September 19, 200520 yr Author Hint: It was inspired by the Harley Earl Buick Le Sabre concept car by an unexpected car maker. Edited September 20, 200520 yr by HarleyEarl
September 20, 200520 yr Its the Studebaker Special Cosmic Air Commander Regal DeLuxe Starlight Consept from 1948 that gave America a SNEEK PEAK at the 1950 production models. :P :D
September 20, 200520 yr It's obviously not a Pontiac, look how narrow the track is under those fenders. No "WideTrack" here! Although it has a similar nose to the iconic Stude, the rest of the car looks totally GM to me. Check out the cyclops headlight! :o
September 20, 200520 yr Now that is just shamelessly wrong ! Ya know thats a couple different cars, right ? 1952 Mercedes Benz Americana Im beginning not to like something about this trivia thing. This is worse than grubs in the cabbage Thats it, its a Packard Grub
September 20, 200520 yr Holy effing crap; I was going to say it looks like a very rough test mule for the '52 LeSabre. BTW: '3 car lengths' (in this era especially) would be about 54' long; no way is this that lengthy. I still do not know this on. Far too homemade to be a Packard, tho it sure looks like it's wearing Packard caps in that one shot.
September 20, 200520 yr Looks very space-efficient! [post="16887"][/post] LMAO My gut says Studebaker for obviopus reasons.
September 20, 200520 yr As, screw it, I'll ruin the surprise. Its the LeSabreski Its the ZIS (Later ZIL)-112. Built in 1951 and obviously inspired by the GM concept of the same vintage, it was about 20 feet long and sat three. It ran in state auto racing events after a rebody that cut some length, some of the original 5400lbs, the hardtop, and a modified engine putting out 192hp. At that point, it reached speeds of about 130mph, very impressive for such a freakin' tank of a car. The ZIS-112 is very significant for being one of the very, very few Soviet dream cars ever produced. Unlike American concepts, cars like the ZIS were used solely to show what the great Socialist machine could produce rather than offer hints at future production cars, cars that often trailed American styling trends by about 20-35 years. Here's another rare bear... That's a 1954 GAZ prototype for a turbojet car intended to break the land speed record of the time of about 430mph (held by the US, of course). It 'only' reached about 186mph in early testing before logistical issues and a minor accident shuttered the attempt.
September 20, 200520 yr Author Damn....never thought anyone had heard of this beast lol.....FlyBrian of course is right.
September 20, 200520 yr Me and my extrodinarily pointless knowledge of cars of the Iron Curtain strikes again...
September 20, 200520 yr Wow, something new for me. Never heard of it before this. Wild. I wonder how the hell they got it to weigh 5400 lbs?? Concrete fenders? And 130 MPH?? Sounds optomistic on only 192 HP- it took Chrysler 300 to hit 140. "LeSabreski" -- is that the actual name??
September 20, 200520 yr Author No, FlyBrian is being inventive with the 'Le Sabreski'...quite funny. It's actually the ZIS '512', 1951 prototype. It does not seem like the type of car the Russian communists would make. Was surprised when I learned of it.
September 20, 200520 yr The Russians knew how to beat a pretty good looking car with an "ugly stick" and turn it into a ZIL or in this case ZIS. A lot of their cars were "bad copies" of Packards. Maybe that's what killed Packard. http://www.cheersandgears.com/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/AH-HA_wink.gif
September 20, 200520 yr Author Here is the ZIL 111, a '61 prototype and the actual car produced. There is some Cadillac influence.
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