One Of 852! 1931 Chevrolet Phaeton
The old, found Chevy hits keep on coming! Last week it was this 1934 Master Six barn bound in Bozeman and today it’s a 1931 Phaeton tucked away in Tuscon Tucson. This example has been out of the barn, or wherever it calls home and is an actual driver – though it probably needs some work, let’s see what’s here. This neat two-door convertible is available, here on craigslist for $28,000. Matt R gets a nod and a wink for this discovery!
Chevrolet’s body style lineup wasn’t dissimilar to other manufacturers in ’31. There were coupes, roadsters, two and four-door sedans, and a rare Phaeton which is, in essence, a four-door convertible though Chevrolet produced a two-door version, such as this subject car and known as a “Landau Phaeton”. And, it’s a rare one too as the Classic Car Database states that of the 619K cars produced by Chevrolet in the depression year of 1931, only 852 were Phaetons. And now, owing to the effects of the downturned economy, that 619K total volume was less than half of 1929’s production of 1.3M copies.
The seller suggests, “Looks like old restoration from the 50’s“. I’m not sure how that can be determined (paint job perhaps?) but the body of this Phaeton, overall, is pretty sound. There is some noted surface rust but no signs of serious rot or physical damage. If anything, this is a complete car, minus the folding top fabric. But, the seller does mention that he has the top’s landau irons. A good wash could reveal an even brighter presentation.
The interior may be feeding some of that restoration suspicion. While in fair shape, it appears to be incorrect and leans more toward an amateur implementation. There is some observable water damage but the material is intact and not ripped or overly worn. The instrument panel is curious, it seems to be complete without vacancies but it’s finished in red which is peculiar. Also, the footwell floorboards show to be missing.
Drives this car does, and the seller adds, “Runs and drives tires are dry rotted but hold air. Brakes work engine runs good“. That engine running comes about thanks to a 50 HP, 193 CI, in-line six-cylinder powerplant working via a three-speed manual transmission. There is no accurate mileage listed or any details regarding possible engine improvements or rebuilding. It looks complete but is as it is.
Next step suggestions? Owing to this Phaeton’s rarity, I’d suggest a restore-to-original state. Yes, it’s easy for me to just recommend that as the hard part is the actual undertaking and there’s the cost, time, talent, interest level, etc. that needs to be present. And, as long as we’re on that front, in spite of this car’s low production volume, I think that price is going to need some downward pressure, what says you?
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Comments
There is no doubt this is a rare body style and appears to be in very good condition. The condition looks good enough , that body and paint restoration could not have too many issues. Not cheap of course but doable. I had a 32 Chevy Coupe, when I was a teenager and it was a cool car ( I couldn’t afford a 32 Ford) . I don’t know about the price. It is going to depend on the buyer, how bad they want it and what they plan to do with it. I know what I would do, but I will keep that to myself. I don’t want a lot of negative comments.
Tucson!
Oops, fixed – thx.
JO
Never a fan of these old cars, but this one looks like someone could throw a little money at it to clean it up and have fun.
Please let us know what it sells for.
True it’s a rare car but; there’s a lot to do here unless you just want to maintain it and enjoy driving it. Someone has installed a later downdraft carb as this should carry an updraft carb- 1932 was the first year for downdrafts in Chevys.
I like the added oil filter and if it doesn’t have one yet I would add a fuel filter too. The wood body framing should be checked closely.
In rust we trust ! In wood? Not so much! Lots of wood in this one!
The old car standard evaluation system: 1. Rare. So, what? No one wanted one then. 2. Valuable. It’s the buyers money, not the seller that determines value. 3. Desirable. Was it then? Is it now?
Then, the biggie: Condition. Why was it not maintained in the first place?
I find this car, quite a nice day and a great event, lets see what we all weather like at 91. years of age. and if even around to compare. thx for the pictures.
i think better than the typical remarks you got as haters. its quite nice. lets see how the rest look at 90 in age, and then send me a picture. thx