure they have a dress code at modern day GM.
@Jay-jb2vr9 ай бұрын
Uncle Sam is not #1 that's why
@mikepotter64269 ай бұрын
It’s part of the plan devised by the filthy politicians
@MyWillypilly9 ай бұрын
This is about 1970. It's not far in time from the moon landing. America at it's Zenith.
@bmingo28289 ай бұрын
It can all be attributed to one thing…Greed.
@rickintexas158410 ай бұрын
This brought a 26 minute smile to my face. I graduated college in 86 with an engineering degree. I can only imagine the amount of work these men went through to bring us these wonderful cars.
@cheapgeek629 ай бұрын
I've had a 68 Chevy Impala, a 74 Monte Carlo, an 86 Corolla, a 94 Voyager, a 2002 Focus Wagon, an 08 Focus and a 15 Ford C-max hybrid. Each car was better than the last one. I don't get this misplaced nostalgia (which even sounds like a disease).
@lare97109 ай бұрын
I agree worked for GM and studies at the tech center for a year ❤
@JamesK79118 ай бұрын
@@cheapgeek62 Ikr 😅
@m420378 ай бұрын
@@cheapgeek62Then why are you here?? Your comment is subjective, just your opinion. Best car I ever had was a 1966 Thunderbird. Tahoe Turquoise and white, swing away steering wheel very beautiful car. SUVs are ugly and all look the same, and that's not subjective. A Ford Focus LMAO 😅
@richardmccann82156 ай бұрын
Destroyed by union greed
@MisterMikeTexas10 ай бұрын
GM was amazing at that time. Thanks to King Rose Archives for posting this film.
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Fisher by general motors is classic I think he was a influence in body design
@ChrisBrooke-l8i9 ай бұрын
No car manufacturer was amazing at that time. It was the Malaise Era.
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
@@ChrisBrooke-l8i your wrong
@rodneyunderwood62369 ай бұрын
Gm is crap now because they have a woman in charge..smh so sad
@T1horn9 ай бұрын
@@ChrisBrooke-l8imalaise era starts from 73-74
@chriswright22509 ай бұрын
I remember seeing that blue coach on the door sill as a kid.
@jamesmcdonnell56179 ай бұрын
Fisher Body - the 'Pride of Tarrytown, NY!'
@LouisAloiАй бұрын
Made by Fisher Body mark of excellence.
@jega1579 ай бұрын
I worked at Fischer Body in willow springs Illinois from '84 til layoffs in about 87, when they closed it. I was a tool and die maker at that stamping plant. We shipped approximately 60 box cars of body panels per week to Detroit. Raw steel coils came in by train, finished panels for Buicks, Oldsmobiles and Cadillacs left on the same rails. It's now a huge UPS distribution center (at least it was last time I drove by on 294). I consider myself lucky to have worked on some of the dies that stamped out those panels. Quite an experience!
@BobBish-m9x9 ай бұрын
I live about 10 minutes from there. Back then we used to attend the ham radio "Field Days" on the grounds of that plant. It's still a UPS distribution center.
@jega1579 ай бұрын
@@BobBish-m9x yes.... between emd locomotive and Fischer body, I had just enough years to get a small pension. Fascinating career.
@KingRoseArchives9 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this story about the history. It's great to hear about your lived experience with it!
@sammyweed47719 ай бұрын
I worked at the Fleetwood plant in Detroit.B.O.C same yrs as you. Worked in the cushion room building seats. Got my 36 in and retired 2 yrs ago
@jakereal36049 ай бұрын
@@sammyweed4771 Thats really cool! Did you ever do that very intricate button tufting that the D'Elegance Interiors and Eldorado Biarritz had? I always wondered WHO did this upholstery work and was it hand done or by machines of some sort? I'd love to know as its always intrigued me. Im a 1966 Model myself so I was of age when 70s 80s cars were new
@smarthome26609 ай бұрын
Born & raised in Saginaw, Michigan. Sad when the music died in the 80's here. I built machines for Fisher as a machinist.
@JAKPM8 ай бұрын
I was born in Saginaw as well, have since moved away, it’s sad to go back and see the carnage of globalization.
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
They say modern computer technology & show what looks like a fax machine, 🤣 funny.
