Checker Marathon | |
Manufacturer: | Checker Motors Corporation |
Production: | 1960–1982 |
Assembly: | Kalamazoo, Michigan |
Wheelbase: | 1200NaN0 1290NaN0 (limousine) |
Class: | Mid-size car |
Body Style: | 4-door sedan 5-door station wagon |
Layout: | FR layout |
Related: | Checker Superba Checker Aerobus |
The Checker Marathon is an automobile produced by the Checker Motors Corporation of Kalamazoo, Michigan, between 1961 and 1982. It was marketed as a passenger car for consumers, as opposed to the similar Taxi, which was aimed at fleet buyers.
Marathons were produced in both four-door sedan and four-door station wagon forms, and the rarer six-door 9-seater and eight-door, 12-seater "Aerobus" sedans and wagons.
The Marathon was introduced in September 1960 for the 1961 model year, alongside, and later superseding, the Checker Superba Custom and differing from the Superba with its better interior appointments. Originally, it retained the Superba's A10 body code, whereas A9 was the code used for taxis. The exterior of the Marathon had a full-width egg-crate grille, differing from the Superba's narrower grille and inboard parking lights.
After a minor facelift for 1963, chassis codes changed to A11 for taxis and A12 for passenger versions.[1] Also in 1963, the Marathon Town Custom, a limousine version on a longer (129 versus 120 in) wheelbase appeared. This version, which seated eight, received the A19E chassis code.[2] A few years later, this was changed to A12E.
Checker did not have a nationwide dealer network and sold most of its production for fleet service.[3]
With the exception of United States government-mandated 5 mph bumpers in 1974 and ongoing mechanical changes, the Marathon remained virtually unchanged during its 21-year production run. However, Checker did comply with all safety and emissions requirements while in production. Notably, the Marathon's front suspension A-frames interchange with a 1956 Ford.
Some of these changes help in identifying the year of a Checker, and included:
The engines used were originally Continental-built L-head inline-sixes (OHV units for the wagons), but these were exchanged for Chevrolet sixes and small-block V8s for the 1965 model year.[4] These continued to change as Chevrolet introduced modifications, peaking with the 1969 L-48 350 V8 which produced 3000NaN0 (gross).[5] In 1969, a Perkins 4.236 L diesel non-turbo engine was available as an option for all models, but for only one year. By 1973, power for the 350 had decreased to 1450NaN0 and in 1975 catalytic converters were introduced. For 1980, the engine lineup was changed entirely, with a 3.8-litre V6 replacing the old inline unit, and a smaller 267 ci (4.4 L) standard V8. The big news was the Oldsmobile LF9 engine, a 5.74L diesel V8.[6]
Six-cylinder engines | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Model Years | Layout | Size | Fuel system | Power | Origin | Notes | |
1961–1964 | L-head I6 | 3707cc | single carb | 800NaN0 at 3,100 rpm | Continental | Sedans only until 1963 | |
1961–1962 | OHV I6 | 3707cc | single carb | 1220NaN0 at 4,000 rpm | Continental | Station Wagon only | |
1963–1964 | OHV I6 | 3707cc | 2-bbl carb | 1410NaN0 at 4,400 rpm | Continental | $57 option | |
1965–1968 | OHV I6 | 3769cc | single carb | 1400NaN0 at 4,400 rpm | Chevrolet | base | |
1969–1970 | OHV I6 | 4095cc | 2-bbl carb | 1550NaN0 at 4,200 rpm | Chevrolet | base | |
1971–1972 | 1450NaN0 at 4,200 rpm | 110 hp SAE net | |||||
1973–1975 | 1000NaN0 at 3,600 rpm | low-comp, EGR | |||||
1976 | single carb | 1050NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | 8.2:1 | ||||
1977–1979 | 1100NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | 8.3:1 | |||||
1980 | OHV V6 | 3751cc | 2-bbl carb | 1150NaN0 at 4,000 rpm | Chevrolet | ||
1981–1982 | 1100NaN0 at 4,200 rpm | LC3 | |||||
V8 engines | |||||||
1965–1967 | OHV V8 | 4638cc | 2-bbl carb | 1950NaN0 at 4,800 rpm | Chevrolet | ||
1966–1968 | OHV V8 | 5354cc | 4-bbl carb | 2500NaN0 at 4,400 rpm | Chevrolet | 10.5:1 | |
1969 | 2350NaN0 at 4,800 rpm | 9.0:1 | |||||
1968 | OHV V8 | 5025cc | 2-bbl carb | 2000NaN0 at 4,600 rpm | Chevrolet | ||
1969 | OHV V8 | 5733cc | 4-bbl carb | 3000NaN0 at 4,800 rpm | Chevrolet | 10.25:1 | |
1970 | 2500NaN0 at 4,500 rpm | 9.0:1 | |||||
1971–1972 | 2450NaN0 at 4,800 rpm | 9.0:1, 165 hp SAE net | |||||
1973–1976 | 2-bbl carb | 1450NaN0 at 4,000 rpm 1450NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | 8.5:1, EGR catalyzed from 1975 | ||||
1977 | 4-bbl carb | 1700NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | 8.5:1 | ||||
1978–1979 | 1600NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | 8.2:1 | |||||
1977–1979 | OHV V8 | 4999cc | 2-bbl carb | 1450NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | Chevrolet | 8.5:1, 8.4:1 after 1978 | |
1980 | 1550NaN0 at 4,000 rpm | 8.6:1 | |||||
1981 | 1500NaN0 at 3,800 rpm | 8.6:1, higher torque (LG4) | |||||
1980 | OHV V8 | 4390cc | 2-bbl carb | 1200NaN0 at 3,600 rpm | Chevrolet | ||
1981–1982 | 1150NaN0 at 4,000 rpm | L39, electronic feedback carb | |||||
1980 | OHV V8 | 5737cc | diesel | 1250NaN0 at 3,600 rpm | Oldsmobile | ||
1981–1982 | 1050NaN0 at 3,200 rpm | improved "DX" version (LF9) | |||||
Notes:--> | |||||||
The final Marathon was manufactured in 1982, when Checker exited the automobile manufacturing business. The company continued operations for an additional 27 years producing body stampings for General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler, until January 2009, when it entered bankruptcy liquidation as a result of the downturn in the USA auto industry.[7]
For decades, Checker was the taxicab of choice for New York City and many other American cities. The size of the car (seating many passengers), the robust construction, the lack of yearly changes to the styling (especially the 1958 and later models, simplifying parts management), and the bolt-on rear quarter panels all contributed to the Marathon's ubiquity on the streets of Manhattan.
The last New York City Checker cab retired in 1999, operated by Earl Johnson from 1978 onwards. The Marathon covered over 750,000 miles and had three engine replacements over the years.[8]
Virtually any film set in New York City in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s will show a Checker Marathon. Many movies set in the 1950s and 1960s use Checker cabs built in the 1970s and early 1980s, since the bodies were virtually the same, and due to the lack of usable early specimens. Also, in works depicting the Soviet Union or East Bloc countries, such as the film Gorky Park and the original Mission: Impossible[9] television series, Checker Marathons were used to depict Soviet-made GAZ-13 Chaika automobiles.
Apart from taxicab use, Marathons were also bought by police departments, most notably in Kalamazoo, where Checker had its factory.[10]
In the late 1960s and into the early 1970s, some black SCV-plated (Stato Città del Vaticano - Vatican City) A12 Marathons were used to accommodate Pope Paul VI's entourage in motorcades.