HomePick of the DayPick of the Day: 1951 Crosley Super Sports with personality to spare

Pick of the Day: 1951 Crosley Super Sports with personality to spare

The fancy version of the Hotshot roadster is a small piece of sports car magic

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Just in time for Christmas, a sports car that just might fit under the tree.  Not a toy but a 1951 Crosley Super Sports, the Pick of the Day.

The Crosley is a tiny bit of an automobile from a short-lived Cincinnati automaker that produced microcars for those who eschewed the bigger-is-better trend of most US car buyers. The company built pint-sized sedans, wagons and convertibles from 1946-1952, following a brief startup in 1939 that ended when war began.

crosley

In 1949, Crosley introduced the minimalistic Hotshot roadster, a doorless sports car that weighed just over 1,000 pounds.  The Super Sport version with doors and a folding top, rather than removable, entered the picture in 1950.

This yellow Crosley Super Sport with a red interior is a “very interesting car to drive,” according to the Indianapolis dealer advertising the roadster on ClassicCars.com.

The diminutive sports car is powered by a 724cc overhead-valve inline-4-cylinder engine generating 26.5 horsepower and backed by a 3-speed manual transmission.  Zero-to-60 time is rated at a brisk 20 seconds, “amazing for a car this size,” the seller notes.

“Pound for pound, some say the Crosley Super Sports is one of the greatest sports cars ever built,” the seller says.

crosley

Be that as it may, the Crosley is pretty much guaranteed to be a fun little runabout for those who appreciate great little cars, and it should attract lots of amused attention everywhere it goes.  The Super Sport is a rare collector car today since not too many of them were sold in the first place.

While the seller does not reveal any details about the car’s history or restoration, the ad does note that it has been outfitted with a new fabric top and fresh tires on its 12-inch rims. 

The asking price for this Crosley is also diminutive, at $12,500. 

To view this listing on ClassicCars.com, see Pick of the Day

Bob Golfen
Bob Golfen
Bob Golfen is a longtime automotive writer and editor, focusing on new vehicles, collector cars, car culture and the automotive lifestyle. He is the former automotive writer and editor for The Arizona Republic and SPEED.com, the website for the SPEED motorsports channel. He has written free-lance articles for a number of publications, including Autoweek, The New York Times and Barrett-Jackson auction catalogs. A collector car enthusiast with a wide range of knowledge about the old cars that we all love and desire, Bob enjoys tinkering with archaic machinery. His current obsession is a 1962 Porsche 356 Super coupe.

2 COMMENTS

  1. It was probably a promotional car . If you buy this beautiful 4 ton pink whale we will include this hideous convertible golf cart . A least you can hang it from a tree to look a Christmas ornament. How could the name Super Sport be attached to this nail file ?

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