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Old 10-15-2013   #1
WB9MCW
 
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Default PREDECESSOR TO THE CORVETTE?



VIDS ON A RESTORATION ON ONE
http://youtu.be/cq9Yg_kC4ig

http://youtu.be/CJ6MeUX9n8g
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Old 10-15-2013   #2
Kevin
 
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Default Re: PREDECESSOR TO THE CORVETTE?

predecessor...that came out 2 years after?
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Old 10-15-2013   #3
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Default Re: PREDECESSOR TO THE CORVETTE?

Ah yes how silly of me!

Oh well I guess it should be retitled as the concept car that was based off a Corvette!

Still KOOL either way but not just as much!
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"The Budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed, lest Rome will become bankrupt. People must again learn to work instead of living on public assistance." - Cicero, 55 BC
" We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution." - Abraham Lincoln
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Old 10-15-2013   #4
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Default Re: PREDECESSOR TO THE CORVETTE?

Wasn't the predecessor the Olds f88 ? (not sure called that) sold on an auction (BJ) a couple of years ago to a collector in south western Colorado for 1+ million and resides in his private muesum?
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Old 10-16-2013   #5
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Default OLDS F-88 - 1954 CONCEPT CAR BASED ON THE CORVETTE





The First Oldsmobile F-88

Before we examine the myths, let's review what's known about the first Oldsmobile F-88. It was designed during 1952-1953, around the same time as the first Motorama Corvette. Preliminary sketches might have come out of an experimental studio run by veteran designer Bill Lange.

The final design, though, was most likely done in the main Oldsmobile studio under the direction of Art Ross. Ross was a gifted designer who'd conceived, among other things, the 1941 Cadillac's eggcrate "tombstone" grille, the World War II Wildcat tank destroyer, and the "rocket" beltline for the 1959 Oldsmobile.

Oldsmobile interiors in the early Fifties were done under Jack Humbert, who later became Pontiac's chief designer. So it was a talented group that worked on that first Oldsmobile F-88, always, of course, under the watchful direction of GM Styling vice president Harley Earl.

In terms of technical detail, the Oldsmobile F-88 was built on the chassis of an early Chevrolet Corvette and shared the Corvette's 102-inch wheelbase. Like the Corvette, the Oldsmobile F-88's body was made of fiberglass. Styling cues like an elliptical grille mouth, "hockey stick" side trim, and bullet tail lights were purely period Oldsmobile, however.

The F-88 was powered by a hopped up 324-cubic-inch V-8 from the 1954 Oldsmobile Super 88. The Oldsmobile F-88 engine used a stock four-barrel carburetor with a tiny, flat air cleaner. The engine's 9.0:1 compression ratio plus additional -- but unrecorded -- modifications boosted the Super 88's 185 horsepower to 250 horsepower and an undisclosed amount of torque.

Power flowed through a four-speed Hydra-Matic transmission to a 3.55:1 Corvette rear axle, which, despite its origins serving a humbler six-cylinder engine, had no trouble handling the Oldsmobile V-8's torque. The F-88's only other off-the-shelf components were its instruments. Humbert took these from a 1953 Oldsmobile, turned the speedometer into a combined speedo/tach, and gave the other three dials custom faces.

During its brief tenure as a Motorama show car, the Oldsmobile F-88 shared the stage with the Oldsmobile Cutlass fastback coupe. The Cutlass' instrument panel, set vertically in a central stack, was identical to the F-88's.

After all of the blood, sweat, and tears, the Oldsmobile F-88 was finally ready for its first public appearance.

The 1954 Oldsmobile F-88, painted metallic gold with metallic green inside the fenderwells, had its first public showing at the General Motors Motorama on January 21, 1954, at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York.

The vehicle display and musical revue ran for six days, after which the Oldsmobile F-88 became part of a series of traveling Motorama shows that caravanned by bus and truck to Miami, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Chicago. Nearly 2 million people saw the five Motoramas that season.

Back then, after a show car had completed its Motorama duties, it was usually turned over to its sponsoring division. The division's top executives were then free to do with it what they wished. They were encouraged to eventually destroy it. Although they couldn't sell such vehicles, they could and often did give them away -- usually to favored dealers, business friends, or relatives.

