zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Culture
/
I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?
I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?-September 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:12:13

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

While hiking in Texas on Saturday, I spotted the frame of an old car that had apparently been swept away by a river and then deposited on the bank, where it has rotted for decades. Try as I might, I’ve been unable to identify the machine; can you please help?

I spent Thanksgiving hanging out in Texas with my brothers and their girlfriends. After a gluttonous few days, guilt forced us to spend Saturday hitting hiking trails at Colorado Bend, a state park in the Texas hill country.

Toward the end of our hike, we checked out a waterfall called Gorman Falls, which flows into the Colorado River. Just a few hundred feet from the falls, along the river bank, I discovered a buried car — well, what’s left of one.

Mystery Car

A quick Google search led me to a photo on with the caption “An abandoned car buried upside-down in mud along the bank of Colorado River near Gorman Falls.” I cannot find any further information, but I can tell you that this car — whatever it is — isn’t upside down.

Let’s walk through some of this mysterious vehicle’s characteristics and see if we can identify what we’re looking at. Luckily, the car’s mechanical components are quite telling.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

First things first: This thing is a body-on-frame vehicle, and what’s interesting is just how wide that frame is between the axles compared to how narrow the frame is ahead of the front axle and behind the rear. It’s a unique frame shape, which should help us identify what we’re looking at.

Strut Rod Front Suspension, Solid Rear Axle With Coil Springs

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

The suspension gives us some good information, too. Up front is an independent suspension that uses strut rods to locate the wheels longitudinally. This isn’t uncommon on some later Japanese cars, and even a few later American cars, but it’s very common on older, 1960s-1970s-era cars like my and . I don’t see any coil springs up front, so it might be a torsion beam design — also common on 1960s-era cars like my Valiant and Mustang. It’s also possible that I just can’t see the coils.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

The solid rear axle works with the body-on-frame design and strut rods to all but confirm that the vehicle is rather old, and the rear coil springs make it clear that the machine is not a truck (trucks have used leaf springs up until relatively recently): What we’re looking at here is an old sedan or coupe. Most likely American.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

Also obvious is the fact that this vehicle has a steering box and not a rack-and-pinion setup. Plus, instead of kingpins, whatever vehicle this is used ball joints to create the axis about which the front tires turn. This all lines up with what I’d expect to find on a 1960s-era American car.

Bias Ply Tires, Drum Brakes

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

The bias-ply tires are Goodyear “Custom Power Cushion” Polyglas tires, which were quite popular in the 1970s:

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

Drum brakes at all four wheels further confirm that this machine is probably from the 1970s or older.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

Vehicles (especially nicer ones with rear coil springs) in the 1980s and newer would likely have had radial tires and at least front disc brakes.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

The vehicle’s size offers a bit of a clue, as well. It’s wide, but not really that long.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

With a coil-sprung rear suspension, we already know it’s not a truck, but given the frame’s size, I don’t think we’re looking at a big four-door sedan like a Lincoln Continental, Chrysler Imperial, or Cadillac.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

Granted, this frame has clearly been crushed by whatever crash put it in this river in the first place, but I don’t think it’s been shortened by accordion by multiple feet.

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

The entire body of the car is gone, meaning the only Class-A surface (i.e. surface that one might consider “styled”) we have left is the frame-mounted rear bumper. It’s chrome, and there’s a prominent crease about six inches inboard from the corner, where there’s a round carriage bolt.

Hmm.

My Best Guess? A 1960s Chevy Impala Coupe

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

I am honestly unsure what the car is, though I will say that a 1960s-era B-Body Chevy would have the same independent front suspension design (though with coil springs up front; again, I didn’t see any on the front of the buried car, but they might have been there), the same coil-sprung solid axle out back, a similar steering box location, and a similarly-shaped frame (you can see a 1965 Impala frame above; this one was being sold by a member of messaging board).

Image for article titled I Found A Car Buried In A Texas Riverbed. Can You Identify It With These Clues?

If it were a 1965 Impala, it’d have a similar rear bumper crease, and a carriage bolt in a similar location. The mint condition Impala shown above (this vehicle sold at a ) shows a rear bumper not unlike what I found on the shore of the Colorado river in Texas.

But I am not sure that the mystery car is an Impala, particularly because the front subframe mounts where the front side of the strut rods bolt up don’t quite look the same. So if you have a guess, let me know in the comments.

Part of me hopes it wasn’t an Impala, because that’s far too badass of a car to go out this way.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Culture
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
closed its São Bernardo Plant in November 2023, marking the end of its first overseas production facility. The closure caps off a period of continuous car production in São Paolo, , lasting over 60 years. The plant was home to a Komatsu 700-ton press that predates itself. And now...
Sep 12, 2025
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I have two automotive loves: The first is the Miata, the second is off-road racing. For a while I raced air-cooled Volkswagens in the deserts of California and Nevada and I was lucky enough to co-drive in a class 11 stock bug in the Baja 1000 a few years...
Sep 12, 2025
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
At long last, we are about to get behind the wheel of for the first time. Sure, , and sure, , and sure , but hey — what can you do? Anyway, before we get behind the wheel of this three-row electric beast, we want to know what you...
Sep 12, 2025
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
MotorWeek’s is some of the on the internet. The long-running automotive news magazine has a treasure trove of tests after being on the air for over 40 years. Where else can you find detailed instrumented testing of long-forgotten cars like the or a ? MotorWeek’s recent Retro Review upload is...
Sep 12, 2025
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I love tiny, of . I have a that is roughly half the size of a normal cat, and she’s perfect. I own a 2013 , which is like the miniature version of a normal-sized vehicle (at least here in Texas) — but beyond that, I also own a Hot...
Sep 12, 2025
Subaru Had It Right All Along
Subaru Had It Right All Along
When first came to the United States, it sold small funky cars that were decidedly un-American. As the company grew its own identity and became more established in the U.S., it became the first automaker to offer an all-wheel-drive passenger car in 1975. Subaru was also an early-adopter of...
Sep 12, 2025
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved