There is a purity in the Imperial lineage that few, if any other car 'brands' can claim: they were, year after year, simply the biggest and the best that the company had to offer. In modern times, companies offer a variety of prestige versions of the different types of automobiles they make, and so you can get both a big, a medium size and a small Lexus or whatever. The given name is merely a brand that implies that what you have is the most prestigious version of a vehicle type in their inventory. Not so the Imperial. In each year until it was discontinued in 1975 it was always the biggest car you could get from the Chrysler Corporation. There was no such thing as a mid sized, or small, or SUV, or pick up Imperial. These cars come from an era when prestige meant size. It is noticeable that these cars always had the biggest engine possible, as well. If you wanted a smaller engine you would have to get a regular Chrysler. Of course, bigness in and of itself was not the only defining element of the cars. They always had the most and the newest luxury extras and they were always the first to get them. While today just about any car can have power everything, when innovations such as cruise control were introduced, you may be certain that it was the Imperial that had them first. This single minded approach may have been a contributing factor to the demise of the Imperial. The economics of the car business dictated the modern approach and a relatively small line of unique cars became less and less viable. My neighbour has a 1973 Chrysler and you just about have to be an expert to tell it from the Imperial, which is hardly the point of having such an expensive line. Once Imperial lost their own individual sheet metal, the writing was, as far as the Chrysler Corporation was concerned, on the wall. While I have been one of the sharpest critics of the company and how it handled the Imperial as a whole, even I must admire their unwillingness to "cheapen" the extraordinary lineage the name always connoted. Witness the name LeBaron. In our world, it means the ultimate with everything version of that year's Imperial. In the public's eye, it is a discontinued K car of no great merit, and I say that as one who owns and loves one of them. All I'm saying is that the name is no longer an indication of excellence and prestige. Post 1975 attempts to use the Imperial name again led to some good cars. The ones from the early 1980s were designed to be competition for the Thunderbird, large luxury coupes. Those from the early 1990s were an upscale version of the Chrysler New Yorker. What this proved was that it was quite easy to use the name again, and that there might even be merit in so doing, but it was still going to be a tough sell to the buying public, whose understanding of what Imperial stands for is that they are always the biggest and the best of what the company has to offer. Hugh