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
@@JAKPMnice to see old cars up close when they were new & in perfect shape
@MarkWG8 ай бұрын
This was a fascinating presentation. Parts of this video were shot at the Arlington, Texas GM assembly plant. My school took us there when these very Monte Carlos and Chevelle Malibu's were being assembled in the early 1970's. They also built the Oldsmobile Cutlass here, as well as mid-sized Pontiacs. It was a field trip I will never forget. Getting to watch those gorgeous Monte Carlos & Cutlasses join with their chassis and sometimes seeing a big block 454 or Rocket 455 being installed. Hard to believe that this was more than 50 years ago. Much more automation and massive technological advances have taken place since way back then. Seeing those ancient computers was a gas. Great memories of being 11 years old.
@ACF6180T5 ай бұрын
That would have been a neat thing to experience. I do remember watching a film in automotive class in the 70's Called the making of the modern automobile; That featured the complete assembly of the Chevrolet Monte Carlo. I would have rather had the experience you had though.
@dalebowman36669 ай бұрын
what a mammoth undertaking to build an automobile and we did it with flying colors every year back when the people of America were great.
@scooterp70099 ай бұрын
We’ve come a long way.
@28704joe9 ай бұрын
We are still great.
@scooterp70099 ай бұрын
@@28704joe We are a failed nation under God’s judgment.
@the_munkee_ranch9 ай бұрын
That was a promo film made to look sharp and progressive. You would think we would have had airbags a lot sooner. How long did it take for seat belts to become standard in the US after Preston Tucker made it obvious to execs? We are great...er than most. Why do you think we have so many people coming here from other countries?
@michaelrenner32149 ай бұрын
WE ARE STILL I SAY AGAIN STILL GREAT. YES THAT'S RIGHT. USA 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
@dinocracchiolo99610 ай бұрын
It is amazing to me the quality of the parts, metal grills, chrome bumpers, idefcation badging,and trim, multipal color interior colors, quantity fabrics and door panels, unlike today with plastic used everywhere. Thoes dsys are long gone.
@formatique_arschloch9 ай бұрын
Cars were pieces of shit back then.
@JamesK79118 ай бұрын
Yah and let’s just ignore the terrible amount of fuel mileage you’d get from all that. Perfect for a decade that saw 2 oil crisis 🤷♂️
@littlegp188 ай бұрын
@@JamesK7911Yep let's ignore the oil crisis. I worked for hess oil back then as a merchant marine. We weren't allowed to dock until they got the ok to push up the price from 60 cents to a dollar and then blame the middle east. Once they got the ok we were allowed to deliver the oil
@m420378 ай бұрын
@@JamesK7911You troll often to old school vids or just bored?
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
Could return at any time. It all could be done again, just cost more now, higher wages etc.
@christopherprince32509 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting. My favorite aunt retired from Fisher Body. She passed away several years back, and I keep hoping I might see her in one of these videos.
@carlschroeder681110 ай бұрын
GM was the absolute king of the big 3 back 1965-1975, best designs, materials, interior, fit and finish, power trains, performance, suspensions, reliability, braking and ride, did I miss anything? Sill own and drive a stock, numbers matching 1972 SS Chevelle big block.
@dadgarage796610 ай бұрын
Breaking??
@carlschroeder681110 ай бұрын
OOPS **braking** happens to the best of us.@@dadgarage7966
@carlschroeder681110 ай бұрын
Talk about the wrong word to misspell, haha!@@dadgarage7966
@johnmaranuk18429 ай бұрын
Absolutely the best! I'm a GM guy. CHEVY runs deep in my blood
@carlschroeder68118 ай бұрын
@BullshitdetectorA1BullDe-xo3pr I was referring to factory stock personal/family daily driver cars, not race heritage.
@BDiaz-np8fn9 ай бұрын
Wow!!I the quality, the computers, the workforce, the era. These same cars hold there value today as the day they were shipped out!
@m420378 ай бұрын
Worth a lot more
@MRLUGNUTS10 ай бұрын
I never get tired of watching this.😊
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Classic
@stevem568510 ай бұрын
5:21 First year for the 454 CID. Nearly 400 HP in a 70 Implala/Caprice grocery getter. Nice.
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Love the Caprice and 1970 71 and I think 72 they had the wide body. Like olds
@MrJohnnyDistortion9 ай бұрын
I didn't see anything 454 at that time stamp.
@foxtrot3129 ай бұрын
454= huge gas hog! 5 mpg
@MrJohnnyDistortion9 ай бұрын
@@foxtrot312 WRONGO! 7-10 MPG. 😄
@jamesrecknor67529 ай бұрын
12 mpg in my 5600 pound 1975 Cadillac limo, 500 CI. @t312
@MrJohnnyDistortion9 ай бұрын
The people that developed and built the machines and computers for the engineers and designers to work with are the real hero's.
@gregk.67238 ай бұрын
What a country we had.
@coach22086 ай бұрын
You ain't kidding, now it's gone to the dogs.
@bsquared46046 ай бұрын
they still make cars here you know.
@globaldeception74146 ай бұрын
Now according to your Overlords. You must hand over your Car soon.. no more freedoms sheeple.. it will be over soon
@mikeweizer31496 ай бұрын
@bsquared4604 Those "cars"That you refer to are more like Home Appliances or Infotainment centers, there not cars anymore or Urban assault vehicles!!!!!.
@stevenc67055 ай бұрын
Yeah that great Tesla truck garbage truck with the adjustable acceleration pedal. Lol
@aintmanyofusleft9 ай бұрын
all the comments and here's the best part, Brand new, these cars were +- $4000.00 now a new pickup to work out of is north of $100,000.00 and we had to bail GM out a few years ago, I guess plastic and electronic non necessaties are rediculously expensive or did Greed come riding in and the car buying public is just getting boned. restore something or buy restored, to hell with new, no style plastic junk. America needs an overhaul, these videos are a testament to what our nation can do.Past time to bring it back home.
@m420378 ай бұрын
I completely agree!! Fkn SUVs are look the same big chicken eggs! It's extraordinary these people today pay 40k+ for these ugly things! People evidently don't buy vehicles off looks anymore. I want another old car turn key but they start around 25k, I'd like a mid 60s Thunderbird or a old 60s Ford or Chevy wagon
@artmchugh564410 ай бұрын
I worked in Flint Michigan fisher body on south Saginaw st building Buick Regals !!! In 1973 Now the south unit is not even standing 😮😮😮my dad worked at Turnsted division making hardware for GM models 😊😊😊😊
@h3e4410 ай бұрын
Do yo know What models were built at fisher body plant in Detroit by the Ford Paquette plant
@timdodd38979 ай бұрын
You probably sent them to Buick city. My uncle was a tool and die maker for Buick.
@m420378 ай бұрын
It's all a cesspool over there now sad ! Nothing's left.
@artmchugh56448 ай бұрын
Yes !!! They had large trucks and the bodies , firewall back would head out to final assembly chassis and engine, then to lots for truck or rail delivery 😀😀😀🚘🚘🚘🚘🚘🚘🚘🚘🚘🚘🍺🍺🍺
@zvsmith20089 ай бұрын
My Dad always had Cadillacs growing up all my life every 4 years he would get himself a new one Eldarado, Seville, Or a Fleetwood , I would always see that Fisher name badge on the door frame of all his vehicles , So I grew up knowing Fisher meant something to Cadillac / GM cars ..👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾❤️❤️❤️💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾✌🏾✌🏾✌🏾
@d-mack-ga53406 ай бұрын
Fisher purchased the Fleetwood Metal Body Company in Fleetwood, PA back in the 1920's, from the 1930's to the early 90's they produced Fleetwood-bodied Cadillacs. They certainly made some beautiful cars back in the day!
@balconi899 ай бұрын
When I worked at GM 20 years ago, some of those huge tables at 9:20 were still around. I used to roll out harness prints on them to review and mark up.
@sasz210710 ай бұрын
From back when America was great...
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
I agree gm had the best back then. Nowadays it's Bull shit
@jp74899 ай бұрын
Yep 👍
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Yes sir we are never going to see those times of great USA product. God bless the folks who preserve old classics
@Jay-jb2vr9 ай бұрын
Yup good times they were. Never to return
@the_munkee_ranch9 ай бұрын
It's comments like these that make the current generations swell with pride.
@Badge112210 ай бұрын
The 72 Monte Caro is still a GREAT car.
@tonychavez208310 ай бұрын
good stuff... this seems to be around 70-71' overall quality was still very high for most GM medium to high priced vehicles.. especially Buick and Cadillac.
@chuckprahl17010 ай бұрын
That's a 1970 Monte Carlo
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Yes sir those are considered boats. Big body even Pontiac product
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
@@chuckprahl170 I own a custom monte 84
@m420378 ай бұрын
@@stravis3269Compared to what? I've been by big SUVs almost as big as a small bus and I can't see anything! Dangerous big blind spot even sitting in parking lots pulling out! BOOM!!! Gas guzzlers too not what the sticker says! The other SUVs all look the same and are very bland. People today don't buy cars of looks evidently like in these days in the videos. After the late 80s the cars were most all same egg shaped plastic rubbish. The 90s most were all chicken eggs except for some foreign car's
@Mtlmshr10 ай бұрын
I worked at Metal Crafters that built concept cars for major manufacturers one of them was Mercedes and that’s when I learned how much detail actually goes into the design of any new car it’s truly amazing how detailed everything is! From how far the door opens to the reach a person has to do to reach the actual door to the position of the driver’s Seat! In many Mercedes cars the driver’s seat is actually pointed ever so slightly to the center of the car so your eyesight is focused to a point somewhere well in front of the car while it’s driving at speed!
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Idk
@m420378 ай бұрын
Back in the day ya, Mercedes was beautiful before they turned them into eggs 🤮
@monnimonnickendam72898 ай бұрын
good old days - pride in industry
@coach22086 ай бұрын
The best days.
@BustedNut-6 ай бұрын
Back when America was a manufacturing powerhouse. I miss those days.
@steves78968 ай бұрын
They sure had that back seat testing (11:35) accurately dialed in.
@ArmyOne5195 ай бұрын
This is really cool. I’m 66 and my Neighbor when I was a Boy worked for Fisher Body. He helped designed the Cadillac Fleetwood . He told me the best stories about his Job.
@rexracernj76969 ай бұрын
Hard work. In terms of morale, quality etc., be sure to read "Rivethead," by former GM autoworker Ben Hamper.
@collinrust2641Ай бұрын
Great book
@dynaflowdave93709 ай бұрын
Narrated by the best in the business, Peter Thomas!
@boblittle25296 ай бұрын
RIP "The Forensic Files" dude
@axjason9 ай бұрын
Back in the day when you really needed to wear sunglasses on the production line handling all that chrome real bling, no plastic bullshit crap
@ricksadler7979 ай бұрын
Those old monties were some of best demo derby/ bomber class races ever!!!!❤❤
@kevinv23026 ай бұрын
My grandfather worked for GM in Buffalo. He started out sweeping floors and retired 45 years later as plant manager. As a kid growing up in the 70's I had hoped to one day go to work for GM, but my parents moved us away from there and it never came about.
@tedf.50557 ай бұрын
I love the diversity of the people in this video. I saw Poles, Italians, Germans, Irish, I saw blue eyes, Brown eyes, blonde hair, black hair, I saw detached earlobes, round heads, oval heads, pointy heads. Not once did I see a African, Indian, Asian or Mexican, but it was diverse.
@westhavenor95137 ай бұрын
I smell a racist
@bigdaddydaddy32039 ай бұрын
Omg this was gold too watch I wonder where those poor cars are now or what barn or junkyard they are sitting in 🥲
@devengudinas16499 ай бұрын
Crushed.
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
They mostly crush em. Their just eyesores haven't u heard
@coach22086 ай бұрын
CUBA
@jimbower92689 ай бұрын
I miss the days when you could tell one brand of car from another without having to read the name on it.
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
Hard to even find name now, like their ashamed to even show it
@dwayneroth1006 ай бұрын
@@rogerdodrill4733 And some of them should be
@mikeweizer31496 ай бұрын
@@rogerdodrill4733 Most cars today look like SHIT to begin with!!!!.
@pjh177610 ай бұрын
Absolutely awesome.
@KingRoseArchives10 ай бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
@jamesfarmer37599 ай бұрын
Let’s hope history repeats itself on this one
@watchinglclowns98909 ай бұрын
Yes, But Will never happened !!!!
@m420378 ай бұрын
In a time machine, you'll never see a car with chrome on it with curves, it has to be a plastic round SUV or nothing
@troy30526 ай бұрын
At 21.39 thats my dad!!! He retired march 1st 2024 55 years at GM
@garymcauley76304 ай бұрын
He looks like Elvis! congrats to your dad.