That's how a lot of the survivors got out of GM. The crusher mandate was often ignored because America was a less litigious place in the early Fifties. These were GM's happy days, and divisional executives didn't concern themselves with getting sued.

So the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 apparently got trucked from GM Styling in downtown Detroit to Oldsmobile's engineering garage in Lansing, Michigan, sometime in late March or early April 1954. According to former GM show-car fabrication manager Richard Henderson, the golden Oldsmobile F-88 contained a complete powertrain, but didn't run during its time on the Motorama circuit.

However, Oldsmobile engineers soon got it going. Home movies taken in the summer of 1954 by a 15-year-old Lansing youth named Don Baron show the Oldsmobile F-88 being driven by Shriners in a downtown parade. After the golden 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 was sent to Lansing, continues Henderson, Harley Earl apparently had second thoughts about having let it go, so he ordered another one built. The twin was painted red. "That red car became Mr. Earl's other daily driver," notes Henderson.

Earl still drove the 1951 LeSabre, but he now alternated between it and the F-88. The Oldsmobile F-88 was a far simpler car than the LeSabre, making it easier to maintain. Earl's personal mechanic, Leonard McLay, always had his hands full keeping the LeSabre on the road. Not so with the Oldsmobile F-88.

The 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 was also considerably lighter than the LeSabre, and the modified Oldsmobile V-8 gave it performance that was probably better than the LeSabre's on gasoline. (The LeSabre had a second tank for methanol fuel, but methanol was rarely used, especially around town.)

"I remember taking the red F-88 to the opening of the New York Thruway," says Henderson. "I drove it there from Detroit. They had 125 miles of thruway open at that time, from about Utica to Rochester. I remember it so well because it was the first trip I took driving a show car. I was 20 years old. In front of me was Leonard McLay in the LeSabre."

"We were coming out of Windsor, Ontario, and all of a sudden I heard a siren. The cop pulled me over. I thought, 'Oh, oh, I'm getting a ticket, and I'll get fired the first trip I ever took.' But the cop just wanted to see the car."

"The second event I remember with that car . . . I drove it to Wisconsin for the opening of the Road America race course. Mr. Harley Earl cut the ribbon. This was in 1955."

There have been many so many elaborate stories about the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 that it's tough to tell what's fact and what's fiction.

The red 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 also appeared at at least two Sports Car Club of America road races in 1954, one at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on May 2; the other at Atterbury Air Force Base near Columbus, Indiana, on May 30. At the Andrews race, according to historian Jim Sitz, both the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 and the 1951 Buick XP-300 stood on display.

During the Atterbury race, three-time Indianapolis 500 winner Mauri Rose, who in 1954 worked as an engineer for Chevrolet, babysat the Oldsmobile F-88 (and presumably one or more Corvettes). When Harley Earl showed up to watch his son, Jerry, compete in the race with a new Austin-Healey, the elder Earl hopped into the Oldsmobile F-88 and drove it around the base like a proud father, much to the delight of the race crowd.

The 1954 Oldsmobile F-88, as mentioned, now belongs to Gordon Apker, the car's 12th owner. He and his wife, Janet, live on a seven-acre compound overlooking Puget Sound near Seattle. Apker founded Monarch Foods Corporation, which bought out the Shakey's Pizza chain in 1983.

Since selling both companies in 1989, he's been pursuing his passion for unusual and interesting automobiles. Apker currently owns a diverse collection of classics, special-interest cars, hot rods, customs, and exotics --some 25 in all. But it's the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 that comes wrapped up in questions.

First, did one of the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88's burn? The story initially told to Apker was that as one of the two cars was being loaded onto a trailer, its engine caught fire. And because the handler didn't know how to open the hood, the car burned up. Yet, among many former GM employees -- including retired designers, engineers, and management personnel, many of whom were working at General Motors in 1954 -- none had ever heard of any Motorama car burning.

Another version of the underhood fire story says that Oldsmobile's chief engineer drove the golden Oldsmobile F-88 from the Lansing engineering garage to his home, with his son as his passenger. When the chief engineer parked the car in his driveway, the engine caught fire, and that's how the golden car went up in smoke. Oldsmobile's chief engineer in 1954 was Harold N. Metzel, who currently lives in Scottsdale, Arizona. Although he's suffered a stroke and has difficulty enunciating his words, he says in no uncertain terms that no car ever caught fire in his driveway.

