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Old 01-24-12, 09:43 PM
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Default The Evolution of the Police Car

The Evolution of the Police Car


The battle between good and evil has been waged since time began. Any police officer will tell you that it's a never-ending battle and that the bad guys are getting smarter all the time. Consequently, the tools the good guys use to combat the bad are constantly evolving. Take the police car, for instance. Today's cruisers are high-tech, powerful machines fully equipped to handle just about any type of law-enforcement situation, from routine traffic stops and crowd control to high-speed chases and roadblocks. But they didn't start out that way. Here, we chronicle the evolution of the police car from its humble beginnings and look at where it might go in the future.

The First Police Car


Akron, Ohio, lays claim to the first motorized police patrol wagon, built by Collins Buggy in 1899.

The first squad car hit the bad streets of Akron, Ohio, in 1899. The battery-powered buggy was designed by city mechanical engineer Frank Loomis and built by Collins Buggy Co. It was equipped with electric lights, gongs and a stretcher, and had a snaillike top speed of 16 mph and a feeble range of 30 miles before it needed to be recharged. The car's first assignment: to pick up a drunk at the junction of Main and Exchange streets.

The Need for Speed


The Model T was the first car widely used by police. It was also the first left-hand-drive Ford.

By 1909, there was a serious need for a more modern police car to supplement or replace bicycle and horse-mounted units in order to keep up with faster, motorized vehicles driven by offenders. Enter the Ford Model T, the only affordable choice. The early versions of the T were powered by a front-mounted 4-cylinder engine that developed 20 horsepower, propelling the big beast to a top speed of almost 45 mph. During this period, cars were purchased retail and then modified by police departments. Modifications were limited — rudimentary markings and a variety of lights were the only things that set most early police cars apart from regular cars.

The Paddy Wagon


The Ford Model T wagon was designed to keep officers separated and safe from prisoners.

In 1919, Ford began producing a Model T police truck, developed in response to police requests for a secure vehicle that separated officers and prisoners. Generally painted black and known by the slang term "paddy wagon," police departments often used the cagelike transport to haul drunken partygoers to a holding cell.

The Radio Car


In the 1920s, police upgraded to more powerful touring sedans, such as these 1924 Lincoln Phaetons.

In the 1920s, police departments started outfitting vehicles with two-way wireless radios as a way to save money. Radio-equipped cars eliminated the need for ineffectual telephone-based call boxes on street corners. In addition, a single officer could cover more territory than he could on foot or horseback and still stay in touch with the station house. The radio car also led to centralized communications systems, which allowed the police car to be used in coordinated covert attacks on crime.

Armor Plating


This 1935 Plymouth police car was armor-plated; its steel could stop a .45 Thompson machine-gun bullet.

In the 1930s, in response to the growing popularity of the Thompson submachine gun among criminals, armor plating became popular on police cruisers. Between 1933 and 1940, Plymouth offered armor-plated vehicles for sale to police departments. The most famous was the Kansas City Hot Shot, a 1933 Plymouth purchased by the Kansas City Police Department after the deadly shootout known as the Kansas City Massacre. Plymouth delivered the basic cars for the conversion into police vehicles to suppliers such as Perfection Windshield or Evans Armored Car of Indianapolis, Federal Laboratories of Pittsburgh and Smart Safety Engineering of Detroit. Full armor plating added about 750 pounds to the weight of the vehicle.

V8 Power


The 1932 Ford Model B and its powerful and easily modified flathead V8 was an instant hit with police.

In 1932, Ford introduced the flathead V8 engine in its Model B and changed the cat-and-mouse game forever. It developed 85 horsepower, more than three times the power of the Model T. Consequently, it was loved by both criminals and cops equally, a favorite of Bonnie and Clyde and John Dillinger as well as the police chasing them. The V8 would establish high-powered, fast vehicles as the cars of choice for police departments.

The Police Package


By the 1950s, automakers had begun offering "police packages," such as this 1956 Dodge Coronet.

After World War II, American automakers began bundling the special options most often ordered by police departments into a special police packages. Ford unveiled its police package in 1950, Chevrolet in 1955 and Dodge in 1956. These cars might have looked like their consumer counterparts, except for the fancy paint jobs and lights, but they were anything but ordinary. The sheet metal hid serious improvements to both performance and protection. Police cars became much tougher and more resilient than their regular street counterparts. In 1956, Chrysler's first official police package was offered on Dodge Coronets. A year later, Dodge offered a package with the 325 Hemi engine, with a variety of performance enhancements and 310 horsepower.

Size Doesn’t Matter


The 1970s Chevrolet Nova police cars were compact but powerful: zero to 60 in 8.5 seconds.

Not much changed for the next 15 or so years. Then in the 1970s, law enforcement started using smaller vehicles to pursue offenders. The first widely used compact was the 1975 Chevrolet Nova Police Package. Some experts still call it the ultimate police car. It was powered by a 350-cubic-inch 4-barrel carbureted V8 engine that developed 155 horsepower. The original police versions were set up as pursuit vehicles. But the Nova soon became valued as a police patrol vehicle after the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department adopted it.

A Dark Time for Law Enforcement


Ford's first compact police car was the 1978 Fairmont. The inline-6 model produced only 85 horsepower.