@jonnysuperglide2 ай бұрын
There was a fisher body plant in my home town years ago we went on a tour in the plant as a family because our family worked in us steel mill the two plants was across from each other the GM plant is completely gone NOW :( I think there was 2000 workers all leaving at the same time it was a traffic jam pulling out in the main road fisher body it was huge Amazing how big that place was the mill is still there running today it was amazing seeing them parts being made all the cushmen carts and all the people working them machines super amazing experience thanks to us steel and fisher body I got to see both places
@Go4Corvette9 ай бұрын
I toured the GM assembly plant in 1989, in Van Nuys, CA when they were building F body Camaro and Firebirds with a friend who had worked there for over 30 years. Sadly, the plant closed soon after that.
@m420378 ай бұрын
Well good because the last nice bodystyle Camaro/Firebird was 1981. The aero style is ugly. My favourite is the 77-78 TAs
@lvsqcsl10 ай бұрын
The only GM car my dad ever owned was a 1974 Chevrolet Impala wagon. with the small-block 400 cid engine. It was a VERY high quality car. The clam-shell tailgate leaked into the car, the dashboard cracked down the center, the glue-on trim fell off, they even welded up the upper control arm shaft bushing nuts so to replace them you had to buy the whole shaft. To top it all off we had to replace the engine; you know, the one with those "low-compression" deep dish pistons. Of course, that 400 small-block was externally balanced. One of the worst pieces of crap ever. GREAT VIDEO!
@m420378 ай бұрын
That was mid 70s. My 1966 Ford County Sedan with the little 289 was a great wagon, no leaks, vinyl seats had no tears, motor ran quiet as a mouse. It died from road salt, had to get rid of it. I'd like to buy a rust free one out west but I don't have 25k to drop at the moment
@mr.iforgot30627 ай бұрын
I'm a mechanical engineer rocket scientist. I worked at the Fisher assembly plant in San Francisco from 1969 till 2 years ago. I designed every single GM product since then. Corvettes, Camaro, Chevelle, you name it and it's my creation. I had some good help and that's why I'm so successful. I retired and now I'm a philanthropist. A philanthropist is a person with lots of money and helps. others.😊
@douglasparise39866 ай бұрын
Good for you
@lorenschwiderski5 ай бұрын
Really now? Did you work with Biden? I think he knows you. 🤥
@erikj.2066Ай бұрын
So you’re the one to blame?
@gclarkbloomfield884810 ай бұрын
…the major standouts: 1….the dominance of mid-century business wear; white shirts with black ties and slacks…a haven for plastic “pocket protectors”… 2. …with two notable exceptions, the domain of white males in the engineering and design studios… 3. …the nascent use of computer assisted design… …an illuminating look at the industry some 55 years ago..
@Nudnik110 ай бұрын
So those are the white dudes who designed the Vega and Chevette,Citation pos 😂
@BlackPill-pu4vi10 ай бұрын
Ah, the good ol' straight White Man. The engine of all real progress. When we ran the show, things worked out well and despite occasional errors (blown up and exaggerated by dual citizen media). Now that we've been deposed and replaced by Diversity Inclusion Equity and Woke, everything has gone to shttt. But, nobody is allowed to point that out in any meaningful detail. I celebrated when that deplorable dual citizen OceanGate CEO went down with his Diversity-inspired submarine project. He OPENLY dissed and punked the old straight White Men who warned him of the errors in his design. Said that he didn't want to hire White guys because we weren't inspirational. Karma put him in his place. [applause]
@BlackPill-pu4vi9 ай бұрын
Today's major standout is YT's comment suppression system and its direct focus on suppressing any comment that comes to the defense of White men and a world that was better to live in because of us. We've been gaslighted, defamed, and marginalized and the West is in free fall as a result.
@TheDacia141010 ай бұрын
Video stupendo...love from Italy 💙🇮🇹💙
@1aikaneАй бұрын
Fantastic look into this era.
@dennisduran85009 ай бұрын
I can't even find a bathroom scale made in USA in 2024.
@josephackeret79119 ай бұрын
Looks like around the time I got married! The child safety car seat was just like the one my mother - in - law got us. That was G M s design. She worked at Delco In Oak Creek Wisconsin we still get the GM Employee discount. I’ve bought 20 new cars with that discount.starting in 72 till my new 2024 Cadillac XT6. Loved every single one.