Still another story claims that the surviving Oldsmobile F-88 escaped the crusher by being disassembled, crated, and shipped off to E.L. Cord's mansion in California. E.L. Cord? The E.L. Cord who simultaneously ran Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg in their glory days? Yes, that Errett Lobban Cord. But the story didn't make sense. Why would the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 be taken apart for shipment to Cord? And which Oldsmobile F-88 was it: the gold one or the red one?

Actually, there's good evidence for the truth of this story. After the 1954 Motorama tour ended, the golden Oldsmobile F-88 apparently survived intact in Lansing for about a year. After that, it disappeared, and if GM policy had been carried out, the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 should have been destroyed.

Obviously the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 wasn't destroyed. In addition to the car, Apker has a set of full-sized engineering blueprints that he got when he bought the F-88, and, more important -- in fact, the most important document of all -- a shipping confirmation sheet dated March 21, 1955. This bill of lading, marked "Customer Copy," was clearly one of several such documents, because it was headed "Styling Section SS-532, continuation of SS-531."

The shipping list specifically mentioned that these were "surplus materials," and among the items detailed on this particular sheet were "obsolete parts and required engineering blueprints for the Oldsmobile XP-20" (XP-20 was GM Styling's internal designation for the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88), two door strikers, two front fender "88" medallions, two parking lamp assemblies, two exhaust port support assemblies, one front-end fiberglass skin, and two engineering drawings of the car's front surface.

The shipment was sent from GM's Styling Section, then headquartered in the Argonaut Building behind the General Motors Building in central Detroit, via Railway Express, and delivered collect to Mr. E. L. Cord, 500 Doheny Road, Beverly Hills, California. Cord died in 1974, but his grandson, Charles E. Cord, Jr., still lives in Los Angeles.

Charles Cord, who was 16 years old in 1955, told me that he remembered a stack of large wooden crates in his grandfather's six-car Beverly Hills garage. Cord didn't know how long they stayed there, what eventually became of them, who at GM had shipped them to his grandfather, or why his grandfather had taken delivery in the first place.

He pointed out, though, that both E.L. Cord and Harley Earl owned homes in Palm Beach, Florida. He also mentioned that his grandfather owned and managed the Pan Pacific Auditorium in Los Angeles. GM rented the Pan Pacific each time it staged a Motorama show in Southern California.

So it's possible -- even likely -- that E.L. Cord saw the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 at the Pan Pacific in 1954. He might have mentioned to someone like Earl or Oldsmobile general manager Jack Wolfram that he admired the car, and it's conceivable that Earl, Wolfram, or one of their colleagues offered to send the Oldsmobile F-88 to Cord after Oldsmobile had finished with it.

Possible? Yes. Proven? No.

Another question arises at this point: Why was the Oldsmobile F-88 disassembled before shipment? Why wasn't it simply left together and trucked out to California intact? Dick Henderson mentioned that it would have made a lot more sense to ship the Oldsmobile F-88 fully assembled, and the reason it was taken apart is still a mystery.

Gordon Apker has yet another story that he'd gathered with this car: E. L. Cord might have planned to go back into the car business. Perhaps Cord envisioned the Oldsmobile F-88 as the sort of car he hoped to produce. Or maybe he intended to simply put the Oldsmobile F-88 back together so he could make it his daily driver, just as Earl had done with the red car. In either case, nothing like that ever happened.

Instead, what apparently did happen is that Cord ultimately -- after an unrecorded length of time -- sold the still crated, still disassembled 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 to a man named Bill Barker, whose business involved renting obsolete military vehicles to movie studios. Barker subsequently sold the Oldsmobile F-88 to Jim Brucker, owner of Movie World in Ventura, California, who also rented vehicles to movie studios.

Brucker thus became the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88's fourth owner, and while he's no longer alive, his son James is. The younger Brucker told me that he, too, remembered the crates and that his father had paid $1,000 for them.

The senior Brucker kept the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 for only six months before selling it to Leo Gephart, a classic car dealer in Phoenix, Arizona. Gephart paid $3,500 for the crates, and when he owned it, the Oldsmobile F-88 chassis arrived separately. The chassis, in fact, came with a Corvette Blue-Flame six-cylinder engine complete with three sidedraft carburetors.

