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The Offbeat, the Unusual & the Ugly


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How about the Beech Plainsman?
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Beechcraft built this in '48 thinking that military and civilian market for aircraft would dry up in the postwar glut. It was not only a hybrid gas/electric car but was four-wheel drive as well due to the 4cyl air-cooled engine being used to power electric motors at each wheel. Cost: $5000. What else cost that much in 1948? An airplane.

Note the loop-style AM radio antenna and expansive greenhouse. And, note to Subaru, you actually have to have a hertiage in avaition before claiming to have a grille like that be inspired by such.

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I am a big fan of some of the orphan companies like American Motors and Studebaker. A descendant of Studebaker is the Avanti car company and this I believe was their latest. You guys are very good at figuring things out. Doesn't this car look like its based on the last Firebird....note the roof line and windshield area. I can't find much info on it. Apparantly the Avanti car company is up for sale?

Avanti:

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'48 Davis: pretty interesting: there is a nicely done devoted site: www.suarezweb.com/davis/
15 built (11 known to exist) plus 2 'jeeps'.

'34 McQuay-Norris: 6 built by the company of the same name to test piston rings and other internal engine components they manufactured. Engineering students were paid to drive these across North America to meet dealers & mechanics. They were built on completely stock '34 Ford Model A chassis'- thus the way-back driver's position. As of today, only 1 is known to exist, which I find hard to believe; they are so completely unique.
http://www.lanemotormuseum.org/restoration.htm

'48 Beech: 2 were supposedly built, tho I have not heard that either have survived.

The Avanti was indeed based on the last generation Firebird. I haven't looked into it far enough to learn if they are still in production using 'used' chassis' or what's going on there.
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How 'bout the revolutionary and innovative Dymaxion car designed by Buckminster Fuller in the early 1930s?
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That's the latest of three built. Its was extrodinary for its day, riding on an inverted and converted Ford chassies with a 90hp V-8 driving the front two wheels and steered with a single rear wheel. It sat 11 passengers, could travel up to 120mph, and did that at 30mpg - remarkable even today.

Unfortunately, during a demonstration drive, the driver of a Dymaxion was killed when another car collided with it. Naturally, the press blamed the accident on Fuller's weird car and that doomed it to being another unfulfilled dream.

One cool aspect about the Dymaxion was that the ultimate fruition of Fuller's car would be for it to be a three-dimensional transport, meaning it could fly somehow. Obviously since that technology didn't exist back then - or really even now in that application - the road version of the Dymaxion was supposed to be the first step.

Fuller also had a ton of other revolutionary ideas and concepts that he actually demonstrated, like advanced houses that weighed less than a ton and cost a fraction of a brick-and-mortar home, yet could withstand earthquakes and tornados. He was a very amazing guy.
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Hey thanks balthazar, flybrian, variance and others for some great automotive info on these interesting and sometimes strange vehicles. I am in complete awe of some of the people that dream up these things and actually produce them. I find it absolutely facinating. I love this stuff.

The '67 Amphicar, these always intrigued me ever since I was a little kid when I first heard of them. They were designed and built in Germany from 1961-68. They operate on land and water. They can drive right out of the water onto the shore.
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Does the trailer float, or sink like a stone? What if you forget to unhitch it when you get the urge to take a dip? Does it pull the car down with it? Does the ship's orchestra play in the background as the headlights slowly but surely point to the sky, then dim as they go under? I wonder......
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Does the trailer float, or sink like a stone?  What if you forget to unhitch it when you get the urge to take a dip?  Does it pull the car down with it?  Does the ship's orchestra play in the background as the headlights slowly but surely point to the sky, then dim as they go under?  I wonder......

[post="1479"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post]



OC, you're too funny!!!! :lol: :P
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Mustang84!....what a great collection of photos of the Quicksilver.  Is it alright if I use for my collection?  I have searched and only have one.  I always liked this conversion. 

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[post="1537"][/post]


They're actually not my photos...I just Googled them off the internet.

I too like the Quicksilver. That big chrome front end is just so cool. :) Edited by mustang84
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The Avanti is still alive... Studebaker dropped a long time ago and someone restarted the Avanti name as a company. The company now produces the Avanti and the Studebaker XUV.

The 2005 Avanti using the Ford 4.6L DOHC engine and based on the, you guessed it, 2004 Mustang.

2005 Avanti
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Studebaker XUV (I'm not yet sure if this has begun production)
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That is great news about Avanti and Studebaker still alive and kicking. I want these little car companies to survive, it makes the automotive world so much more interesting.

Those shortened numbers are ourtrageous !!

4-Door Avanti:

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Edited by HarleyEarl
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Avanti has been in pretty much continuous production after Studebaker closed down in '66. Some dealers bought the rights & tooling and brought out the unchanged Avanti II with Chevy power. Since then the company has changed hands numerous times. Circa '84 is the first any notable visual changes occured, with the move to body-colored bumpers.

I hope & pray Avanti Motors continues & expands. We need more domestic nameplates in the endless flood of foreign makes. XUV needs some work, tho. Anyone know if the XUV features a certain 'S'-in-a-circle emblem recently appropriated by toyota?
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Quicksilver: Waste of a Fiero. BTW: There's a navy blue Firebird Avanti in my town... it has eluded my camera so far however.
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Here's one from the seventies - the Fascination:
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Designed by Paul Lewis and built in Nebraska of all places in 1974, the Fascination was powered by a Renault engine. Apparently, it had amazing stability as a test driver took one from 60-zero by slamming on the brakes without holding the steering wheel; the car stopped straight and true. Also, 40mpg and a front wheel that turned almost perpendicular to the car's longitudinal axis meaning it could turn in its own footprint.

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What about this heavily moded and widened Saab c900.... just saw it yesterday...... I like it!
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[post="1295"][/post]

That's kinda cool, but....does he really expect to tow anything with that car?
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Fiero-based '86 Zimmer Quicksilver

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[post="1533"][/post]

I always liked the Zimmer....I had no idea it was Fiero-based, however. That would make for a tight cabin fit, but also makes for interesting mod ideas.
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That Mustang-based Avanti looks terrible. Proportions aren't sexy at all: too slab-sided & upright. The Firebird-based Avanti was much nicer proportionally. I wonder of the GTO chassis is a future possibility?

[post="1621"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post]

Don't offer up the GTO to make anything like that.

BTW, folks, IIRC, the Avanti of these times actually used the Camaro for the base.
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Also, a Pininfarina-designed Ferarri Estate - one of seven.
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[post="1833"][/post]

Sexay!! The front overhang's a bit long, but overall that thing should exist in higher quantities....
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He just had to do that to a poor Firebird...why couldn't he cut up a Camaro instead? BTW, damn, Harley, over 400 posts already? More than each admin... Edited by LosAngeles
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