car design thread | Page 528 | FerrariChat

car design thread

Discussion in 'Creative Arts' started by jm2, Oct 19, 2012.

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  1. of2worlds

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    Looks more like some new fancy Liquorice flavours... ;)
     
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  2. jm2

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    Nice, I knew my cars weren’t yet complete.:rolleyes:
     
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  3. bitzman

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  4. bitzman

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    Surely youn jest, While it is a minimalist wedge, it was done by Marcello Gandini working as consultant for Bertone. Franz was probably in grade school then. BTW Nuccio once offered to build me another Rainbow for $250,000 if I supplied him the chassis....
     
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  5. jm2

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  6. jm2

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  7. energy88

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  8. Edward 96GTS

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    as a kid 50 yrs ago, that porthole was cool. very popular car and everything on the road was American.
     
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  9. jm2

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  10. Edward 96GTS

    Edward 96GTS F1 World Champ
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    ^ at that time was cadillac considered top dog?
     
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  11. jm2

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    Cadillac outsold Lincoln.
    That's when Cadillac was still referred to as 'The Standard of the World'
     
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  12. tritone

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  13. colombo2cam

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  14. colombo2cam

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  15. Bob Parks

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    The 1941 Lincoln Continental is still the best.
     
  16. VigorousZX

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  17. 330 4HL

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    Best news here is that the Excess grille has mostly disappeared...
     
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  18. jm2

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    From my Facebook feed. A Giugiaro Lambo that I've never seen.
    Rolling Art
    Tatiana Kantor · 9h ·

    1960-1965 The Giugiaro Lamborghini that never was.
    At a recent visit to Giugiaro, this 60-year-old unnamed Lamborghini, never before seen, suddenly appeared like an undiscovered Shakespeare manuscript, discreetly displayed in a library with no one paying attention.
    Parked under some Greek temple-like stairs at the Giugiaro Design headquarters, the car sat on its period Borranis, painted in a yellow hue unseen this side of Ducati.
    No details, no background, but the story is simple: Fabrizio Giugiaro found some of his father's old sketches from the Bertone era (1960-1965). He digitized one of them, milled it, painted it, put on wheels, headlamps, some brightwork around the windows and a period numberplate.
    "Happy Birthday father," he then proclaimed on Giugiaro's 70th birthday. "This is actually from you to us, but we made it for you."
    So what is it –- apart from a beautiful birthday present?
    The drawings were marked "Lamborghini," and though the first Lamborghini was presented at the 1963 Torino motor show, the Torino design community had known for a while that a new Italian supercar was about to be born. Uninvited Pininfarina, Ghia, Vignale, Michelotti and certainly many more (Bertone confirmed that they too, had participated) submitted proposals, without knowing too much about the project.
    A design by ex-Bertone (now freelance) designer Franco Scaglione was eventually chosen, but it disappointed many –- even Ferrucio Lamborghini himself admitted it might have been a mistake so he sent it to Touring to have it reworked.
    We have never seen any of the other designs so it is impossible to get an idea of how the original Lamborghini might have looked. But this sculpture might give an idea of what Bertone intended.
    It is entirely different from all the other designs Giugiaro created during his time at Bertone, but that's no surprise. Giugiaro worked on super-disciplined production cars like the Alfa 2000 Sprint, Gordon Keeble, Fiat 850 Spider or Mazda Luce 1500 at the same time as free-wheeling fantasies like the Aston DB4 Jet, the Corvair Testudo (sold at Villa d'Este this summer to a businessman from Milan and now back at Giugiaro headquarters) or the Alfa Romeo Canguro.
    Most of the 25 "officially credited" creations he worked on while at Bertone are nothing short of masterpieces.
    This Lamborghini is completely different from both the other designs he worked on during that period and what everyone else was doing at the time. The flowing – some might say bulbous – lines recall the Ferrari P3 and P4, but those cars appeared years after young Giugiaro sketched these lines.
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  19. 330 4HL

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    Lambo, eh? Looks more Bizzarrini with a bit of Alfa33 in the greenhouse. I like 3/4 rear, 3/4 front not so much...
    CN plate is Cuneo for what it's worth -
     
  20. Peter Tabmow

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    Horns-of-the-bull rear bumperettes are pretty cool...
     
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  21. jm2

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    Pt. 3 of the Bat Mobile story with George Barris.
    The Lincoln Futura/Batmobile, Part 3: Interview with George Barris
    December 16, 20211 CommentFord, Jim Farrell
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    Lincoln Futura/Batmobile—Interview with George Barris (Part III of III)
    By Jim and Cheryl Farrell

    To the old car hobbyist, George Barris is not a very popular person. In 1965, he converted the Lincoln Futura concept car into TV’s Batmobile. Even though we have not been able to confirm everything he told us. We thought it only fair to let Mr. Barris speak for himself. We have been able to confirm that during the 1960s he built at least one Lincoln concept car and several Ford and Mercury concept cars. Also during the 1960s, Mr. Barris was a part of the Lincoln-Mercury Caravan of Cars. What follows is a portion of our 1995 interview with him. Mr. Barris sold the Batmobile at auction in 2013 for $4.6 million. On November 5, 2015, Mr. Barris passed away. RIP.