Gephart also said that after he'd owned the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 for a while, he traded it to an Oldsmobile dealer in Ohio for a brand-new GMC "dually" pickup. The dealer, whose name Gephart couldn't remember, intended to assemble the F-88 and use it to publicize his agency. This, though, didn't happen either, and the dealer soon sold the Oldsmobile F-88, with Gephart's help, to Ed Lucas, of FEL Classics in Troy, Michigan.

Lucas operates a restoration/sales facility and frequently participates in auto auctions. He's emceed a number of prestigious concours d'elegance, including Amelia Island and Meadow Brook. Lucas said he received the car as a rolling chassis with the fiberglass body set on it, but it hadn't been assembled or painted. The rest of the car came in crates.

The fiberglass body was complete when Lucas got it, but the doors, hood, and decklid were separate, and the main body section wasn't trimmed. Yet the Oldsmobile F-88 came with all its original hardware, plus an extra windshield -- plus, for some reason, an unchromed grille for the 1954 Oldsmobile Cutlass Motorama fastback coupe.

"There were almost enough parts to do two F-88's," Lucas said. "If you bought another chassis." Lucas said he did some of the assembly work, then traded the unfinished car back to Gephart for a collection of Duesenberg parts. Gephart went to Ed Lucas's shop in Michigan accompanied by Lon Krueger, a respected professional auto restorer who owns and operates Sun Valley Classics, in Tempe, Arizona.

Krueger recalls that this trip took place in 1980, and he remembers seeing the partially assembled 1954 Oldsmobile F-88, along with the crates, in Lucas's shop, but didn't think much about it at the time. After some time, Krueger got a call from Gephart. Gephart asked if he might be interested in purchasing the Oldsmobile F-88 so the car could finally be put together properly. Krueger pondered the offer and ultimately traded a car and cash for the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88.

"When I got the car, it was very complete," says Krueger. "There was very little missing. But the car had been all taken apart. A lot of the stuff, including blueprints and copies of the parts list. . . were inside the wooden crates." Some of the crates measured 2-1/2 x 2-1/2 x 8-1/2 feet, notes Krueger, and all were addressed to E.L. Cord. "I have the end plate off of one of those crates at home," he continues. "When I uncrated this stuff, none of these other previous owners . . . had ever taken anything out of the packing straw."

"Okay, so now I owned the car, and I stored it at my home in Scottsdale, unrestored, in my garage. It sat there for probably six or seven years. I didn't start working on the car until 1988. I brought it down to my shop here in Tempe and began to restore it."

Restoring the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 wasn't going to be easy.

Kreuger goes on to say this about the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88, "As for the car having a six-cylinder engine . . . it definitely had a V-8. The motor mounts were set up for a V-8. . . . There were some miscellaneous parts that were detailed on this list that either were not included or were lost or something of that nature. I don't remember the specifics, but there were all kinds of scraps of paper and blueprints down in the bottoms of those crates, all folded up. They'd been in there forever, because some of them were water-stained. The crates must have stood someplace where it was wet."

The surviving Oldsmobile F-88's chassis number suggests that the car was built on a 1954 Corvette frame (E54S003701), but vintage Corvette expert John Amgwert said that it's probably not the original Motorama show car frame. The number's last four digits, 3701, mean that the frame was number 2701 out of 3640 built for 1954.

That puts the frame's manufacturing date quite late in the model year, especially since, according to Amgwert, fully a third of all 1954 Corvettes weren't sold until 1955. As for the Oldsmobile engine, its number is V2470, which makes it the 1,470th in the 1954 model run. The engine, therefore, probably is the one that was originally installed in the Motorama F-88.

"So when I got the car," continues Krueger, "the body was on the chassis, it had the Olds V-8 in it, and it had remnants in these boxes of an interior." The door panels were made of fiberglass, but the original upholstery had deteriorated, so Krueger's staff had to completely reupholster the Oldsmobile F-88. They reproduced all the original materials as faithfully as possible.

"The whole dashboard, the windshield frame, the grille, bumpers, all that stuff was all crated up. There's no way anyone could have made that stuff from scratch. It's just impossible," he says. "To the best of my memory, we had pretty much all the instrumentation. Obviously, the gauges had to be gone through. . . . You don't want to put something together [not knowing] whether it works."

