Photos by Charley Seavey
Charley Seavey has done a number of Galleries for us in the past, and his photo archives are not yet depleted by any account. Here, we see that cars in this gallery are mostly pre WWII and were built for the rich and very rich. What Seavey eyes is the touches of quality, size, and luxury that are conspicuously absent from more mundane vehicles and in themselves great examples of conspicuous consumption.
Seavey’s previous work for VeloceToday can be accessed via the links following this gallery.
Richard Henry says
That 1927 Rolls-Royce Phantom l is what the British would call a “typical American restoration”, meaning flashy, inappropriate and a lamentable representation of a British Classic. I like it too, so screw ’em! As to the cockpit, I see three pedals, from right to left are throttle, brake and clutch. What are you seeing? Those switches under the dash look modern. One of them probably activates the “AHOOOOGA horn”. The gearshift is just behind the parking brake lever, up against the driver side door. That button on the floor would be the dimmer switch, if it was in my 1970 GTO. Not sure what it does in a Roller.
Charley Seavey says
Richard, thanks for the like. I have occasionally made “over restored” observations, and non-period color schemes can be irritating, but like you, I thought that Roller looked just fine. I was wondering what the little red things on the pedals were. They sure don’t look original but I suppose they might be.
RobertWilsonVic says
The little red thingys look like switches suspended below the dash.
John Shea says
Preselector would be mounted on the steering column not on the floor board area. 120 Cab is magnificent.