Unfortunately, the end of the 1970s signaled a weak era for the police car. The oil crisis and stricter emissions regulations slowly pushed big engines out of regular, civilian cars and, consequently, out of the police force as well. By the early 1980s, big engines were nearly extinct and police departments turned to the likes of the Ford Fairmont and Plymouth Volare. Most police-specification vehicles were the same under the hood as taxicabs in use at the time.

Diversity Comes Into the Mix


Police fleets have diversified, and now include SUVs like this 2010 Ford Police Interceptor Utility.

Since the 1990s, police cars have been placed into three categories. First, the police pursuit vehicle is the everyday patrol car of a police precinct. It is fully equipped to handle just about any situation, from regular traffic stops to high-speed chases and roadblocks. Second are the special service vehicles, mostly used by government agencies. Most of these are specially equipped SUVs. Finally, there are the special service packages, many of which are sports cars.

Ford Recaptures the Market


By 2003, more than 80 percent of police vehicles in the U.S. were Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptors.

After the Chevrolet Caprice was discontinued in 1996, Ford's Crown Victoria held a near monopoly on police cruisers in North America, primarily because its conventional rear-wheel drive, V8 power and body-on-frame construction were advantageous for police use. The Crown Victoria's body-on-frame construction allowed for inexpensive repairs after accidents without the need to straighten the chassis — an important benefit for a car frequently used for pursuit maneuvers, such as ramming a car to spin it out. Rear-wheel drive made the car easier to control than its front-wheel-drive rivals, and allowed it to better withstand hard driving over curbs and other obstacles found in urban environments. The Crown Vic came equipped with many heavy-duty parts, such as a beefed-up transmission and a 251-horsepower engine.

The Future


The Carbon Motors E7's high-tech features include radiation, chemical and biological threat detection

Carbon Motors of Connersville, Ind., is building the E7 police-car prototype. The E7 was designed from the ground up as a law-enforcement vehicle, with features such as rear-hinged doors for easier passenger ingress. Powered by a BMW 3.0-liter 300-horsepower turbodiesel engine producing a hefty 420 lb-ft of torque and impressive fuel economy of 30 mpg combined city/highway, it can accelerate from zero to 62 mph in 6.5 seconds, and on to a top speed of 155 mph.

http://editorial.autos.msn.com/the-e...d=autos_2123#1
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Old 01-24-12, 09:43 PM
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Ford Stealth Police Interceptor Concept
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Old 01-24-12, 11:02 PM
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adamls2
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The new caprice cop car that they sent over is sick...here's one for sale on eBay...http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/GM-Ce...t_26795wt_1172
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Old 01-25-12, 03:01 AM
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My city's department still loves the Crown Victorias (impeccably maintained). The higher ups are driving around in LE-Spec Tahoes. Both are equipped with VERY low-profile LED lightbars and lamps...

Neighboring cities are warming up to using the Charger.
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Old 01-25-12, 07:48 AM
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I love/hate the Charger police cars.



They look bad-***, but they are intimidating and the cops that drive them always love to accelerate really quick and get up on your *** to further intimidate you!!! lol
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Old 01-25-12, 09:12 AM
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Interesting read! My county uses mostly Crown Vics. There are a few Impalas and a growing number of Chargers though. They modified a number of the Vics to run on natural gas too. Pretty cool stuff.
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Old 01-25-12, 09:37 AM
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there are a lot of undercover cop cars in my area...recently the police department just got a GTR http://www.autoblog.com/2011/10/06/2...lice-car-ever/
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Old 01-25-12, 09:44 AM
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Default The Ultimate Police Car:

The Ultimate Police Car:

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Old 01-25-12, 09:49 AM
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GT-R police car is BAD-***!!!
But that Dunkin Donuts Mini Cooper is awesome LOL !!!

They use an STI police car where I live haha
Here's a pic of it I snapped...
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Old 01-25-12, 10:03 AM
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In my hometown, they used to have Crown Vics for the police dept and F150's for the Sheriff's dept. Now they've gone all dodge, with chargers(a mix of marked and unmarked) for the police, and Ram 2500 HEMI's for the Sheriff's dept.

Here in my college town, they're still 90% Ford. Local police use both crown vics and F150's, with a few chargers here and there. Highway Patrol uses chargers.
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Old 01-25-12, 10:16 AM
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I know a police department in the UK has a fleet of IS-F's that they rebranded IS-Force.
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Old 01-25-12, 10:42 AM
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Originally Posted by greg0126
I know a police department in the UK has a fleet of IS-F's that they rebranded IS-Force.
Haha yeah I remember those!

http://www.autoblog.com/2009/07/27/u...is-f-cruisers/
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Old 01-25-12, 06:11 PM
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The '80s weren't that bad in terms of cop cars. I've always had a soft spot for these.



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Old 01-25-12, 07:03 PM
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Interesting... Not to mention some people donate cars to popo like the supercharged corvette in LA i think, and some other crazy car in Miami.

^^ these are crazy, I love these chevy's as well. They beat most newer ones in reliability. My friend still has one passed down from generation to generation, father to son to now grandson. You can imagine the amount of beating it took lol

Although I'm not a big fan of police officers, I'd highly consider becoming one in Italy for one reason...

http://coolsportycar.com/the-italian...mborghini.html
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Old 01-25-12, 07:04 PM
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I like the charger police cars
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