Cars named after (or same as) WW2 and 1950s aircraft? (1 Viewer)

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The BMW emblem, complete with the four colored quadrants, is a spinning airplane propeller.
Yes, the logo was to touch on their aircraft engine manufacturing heritage.

Same with many older GM vehicles, which had a carriage logo on the rocker panel step plate: "Body by Fisher".
Fisher manufactured carriages and buggies before the advent of the automobile.
 
Buick Skyhawk (Douglas A-4 Skyhawk)
Buick Electra (Lockheed L-188 Electra, Lockheed L-10 Electra)
Pontiac Phantom Concept Car (McDonnell FH Phantom)
Pontiac Ventura (Lockheed Ventura)
Pontiac Executive (Spartan Executive)
Oldsmobile Toronado (North American B-45 Tornado)
GM Saturn (Lockheed Saturn)
Dodge Demon (McDonnell F3H Demon)
Plymouth Fury (North American FJ-1 Fury)
Mercury Cougar (Grumman F9F Cougar)
Mercury Marauder (Martin B-26 Marauder)
Packard Clipper Constellation (Lockheed Constellation)
Ford Scorpio (Northrop F-89 Scorpion)
 
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Going back to the Mustang, yes, Lee Iacocca approached North American and actually wanted to use the image of a P-51, not the horse.

North American basically told him to pound sand as they weren't about to have their most iconic aircraft decorate some cheap little Ford. And yes, the mustang was a cheap little car back at the beginning. It's mentioned in several books about Ford and Lee Iacocca wrote about it himself a couple of times.
 
Going back to the Mustang, yes, Lee Iacocca approached North American and actually wanted to use the image of a P-51, not the horse.

North American basically told him to pound sand as they weren't about to have their most iconic aircraft decorate some cheap little Ford. And yes, the mustang was a cheap little car back at the beginning. It's mentioned in several books about Ford and Lee Iacocca wrote about it himself a couple of times.
Thanks for this post. I thought I was losing my mind again.
 
It is amazing how many automobile ads on TV in reality are selling airplanes, sometimes complete with radio chatter in the background and even some with the car climbing through the clouds.

There was a full color glossy insert in Air and Space Magazine some years back that had on its first page a gorgeous picture of a Beaver on floats sitting on a beautiful mountain lake, with a cabin in the foreground. What were they selling? Airplanes? Flight instruction? Hunting trips? Cabin sites? Well, open it and you see they are selling Pickup Trucks!

Okay, the pickup truck CANNOT get to the cabin because it clearly is only accessible by airplane.....

More recently, there was a TV commercial where they go find a dusty F6F Hellcat in the desert and soon have it looking brand new. They were shown towing it with a pickup truck.
 
Buick Skyhawk (Douglas A-4 Skyhawk)
Buick Electra (Lockheed L-188 Electra, Lockheed L-10 Electra)
Pontiac Phantom Concept Car (McDonnell FH Phantom)
Pontiac Ventura (Lockheed Ventura)
Pontiac Executive (Spartan Executive)
Oldsmobile Toronado (North American B-45 Tornado)
GM Saturn (Lockheed Saturn)
Dodge Demon (McDonnell F3H Demon)
Plymouth Fury (North American FJ-1 Fury)
Mercury Cougar (Grumman F9F Cougar)
Mercury Marauder (Martin B-26 Marauder)
Packard Clipper Constellation (Lockheed Constellation)
Ford Scorpio (Northrop F-89 Scorpion)

I'd buy a car named a Superfortess, so long as it had 12 remote-controlled .50s, and a 20mm stinger. I got your rush-hour hangin'.
 
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Going back to the Mustang, yes, Lee Iacocca approached North American and actually wanted to use the image of a P-51, not the horse.

North American basically told him to pound sand as they weren't about to have their most iconic aircraft decorate some cheap little Ford. And yes, the mustang was a cheap little car back at the beginning. It's mentioned in several books about Ford and Lee Iacocca wrote about it himself a couple of times.
How is an image of a P-51 copyrighted?

How could they prevent Ford from using it?

Besides, that is the name the UK Air Ministry gave it.
 

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