    Farrell: Mr. Barris, did you have anything to do with the Futura getting into Hollywood and the 1959 movie, “It Started With A Kiss?”

    Barris: Yes. I got the Futura and a half-dozen other concept cars from the different Ford divisions. I asked to have them all brought out here because in those days they were chopping them up, and I said “no, lets keep them here,” because we do films with nondescript cars, cars that don’t look like regular production models.

    Farrell: Besides the Futura, what other concept cars did you get from Ford?

    Barris: I got the Futura and a Cougar and half a dozen cars from the different divisions. We did the Mercury Delgato, the Mercury Maurauder, a Comet—I can’t remember the name of, and the Ford Magic Cruiser. We also restored the Mercury Beldoni, which was a sedan, a Ford Bronco—I’ve forgotten the name they used, several more Mercurys, and at least one other Lincoln. We also did the Lincoln-Mercury Cavalcade of Cars, and in the ‘60s, we also did (Lee) Iacocca’s Custom Car Cavalcade for about five years, because Iacocca wanted to obtain the youth market.

    Farrell: Who at the Design Center where you dealing with?

    Barris: Gene Bordinat and Dave Ash—and lots of others from the Ford divisions, but I can’t remember their names.

    Farrell: A story we’ve heard is that you obtained ownership of the Futura through a lien foreclosure.

    Barris: No, we didn’t have a lien foreclosure. We made a request to obtain title for those vehicles. Ford wanted to have the vehicles chopped and squashed and I kept saying “no;” it’s ridiculous to destroy these things that can be used. To eliminate the hassles of the liability and all that, I said ”then give me title, we’ll give you $1.00.” That’s when we started paying $1.00 for each of the cars, and that’s how we obtained ownership.

    Farrell: Is the Batmobile titled?

    Barris: No.

    Farrell: Do you recall when Ford signed over the Futura to you?

    Barris: It had to be in 1964-65.

    Farrell: Did Ford ever file suit against you over the Futura?

    Barris: No.

    Farrell: Is it true that sometime during the filming of the Batman series, the frame on the Futura broke?

    Barris: No. That’s not true. There were stress cracks. It was old and the stuff that was originally used wouldn’t hold up. We were also having transmission problems. The car was not made to be a driven car; that wasn’t supposed to be what it had to do. So we put a late model Ford Galaxy chassis under it, and when we built the duplicates, we just extended the frames and suspension eleven inches to handle the vehicle. Except for one, the engines were Ford 390s. On one we used a big 429.

    Farrell: Do you recall what the original frame and engine underneath the Futura were?

    Barris: They were Lincoln.

    Farrell: Do you know if it was Mark II?

    Barris: I couldn’t tell you.

    Farrell: Why were the duplicates built?

    Barris: Demand for the shows.

    Farrell: They weren’t built for the TV series?

    Barris: Well, we used them on and off in the TV series. We aways had a second car at the studio. The reason was in case we had problems. Like the first problem was when we finished the car and rushed up there. It was in primer and they were shooting the scenes coming out of the bat cave up at Griffith Park, and I didn’t want to take a chance of getting a flat tire or anything like that. So I called Mickey Thompson and asked to use some of his Indy tires to put on the car. I did not want to have a bad problem, so he sent me some Indy tires, and of course we come out of the bat cave and ”pow!” we blew a tire. That’s because we had a 4,000 or 5,000 pound car on an Indy tire that’s supposed to be for a 1,500 pound race car.

    Farrell: The other story we’ve heard is that originally the Batmobile was flocked or painted a flat color.

    Barris: That’s not entirely correct. There was a scene where the Batmobile was supposed to be camouflaged, so we had to put bat fuzz on it. We did a couple of the cars like that, and from there it went right out on exhibition. The exhibition tour was so successful that if I had 20 cars it would not have been enough. In fact, I had one driver who went out with the car that I never saw for three years. It never came back to home base for three years.

    Farrell: Have the Batman movies helped rekindle and interest in the original Batmobile?

    Barris: Well, I’ll tell you what happened. Even though the new Batman movies brought a lot of interest, people still love the character of the original TV car. It’s got a certain charisma about it that is different than “Batman Returns” and “Batman Forever,” the new movies. I think it’s the humor and enjoyment. The original Batmobile has a cartoon character. It wasn’t evil looking and it wasn’t outlandish looking. It was an enjoyable, fun car, and that’s why it became such a popular item.

    Farrell: What happened to the parts that came off the Futura. Like the frame and the engine?

    Barris: Some of them were thrown away, and collectors started wanting pieces, but that was afterwards. They are all gone, all the parts, I still have guys calling me wanting parts.

    George Barris
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  22. tritone

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    Available @ Kissimmee next month.......
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    Maybe a better angle on the photo might help......? or is it just those caissons behind......hmmm
     
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  23. jm2

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