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Corvette - America's Star-Spangled Sports Car
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Corvette - America's Star-Spangled Sports Car by Karl Ludvigsen - Table of Contents by Bentley Publishers
- Americans Discover Sports Cars
- The nature of the sports car
- Early and late American examples
- Kurtis, Cunningham, Nash-Healey and Crosley
- Edwards and Darrin using the new body material fiberglass
- Plastic Fantastic
- Henry Ford's plastic-bodied cars
- Creation of glass-fiber and its uses
- Postwar pioneers Stout and Darrin
- Enter Eric Irwin, Bill Tritt and Earle Ebers
- Glasspar and Life magazine of February 1952
- Woodill Wildfire
- Styled by Harley Earl
- Harley Earl and GM Styling
- 1951's LeSabre and Buick XP-300
- Watkins Glen 1951 and General LeMay's influence
- Alembic I in Detroit
- Studio in Fisher Body Plant 8
- Arrival of Ed Cole at Chevrolet and his enthusiastic support for a sports-car design
- GM and GRP
- GM engineers learn about glass-reinforced plastic (GRP)
- Parts Fab and its early experiments
- GM's GRP bodies for some 1953 Motorama dream cars
- Plans to produce Chevrolet's Corvette
- Bob Morrison rescues the role of GRP
- Corvette is tooled for manufacture
- Chassis by Maurice Olley
- Maurice Olley's R&D Department designs a chassis for Project Opel
- Mauri Rose ramrods prototypes and hot-rods the Chevy six
- Decision to use Powerglide
- Myron Scott names SO 1737
- Final details decided
- Perspective: Corvettes Courageous
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1953-1955
- Dream Car or Nightmare
- Final design changes before manufacturing
- First production cars from Flint
- Mill Building is plant in St. Louis
- Tests of early cars
- Marketing and the press launch with Mauri Rose
- First sales to VIPs
- Problems with the bodies
- Slow sales force production cuts
- Chevrolet's doubts about its new baby
- Sports Car in the Doldrums
- Enter Zora Arkus-Duntov
- Meeting Cole and Olley and joining GM
- Special Corvettes for 1954 Motorama
- Ideas for face-lifts
- Enthusiast engine swaps
- First tests with new V-8
- Introduced with 1955 model
- Sales still sluggish
- Corvette faces extinction
- Perspective: Zora Arkus-Duntov-The Early Years
- Creating the Real McCoy
- The 1956 model
- Ford's Thunderbird shows two-seater's potential
- Handsome restyling with wind-up windows and hardtop
- Experiments with transmissions
- Duntov's chassis improvements and new camshaft
- 150 mph at Daytona
- SR-2 racing versions
- Perspective: GM's La Salle II Dream Cars
- Corvette Learns to Race
- Corvettes star at Daytona in 1956
- First amateur racing efforts in 1954-55
- Ed Cole urges racing but Duntov demurs
- Smokey Yunick and John Fitch prepare cars for Sebring 1956
- Corvette competes bravely in 12-hour race
- Le Mans in the Windscreen
- Ambitious plans for international racing in 1956
- Corvette and Dick Thompson surprise rivals in SCCA events
- SR models defined for series production and homologation
- Le Mans effort postponed
- Fuel Injection
- John Dolza and Zora Duntov develop fuel injection
- Constant-flow design chosen for production
- Smokey Yunick helps racing development
- In spite of late problems manufacture begins
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1956-1957
- Fabulous Fifty-Seven
- The 1957 model
- One horsepower per cubic inch
- Full-synchro four-speed transmission introduced
- Sparkling injected performance
- Super Sport show car
- Return to Sebring
- Production Corvettes for Sebring 1957
- Shakedown at Nassau
- SR-2 for Bill Mitchell
- RPO 684 racing package
- Daytona speed trials and racing
- GT success at Sebring
- Chevy's cars sold to private teams
- American automakers agree to stop promoting performance
- Corvette SS - The Creation
- Duntov's conviction that racing should be by special cars
- Cole is Chevy general manager
- Harley Earl threatens a V-8-engined Jaguar
- Low-drag XP-64 racer styled