@m420378 ай бұрын
The last beautiful bodystyle Cadillac car ( now the early Escalade was nice up to about 2012) was the 1992.5 Cadillac Brougham, then in 93 they went plastic aerodynamic crap
@hueyman6246 ай бұрын
My favorite worked at the GM Doraville plant for 24 years in the paint department. I remember a family tour there in about this same time period. I believe they were building full size cars. It was a great experience for a 11 year old. I really wanted to see the truck plant at Lakewood. I'm not sure when the Doraville plant closed, but Lakewood closed in 91 I think. Their last model was the box body Caprice and the last few were for the GA State Patrol. I remember seeing them at the delivery lot when the plant had closed. We bought some plant surplus from time to time. Today in WA state I still have a set of long forks we bought at the Lakewood GA plant in the 80s. I still use them daily in my shop.
@lrobbinz6 ай бұрын
Its so nice to see your logo in the middle of the entire video.
@IKhanNot9 ай бұрын
If you worked for the big 3 throughout the 70s to the 90s you made an absolute killing and could retire with a lot.
@warrenlewis39778 ай бұрын
I get annoyed when a 35 year old tells me that the factory "didn't care" about door gaps in the decades past. Young people rarely know what they're talking about.
@AdullFiddler-ez7tm6 ай бұрын
Yes, they're full of crap. They know about flat earth and puberty blocking hormones though.
@briandawkins9845 ай бұрын
But they didn’t. Around 1973 my dad and I stopped in at the local Pontiac dealer. On the sales floor was a white two door sporty Pontiac. I remember there was paint drip on the edge of the trunk lid, and orange peel paint on the lower sills and quarters. My Dad’s VW cars had no such issues. The build quality was superb. GM products were shoddy, as were American cars generally. It as the beginning of Denning’s quality sampling in Japan, and so the beginning of the decline of American manufacturing in general.
@onemoremisfit9 ай бұрын
1:21 the worker slapped that trim onto its mounting clips, which probably broke paint on the body underneath it. Not his fault, he's doing his job as designed. No time is allowed for extra care, no applications of protective coatings under the trim are added to the process. Now that trim that people thought would protect that lower rear area of the car's body will actually serve to accumulate and trap water and corrosives into continuous contact with the metal underneath it where the paint has been broken since the day it was assembled. Unless that car went to a desert climate and stayed there, it has long since rusted away.
@printissgraham49309 ай бұрын
Ok make sense
@onemoremisfit9 ай бұрын
@@printissgraham4930 I did.
@m420378 ай бұрын
Ya out west (away from the coast) there's lots of old clean cars waiting to be restored or already done, just Google and shop! 💰
@mohsintai96998 ай бұрын
old is gold car for the history
@lr76339 ай бұрын
I have a 71 cutlass supreme a 71 chevelle and a 72 camaro
@printissgraham49309 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂🧢
@m420378 ай бұрын
@@printissgraham4930
@8092DJ6 ай бұрын
Yipppeeee
@billb896 ай бұрын
Body by Fisher! The Kansas City Mo plant was a behive of activity in the 60s and 70s.
@domingodeanda2339 ай бұрын
That was so awesome
@CSltz10 ай бұрын
Back when you actually felt like you could afford a new car. I just saw an article for a $107.000 Ford pickup. Two-wheel drive. But loaded. It's hard to believe that they used to change body styles every year. And most of them really looked different than last years. Now it's all Mexico and it shows.
@8092DJ6 ай бұрын
107 dollars is not expensive
@bryanmcleod93469 ай бұрын
General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, American Motors, JEEP! Innovation, Creativity, and Competition, cannot happen in a communist/marxist environment. I am Proud to have been born an AmerICAN!! Where "I Can" is always possible.
@ACF6180T5 ай бұрын
I've restored a few automobiles from the 60''s, & It's neat when you strip them down, & reassemble them because you can really appreciate how the were built from the begging. & you can see the pride that they took in making them, & I like one of the final assembly parts near the end of the restoration; That would be the door sill plate with the Body By Fisher emblem on it lets you know you did it right; Like they did.
@berniesoprano698010 ай бұрын
“Talented men”. Love that line. And I agree. Women have no business in the automotive industry. Especially running some of these companies.
@johnehlert43669 ай бұрын
Mary Barra.
@coach22086 ай бұрын
Like the one ruining GM.
