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News Abstract
By: PointLine Media Research & Editorial Team
Topic:Arts & Media
July 3, 2026
The DFW Car & Toy Museum has added a 1936 Tatra 75 convertible to its current display. The vehicle, previously held in the Tampa Bay Automotive Museum, is now part of the Ron Sturgeon Collection in Fort Worth.
This specific model features a 1.7-liter air-cooled flat-four engine and a four-speed manual transmission. Its design incorporates a backbone chassis, which provided structural stability for passenger vehicles during that period.
The car retains its original right-hand-drive configuration with red leather interior accents. With only 44,000 kilometers recorded on the odometer, it remains a well-preserved example of European automotive engineering from the 1930s.
The preservation of vehicles like the Tatra 75 reflects a growing interest in mid-20th-century mechanical history. As automotive technology shifts rapidly toward electrification, collectors and museums are increasingly focused on maintaining functional examples of early internal combustion design to document the evolution of engineering standards.
This trend highlights the importance of private collections in keeping rare industrial artifacts accessible to the public. By housing these machines in specialized facilities, owners ensure that mechanical milestones remain available for study and historical observation.