- Duntov creates skunk works for chassis design
- Multitube frame and special suspension
- Tuned injected V-8
- Corvette SS - The Racing
- Mule version of Corvette SS used for testing
- Recruiting drivers for Sebring 1957
- John Fitch and Piero Taruffi the choices
- Fangio and Moss sensationally lap in the Mule
- Racing version's extreme heat from exhaust headers
- Problems in race and retirement
- Shutting down the program
- Going for Baroque
- The 1958 and 1959 models
- Olds Golden Rocket inspires possible new body
- Four headlamps front dramatic styling changes
- New interior pioneers a console
- Potent Corvettes excel in SCCA racing and record-breaking
- Production rises
- Ed Cole's Q-Ship
- New Code Q passenger cars for 1960 to have transaxles and independent rear suspension
- XP-64 Corvette designed in 1957 to use components
- Platform frame designed
- Bill Mitchell inspires new body concept
- Radical swing-up doors proposed
- Mid-engined proposals also
- Code Q's cancellation ends projects
- Perspective: Mitchell on Mitchell
- Stingray Racer
- Bill Mitchell succeeds Harley Earl
- His passion for Corvettes
- Mitchell acquires Corvette SS Mule chassis
- Special body derived from Q-Corvette roadster
- Curved underbody concept for downforce
- Bill finances racing by Dick Thompson
- He gains GM's approval
- Stingray SCCA success in 1959 and 1960
- Mitchell's Motors
- Mitchell XP-700 of 1958-59
- Establishing Studio X with Ed Wayne, Larry Shinoda and Tony Lapine
- Foreshadowing look of future Corvette
- Creation of XP-755 Shark for 1961
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1960-1961
- Sixty Specials
- The 1960 model
- Increased use of aluminum
- Major suspension rethink
- Racing entries abroad in GT category by Camoradi and Cunningham teams
- Four start the Le Mans 24 Hours
- Fitch and Grossman finish eighth and win their class thanks to Bill Frick's inspiration
- CERV at Your Service
- In 1960 Duntov's team designs mid-engined "R Car" single-seater
- Attack on Pikes Peak record a priority
- Striking Studio X bodywork
- Sensational appearance as "CERV I" at U.S. Grand Prix
- Later engines with Roots blower and twin turbos
- Tests at Daytona in 1962
- In 1964 206 mph at Milford
- Ducktail for 1961
- The 1961 model
- New rear end based on XP-700 design
- Successes in SCCA racing and at Sebring
- Allen Markelson takes a C1 to Europe
- Bunkie Knudsen becomes Chevy chief
- Joe Pike named Corvette marketing manager
- Perspective: C1 Inspires Coachbuilders
- Calling Car 327
- The 1962 model
- Consideration of the "W" V-8 for the Corvette
- Original engine enlarged to 327 cubic inches
- Two ratio spreads for four-speed box
- Meeting the XK-E Jaguar on the track
- Lone Corvette races at Le Mans
- International Initiative
- Four-liter prototype rules for 1962 offer Duntov an opportunity
- Bunkie Knudsen keen to compete
- 36-valve V-8 of 4.0 liters planned
- Space frame for CERV II
- Ingenious transaxles
- Shinoda smuggles body ideas
- Corporate crackdown halts manufacture
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1962-1963
- A Legend's New Legs
- Q-Corvette and Stingray provide ideas for aborted 1962 face-lift
- XP-720 is project for all-new 1963 Corvette
- Clever front suspension allows independent rear with transverse leaf spring
- Rugged new perimeter frame
- Engine and gearbox refined
- Mule tested at Sebring in January 1962
- Concept-Car Styling
- XP-720 to look like the racing Stingray
- Controversy over coupe's split rear window
- Challenge of hidden headlamps
- Wind-tunnel testing of scale model in California
- Compromises for four-passenger version craved by Ed Cole
- Production of pilot cars at St. Louis
- "Sting Ray" name established
- Year of the Sting Ray
- Two shifts at St. Louis support record sales
- Sensational interest in new Sting Ray
- U.S. press reports
- Coupe sent to Europe is evaluated
- Divided rear window is criticized
- Sting Ray called "tomorrow's car, on the street today."
