The 1950s and 1960s were a golden era in automotive history. Motors were big and powerful, but not nearly as powerful as the styling departments at car companies, which ran the whole damn industry. Chrome abounded, colors went wild, and metal stampings of high-volume cars began taking more complex shapes than ever. The big defining feature of the era were tailfins, which may have had their origins at General Motors, but that were unquestionably pioneered by Chrysler’s Virgil Exner, whose “Forward Look” styling initiative — which hinged heavily on tailfins — changed automotive styling forever. Chrysler was putting fins on damn near everything in the late 1950s, and Australian-model cars would be no exception. But don’t think Australia’s Chryslers were the same as the U.S.’s. No, due in large part to Australian regulations that promote cars being built locally, based on what I’ve read online, Chrysler Australia was in many ways a separate entity from its Detroit “mothership,” getting off the ground by building a number of 1954 Plymouth Belvedere-based cars in Adelaide. These cars, built on the same bones as the U.S.-spec 1951 Plymouth Cranbrook [Editor’s Note: I think those are what you’re supposed to drive if you have a UTI – JT] (which became the Belvedere in 1954), would eventually be turned into a single Australian model, the AP1 Royal (“AP” for “Australian Plymouth”) for the 1957 model-year.
Chrysler Australia seemed to always be tight for money, and the result was that its cars were always a mishmash of various American cars. Just look at the Chrysler Royal in the picture above. As Curbside Classic points out, it just took the 1955 Plymouth Belvedere’s front end and added 1957 grille bars. Here’s the ’55 Belvedere:
And here’s a 1957:
In the back, the Royal looked like a 1956 Belvedere, but with a different C-pillar. Here’ the Royal:
And here’s the ’56 Belvedere:
Then 1958 came around, and AP1 became AP2, with new styling becoming part of the change (which lasted until AP3 debuted in 1960). The AP2 Chrysler Royal was special because of these:
Per the National Motor Museum in Birdwood, Australia, these fins-on-top-of-fins were called “saddle fins,” and they were bolt-on options. If that sounds absurd to you, then just read the museum’s little blurb:
Look at those things. They’re glorious, though based on this ad, I might suspect that Chrysler Australia was a bit self-conscious about them. Here’s what the ad reads at the top right: Again, that seems a bit defensive. You’d think that company that bolts wings onto wings would have no shame.
I have yet to find a brochure that states that the saddle fins were actually optional, but in any case, bolt-on fins mounted atop fins is just amazing, and a reminder of how wild things got in the 1950s. Here’s a look at the Royal AP2’s standard features; the brochure says the fins act like airplane stabilizers to help the vehicle track straight down the road:
There was a 117 horsepower 250 cubic-inch inline-six as the standard motor, or a customer could opt for a 313 cubic-inch V8. Hooked to those motors was either a three-speed manual or a three-speed pushbutton automatic. It was a cool car that I’m sad I didn’t know about sooner. Also, DT, shouldn’t you be wrenching on something and writing about that? https://b.zmtcdn.com/data/pictures/5/19188465/2906a69c352b9d2df0a0702139576aa3.png Seriously though, I’ve been catching up on your and the Autopians Instagram, if that black ute is a solid shell and with a little luck you can get this project across the finish line. A-body mopars are fairly simple machines, in my younger days my friends and I managed near complete suspension and drive train swaps on darts and dusters over a couple of days, it can be done, good luck! https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0c/Shanghai_SH760_front-left_2016_Shanghai_Auto_Museum.jpg/800px-Shanghai_SH760_front-left_2016_Shanghai_Auto_Museum.jpg