@stevenrich8468Ай бұрын
Yes, running General Motors is definitely a man's world and a man's job.
@daviddaniel3873 ай бұрын
I can't help but look at the Monti Carlos being assembled, my father brought a brand new bright orange and white vinyl top 1971, I was born in 74 and that was the car I was brought home from the hospital in, I remember seeing a picture that my father had taken of my mom sitting on the passenger side holding me, fifty years ago.
@spandecker7278 ай бұрын
What they aren’t showing is upper management and the bean counters hamstringing engineering, sacrificing quality and customer satisfaction to make as much money as possible in the short term- that’s the American management style I’ve worked under for over 40 years
@m420378 ай бұрын
See the airbags? 1974 some cars had them and they worked perfectly, also ABS aka Automatic Skid Control
@recoveringnewyorker22435 ай бұрын
10:45 and despite all the prototyping and testing , I still heard complaints of squeaks, rattles, leaks, etc.
@markbehr887 ай бұрын
The good old days of Made in USA. Bring it back!
@malcolmhamilton520010 ай бұрын
Weld those door hinges on that Nova. We'll never need to change them later.😆
@lvsqcsl10 ай бұрын
Oh come on! When those door hinges wear and the door won't close you can roll the window down and push up on the window frame while closing. Of course, you can't do that if the window is frameless.
@malcolmhamilton520010 ай бұрын
@@lvsqcsl I grew up when these Novas were new, used and bent. You and your Chevy buddy are in the junkyard looking for a door when it dawns on you they're welded on. I can't tell you how many Novas I saw going down the road looking like they were permanently turning left, or right forever more, after the mildest of front end impacts. Several buddies had the very front of their frame rails rot out, completely liberating the steering box from that very frame. One had just spent a fortune getting his Nova resprayed only to find out his steering was done permanently. I saw several attempts of pounding wood inside the frame rails and trying to secure that steering box. And who doesn't remember a pushrod coming through the 307s valve cover because of "push in" rocker studs......on a moving parts engine! Push in studs! The fact you couldn't fit anything wider than an E70 series tire in the wheelwells ensured you couldn't get traction, even if it had a suspension that could plant the tires. I remember when back halfing and tubbing hit the streets in the mid 70s, Novas were the FIRST to get this done to them, to correct the terrible GM engineering in these cars. Never owned a GM, never will.
@tomrogers94679 ай бұрын
@@malcolmhamilton5200. Every GM had its defects.
@Maaaattologyyyy9 ай бұрын
I miss my late 80's Buick Skylark. Body by Fisher.
@m420378 ай бұрын
Buy one, Google
@floorpizza80748 ай бұрын
Dad had a 1964 Buick Skylark that he kept as a beater for us kids to use as training wheels. Got my license in 1982, the last of the three kids to drive it, it was beat to hell by the time it finally reached me. Front left quarter panel was replaced with a junkyard panel, not even the same color. Driver side door was caved in. Paint worn through, upholstery in ribbons. And I loved that car dearly. If I could go back in time, I'd time capsule that car so I could restore it at a later date, which happens to be now.
@socaljarhead76709 ай бұрын
You can get all nostalgic all you want but the truth of the matter is the 1970s is when the reputation of the American carmaker took a shit.
@richardanderson50785 ай бұрын
Seeing real men work freaks you out , sorry you missed it.
@Mudnuri9 ай бұрын
Remember when we gave tours to the Chinese and then gave them tool and die equipment? Beginning of the New World Order
@vincentwaclawek61909 ай бұрын
Alot different from the >$65,000 plastic, hard riding suspension, rolling computers they have to nerve calls car now.
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
The hard ride is from short sidewall tires, like we are all road racers now
@dougdier31047 ай бұрын
What cars, all the big three build today are overpriced 4 door pickups. Crossovers and suv's
@axjason9 ай бұрын
There were some interiors that were pretty ridiculous, but there weren’t very many cars that looked all the same
@dan-xxx-87139 ай бұрын
Wauw! I had a 1978 2 door Malibu with a fisher body back in 2000, and I always wondered how a car was developed, designed , and put together😊 and now I know. Amazing documentary 😊
@m420378 ай бұрын
Buy another one
@hassanzaib35259 ай бұрын
Beautiful, I really enjoyed watching this....