- Perspective: Corvette C2 Customs
- Fish Meets Serpent
- High hopes for Sting Ray's racing success
- RPO ZO6 created for competition
- Knudsen involves Mickey Thompson
- Cobra upsets applecart
- Corvette wins first Riverside encounter
- Cobra's acceptance by SCCA as production car ends Corvette's championship runs
- Grand Sport Genesis
- Chevrolet's better idea for racing is ultralight Corvette
- Production of 100 planned for GT car category
- Special ladder frame and suspension
- Ultralight fiberglass body
- Hemi-head dual-ignition V-8 of 377 or 402 cubic inches
- Ventilated disc brakes
- Lightweights Go Racing
- Grand Sport production plans finalized
- GM bigwigs reconfirm nonracing policy
- Only five cars completed
- Two raced in 1963 by Dick Doane and Grady Davis
- Testing at Waterford Hills improves cornering
- 377-cubic-inch engine specification confirmed
- Perspective: Thomas and the Cheetah
- Meet Mr. Mecom
- Texan John Mecom provides fig leaf for Grand Sport entries at Nassau in December 1963
- "Green" final drives throw up problems
- Cobras soundly thrashed
- Bernard Cahier gives his impressions
- Two rebuilt as roadsters
- Cars sold to private owners
- Roger Penske establishes team to race one
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1964-1965
- Sting Rays that Stop
- The 1964 and 1965 models
- Cleaner style with one-piece rear window
- High-performance hydraulic-lifter V-8
- In 1965 disc brakes after exhaustive development
- GM's disc-brake evolution
- Power to Spare
- The 1965 and 1966 models
- Mark IV engine in '65 with 396 cubic inches
- Optional outside exhausts
- Fuel injection dropped for 1966
- Mark IV now 427 cubic inches and nominal 425 bhp
- RPO M22 "rock crusher" gearbox
- L88 the Great (click to preview this chapter)
- The 1967 model
- Rivalry from others including Pontiac's lighter, smaller XP-833
- AMC's AMX
- Ventilated steel "Rally" wheels appear
- Triple Holley carburetors for Mark IV
- Aluminum-head L88 engine in spring 1967
- L88 entry at Le Mans in 1967
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1966-1967
- Winchell's Raiders
- Frank Winchell's Chevrolet R&D takes an interest in Corvettes
- Project XP-777 Corvair could be lighter version
- GS-II was V-8-powered mid-engined car proposed to Knudsen for production
- Thanks to Mitchell R&D begins cooperation with Jim Hall's Chaparral
- XP-819 a rear-engined V-8 coupe
- To compete with Ford's Mach 2 the XP-880 is built
- Becomes 1968 Astro II show car
- Racing Four by Four
- Direct opposition to Ford GT40 planned for 1964 GS-3
- Later known as CERV II
- Advanced Firestones powered by four-wheel drive
- Patented torque-converter driveline
- Single-overhead-cam hemi-head V-8 planned
- Engine used as frame behind steel tub
- Effort to build GS-3 comes to "screeching halt"
- Perspective: Driving CERV II
- Mako Shark the Second
- Astonishing X-15 single-seater based on Scarab
- Ideas used in new XP-830 concept car planned in 1964
- Mitchell's ideas implemented by Shinoda's studio
- Shown at New York and Paris in 1965
- Rich in fascinating features
- Named Mako Shark II
- becomes Manta Ray in 1969
- Choosing the Future
- The 1968 model
- Threats from Corvair, Camaro and designs of R&D
- Fresh mid-engined proposals
- New front-engined studies from Hank Haga and Larry Shinoda
- Shinoda's concept closely related to Mako Shark II prevails
- Poor visibility and aerodynamics of first body force delay from planned 1967 launch
- Zora not fully in charge
- last-minute cooling problems
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1968-1969
