Classic Ride: 1932 Packard Twin Six 906 Convertible Sedan
Gooding & Co. to auction ex-Al Jolson V-12 touring carSANTA MONICA, California — "Nice car!"
The shout comes through our passenger window, from the driver of anSUVso bland that I honestly can't remember its make or model just seconds later. I give a friendly smile and a thumbs-up, while David Gooding, founder and president of Gooding & Company (and currently my chauffeur) politely thanks our admirer.
"What year?"
"Thirty-two," David and I return in unison. To be more precise, the vehicle in question is a 1932 Packard Twin Six 906 convertible sedan and it's one of a smattering of rare, important, not to mention valuable, cars to be auctioned at Gooding & Co. 's Scottsdale auctions this month. The light turns green, David slots the long, spindly shift lever down and to the left, releases the clutch and we're off again, wafting in an eerily effortless manner down the road. The Packard's "Twin Six," single-carb, 446-cubic-inch V-12 engine gives only the faintest mechanical whirring to indicate the 160 horsepower it's producing.
David tells me 1932 was the first year of the Twin Six engine (and the only year the engine would be given the Twin Six name) with very few produced due to the extra cost over the standard Straight-8. Nevertheless, the smoothness and refinement of theTwin Sixunder acceleration is something that has to be experienced to be believed. In fact, the dominant noise from the Packard is from the transmission, which whines with increasing pitch as we build speed.
"The four-speed transmission is a little noisier than the three-speed," David tells me. It's a bit rarer too, ordered primarily by those who wanted a low first gear for climbing steep hills and mountains. "I'm using second gear [from a stop] around town," says David. This particular car's first owner was famous actor and performer Al Jolson, the star of the 1927 movie "The Jazz Singer," the first sound film that signaled the beginning of the end for the silent film era. I wonder if Jolson intended to climb many hills in his new Packard or if he simply ordered the more expensive transmission just because it was available.