@milfordcivic675510 ай бұрын
@ 8:00 - all contained within a laptop computer today
@boblittle25296 ай бұрын
yep and the battalion of disk packs is now a cloud
@realdealio16 ай бұрын
a cellphone
@KEEPTRUCHA949 ай бұрын
RIP Fisher Body
@WarNPeace-p6hАй бұрын
Fisher Body The Greatest Automotive Legend's In Body Design History
@MegaRetr9 ай бұрын
Wow GM was amazing at that time)))))
@tomrogers94679 ай бұрын
I seemed to have missed the part where they installed the rust accelerator.
@abc339449 ай бұрын
I wonder what happens to all the body stamping dies,, do any get bought or preserved?
@steves78968 ай бұрын
That music, I'm waiting for Steve McQueen to come crash the party in a green Mustang.
@17Onager8 ай бұрын
Such amazing technology. And this was half a century ago!
@mariocooldude90928 ай бұрын
Had no idea computers 🖥️ played such a role in the design back then wow😮
@qualityman19659 ай бұрын
Bodies by fisher. They used poke fun at it and call it coffins by fisher back in the 80s.
@mlez71979 ай бұрын
We need to bring those machines back
@bryanphipps91319 ай бұрын
Sad to think that between 1970-1980, prices of new cars went up 3-4 times, design, looks and the quality crashed that much.
@devengudinas16499 ай бұрын
Inflation was insane back then
@recoveringnewyorker22435 ай бұрын
Y’know , I worked at a firetruck/ambulance factory for 21+ years (1987 - 2009). They put out a film much like this. It looked great. But the real story on the assembly line was quite different. Inspections and defect corrections were nothing more than exercises in pencil whipping. By the time a typical firetruck/ambulance made it to the end of the assembly line , there was an average of 250 defects that had to be corrected. Before that in the early 1980s I was a junior mechanic at two General Motors dealerships. It took on average 2 1/2 hours to correct all that was wrong with those cars from the factory.
@axjason9 ай бұрын
Back in the day when Chevy, Cadillac, Buick and Pontiac and Oldsmobile had more chrome than you could shake a stick at
@bshingledecker10 ай бұрын
1970 Monte Carlo. Could be 71-72 as well. Personal Luxury as they would name it.
@johnsorensen208810 ай бұрын
1970 in the description
@chuckprahl17010 ай бұрын
70, front parking lights in the bumper are rounded. 71 are rectangular and the 72 are in the grill.
@claytonbouldin93815 ай бұрын
My friend has a '70 Monte Carlo and owned a '72 when we were in high school.
@lilibethdoherty2953 ай бұрын
What they do not say is they are making the cars as cheaply as possible and more importantly only last till the Warranty Expires !
@JT-ee1ii8 ай бұрын
Enjoyed the video. Is the "King Rose Archives" water mark necessary?
@cj81722 ай бұрын
I recently owned a green 1970 Monte Carlo, awesome car. Great video, from a time before the world become such a mess.
@PyrosPelagics9 ай бұрын
love that pontiac in clay,
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
Would like to know what a full size clay mock up weighed?
@MindsEyeVisualGuitarMethods9 ай бұрын
were can I get the background soundtrack for cruising in my 78. 8track would be perfect.
@karaDee23639 ай бұрын
Love seeing those clay models of the second generation Pontiac Firebirds. And that formula undergoing testing. This is back when American car manufacturing was so great. Before robotic automation replaced people
@rogerdodrill47337 ай бұрын
Don't think robots ever replaced people, just helped them work faster& easier
@heinrichgerhardt61199 ай бұрын
Even showed the prototypes of the airbag from 2:36-2:53. Those came out in 1973-74.
@deltajohnny5 ай бұрын
Awesome... 😍😍😍😍
@simonschiller56806 ай бұрын
STIL LOVE FOR THIS PERFECTION IM 43 YERS MECANIC : OLD MAN FOR OLD THINGS ?? RESPECT FOR GREAT CARS !!
@8092DJ6 ай бұрын
Terrible at spelling
@maconp11196 ай бұрын
How our country has fallen…😢
@ThomasLee-ss4bvАй бұрын
Turnstead, later fisher body Detroit on springwells & fort in Detroit. That place hummed 24 / 7. Then the olds and caddy bodies on the car haulers going down Clark St. To Clark assembly on Michigan Ave and Clark St. Sad that's all gone now.