- Preening the Shark
- The 1968 model
- C2 underpinnings get overhaul
- Turbo Hydra-Matic introduced New suspension geometry and wider wheel rims
- As "special consultant" Duntov takes a C3 to Europe
- Production quality suffers and Car and Driver cancels a test
- Astro-Vette a show-car version
- Return of the Stingray
- The 1969 model
- Arrival at Chevy of John DeLorean
- 350-cubic-inch V-8
- Alarm system option
- Aluminum Mark IV blocks
- Quarter-millionth Corvette
- Rathmann and the astronauts
- Sharks With Teeth
- L88 racing in 1968
- DeLorenzo and Thompson race for Owens-Corning
- John Greenwood brings fresh impetus
- GM designers are involved
- Lutz, Filipinetti and Greder join forces to create legends at Le Mans
- the Shark's racing career
- Mid-Engine Mania
- The 1968 design of XP-882
- Adaptation of Oldsmobile Toronado transaxle
- Two prototypes ready in 1969
- Joe Pike's pessimism
- Attempt to merge Camaro and Corvette
- Surprise appearance at 1970 New York Show
- 'Vette for the Seventies
- The 1970, 1971 and 1972 models
- Styling freshening
- Pricing rises
- Solid-lifter LT1
- Mark IV increased to 454 cubic inches and aluminum heads
- Adapting to unleaded fuel
- St. Louis plant activity
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1970-1973
- Foam and Aluminum the Answer?
- Foam-plastic structure of Vega-based XP-898 of 1973
- John DeLorean and Alex Mair support revived mid-engined XP-882 effort
- Haga and Young style XP-895 version
- Aluminum structure built by Reynolds and assessed in 1972
- Topping and Tailing the C3
- The 1973 and 1974 models
- Radial tires
- Better body mounts
- L82 engine option
- Urethane plastic nose and tail
- Gymkhana suspension
- Last years for the Mark IV V-8
- Welcome to Wankel World
- GM's commitment to the rotary Wankel engine
- Design by Wasenko and MacKichan
- Inspiration source for John DeLorean
- Aerovette the Magnificent
- The 4-Rotor mid-engined Corvette concept of 1973
- Wankel power package by Gib Hufstader
- Styling by Mitchell, Palmer and Haga
- Paris Salon star
- GM decides against Wankel power
- Change in 1976 to V-8-powered Aerovette
- Its significance and influence
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1974-1975
- Period of Adjustment
- The 1975 and 1976 models
- Solely 350 V-8s
- Bladder fuel tanks and catalysts
- Paint issues
- Elimination of the convertible
- Retirement of Zora Arkus-Duntov
- Arrival of Dave McLellan
- GM management not keen on all-new Corvette
- Perspective: Tribute to Zora Arkus-Duntov
- From Duntov to McLellan
- The 1977 model
- new Corvette chief Dave McLellan
- Body-quality issues
- V-6 experiments
- Prices march upward to improve profits
- Retirement of Bill Mitchell and Joe Pike
- Irv Rybicki at Design Staff
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1976-1977
- Happy Anniversary!
- The 1978 model
- Fastback glazing
- Aerodynamic refinements
- New instrument panel
- Silver Anniversary edition
- Corvette demand intensifies
- Frenzy over Pace Cars for the Indianapolis 500
- Production Corvettes Profiled: 1978-1982
- Weight Watching the C3
- The 1979 and 1980 models
- Durability issues
- Production sets records
- Plastic seats lighter but controversial
- Turbocharged V-8 experiments
- Duntov Turbo
- A turbine-powered C3
- A four-door Corvette
- Weight-reduction campaign
- Between Dream and Reality
- The 1981 and 1982 models
- A fiberglass leaf spring
- Power seats and two-tone paint
- Cross-Fire Fuel Injection
- A new factory at Bowling Green, Kentucky
- through the $20,000 barrier
- Final Collector Edition lovingly created