Pierce-Arrow Model 66-QQ Five-Passenger Touring 1912, Estados Unidos
Fotografia
The Model 66 Pierce-Arrow occupies the same position among
Brass Era automobiles that the Bugatti Type 41 La Royale does among its Classic
Era brethren. It was the largest, grandest, and most potent thing produced by a
manufacturer during its time. For collectors of contemporary automobiles, it
is, quite simply, the Holy Grail.
The 66 was named for the rated horsepower of its engine, a
massive inline six-cylinder mill that, at its introduction in 1910, displaced
an immense 714 cubic inches. By 1912 the engine had swelled to nearly 825, and
while its name remained the 66, its rating had increased to nearly 100
horsepower. Most important, the long stroke created the prodigious torque
necessary to propel the massive chassis and typically luxurious, regal
coachwork. For some years this model was recorded by Guinness World Records as
having the largest engine installed in a production automobile.
Some 1,250 Model 66s were produced between 1910 and 1918.
Almost all of the survivors are held in private collections and rarely emerge
for sale on the public market.
The early example offered here was assembled by longtime
Pierce-Arrow Society member Howard Lane of Massachusetts utilizing a correct
original 66-QQ engine that had been acquired by the great Henry Austin Clark
Jr. Records of the Pierce-Arrow Society note early owners of 66500 as George
Dickinson of Gloucester, Massachusetts, and Fred P. Bagley of Boston, both in
the 1910s. It is thought that Mr. Dickinson may have been the original owner.
The engine was mated with a frame built to specification by a local craftsman,
then fitted with axles from a Model 48, with the front axle appropriately
widened to fit the new 66 frame. In this form the project passed to Richard
Pettingell, a Brass car collector in Ellenville, New York. Mr. Pettingell
fitted the car with the current body, a handsome five-passenger touring
constructed in the pattern of original 66-QQ coachwork, including appropriate
fenders, aprons, hood, top, and ancillary items such as the windshield, coil
box, and glove and tool boxes.
The current owner acquired the car for his distinguished
collection in the mid-1980s. With an eye toward long-distance touring, it was
upgraded with a 12-volt electrical system, including alternator and starter
motor, a Zenith carburetor and modern distributor, and four-wheel hydraulic
disc brakes. The Pierce was then entered into the 1985 Transcontinental Tour,
one of the biennial cross-country journeys hosted by exuberant Florida cigar
manufacturer and car aficionado Millard Newman. It was driven over 3,500 miles
from Portland, Maine, to Portland, Oregon, mainly on Canadian roads, reportedly
passing all comers and climbing hills with ease.
Most recently, the Pierce-Arrow received a thorough cosmetic
restoration, with the bodywork improved for fit and finish and painted two
subtle shades of rich maroon, with beautiful varnished wood wheels, tan leather
upholstery, and a tan cloth top. The abundant brass trim, including the
radiator, jewel-lensed headlamps, and windshield frame, is a rich and sparkling
accent. Pierce cowl lamps are fitted, as are a klaxon horn and Warner
Auto-Meter with clock.
This is a truly fabulous machine and would be a superb entrant
to any number of Brass Era tours all over the country, where it could continue
the tradition happily set by its owner back in 1985. It is still capable of
abundant performance, all while carrying its passengers majestically high above
the road in the largest, hottest automobile of its time—the great Pierce 66, a
car for captains of industry and leaders of men, then and now.


























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