Krueger mentions that the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88's side glass is curved. He recalls that his shop had to remake the headlight bubbles, because the originals were cracked. The blueprints and black-and-white factory photos of the Oldsmobile F-88 helped immensely, he says. A fully labeled photo of the instrument panel was especially helpful, because, "Yeah, we have this part in the crate, but where does it go? What does it do?"

Now it happened that, since around 1981, Krueger had been restoring cars for Don Williams and Ken Behring at the Blackhawk Collection and Behring Auto Museum in Danville, California. Williams visited Krueger's shop regularly, and, around 1989, saw the Oldsmobile F-88, recognized its potential, and bought it even before Krueger finished putting it together. Krueger delivered the car to Williams in December 1990, just in time for the 1991 Barrett-Jackson auction.

At the 1991 Barrett-Jackson Auction, the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 was sold to Bruce S. Lustman, a vintage racer and collector of competition Ferraris and Jaguars who now lives in Colorado, after having retired from a large Connecticut surgical instrument firm. The Oldsmobile F-88 remained in Lustman's possession for about six years, during which time he showed it in Chicago and at Pebble Beach.

In 1997, the Oldsmobile F-88 went back to Don Williams on consignment, and Williams again placed it in his Blackhawk showroom. That year, Oldsmobile borrowed the car from Blackhawk to help celebrate the division's 100th anniversary.

The car somehow was damaged in transit, and the transport company paid Sun Valley Classics to repair the broken fiberglass and repaint the car. Krueger returned the Oldsmobile F-88 to Blackhawk, after which Don Williams sold it to Gordon Apker. Several questions remain. First, which of the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88's is this survivor? Is it the Motorama car or Harley Earl's duplicate?

It's definitely not the red car, says Dick Henderson, because sometime after 1955, GM Styling removed the 1954 body and redid it as the Mark II, using the same chassis and engine. This second-generation Oldsmobile F-88 was painted a light metallic blue, according to Henderson. It eventually ended up with Oldsmobile Division, and Henderson has no idea what happened to it after that. He never saw it again.

So the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 that Apker owns today is probably the original golden Motorama show car that ended up with Oldsmobile. Lon Krueger says that when he got the car, the main body shell was all put together, but the external surfaces weren't painted. However, the inner fenders and the bottom of the floorpan were -- in metallic green -- same as the Motorama Oldsmobile F-88.

There is one other possibility. Henderson points out that the salvaged Oldsmobile F-88 could be an entirely different car made up of backup parts and a third set of body panels. It would have been easy enough to pull one more complete fiberglass body off the existing female plaster molds. And it wasn't that unusual to make spare parts just in case something happened to the original show car.

That could explain, too, why E. L. Cord got crates of parts and blueprints instead of an assembled car. Lon Krueger told me that some of the parts in those crates had obviously been mounted on a car before, however. The 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 emblems, for example, still had black dumdum on the retaining spikes.

The windshield came with its rubber molding in place. And the body itself had obviously been assembled in a jig, because no one could have fitted the panels together so precisely and seamed the joints so neatly without one.

Here is yet another interesting point about the 1954 Oldsmobile F-88: Krueger says that while a few parts were missing and he had to make them from scratch, the crates contained more parts than were needed to finish the car. It seemed to him that whoever filled those crates put in not only the parts from a previously assembled car but some spare parts in addition. It looked like everything General Motors had for this car got boxed up and shipped out.

No one knows why an apparently complete 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 got taken apart, but it is believed that, that's what happened. Many believe that the surviving Oldsmobile F-88 is the golden Motorama car, which was taken apart and sent to E. L. Cord along with all the miscellaneous related parts GM had lying around. Disassembling the car and sending it to Cord may have seemed to Wolfram or Earl close enough to destroying it to satisfy GM's crusher edict.

Another question still lingers: Who actually authorized the crating and shipment of the Oldsmobile F-88 to E. L. Cord? A comfortable answer to that one may never be found. Even the very capable and cooperative Ed Stanchak of the Oldsmobile History Center in Lansing could not come up with any answers.

Some of the ex-GM people consulted for this article speculated that the shipping order might have originated with someone high up at Oldsmobile, like general manager Wolfram. Wolfram might have sent the car back to GM Styling and asked Earl to have it disassembled and shipped. But most of the people that were interviewed felt that the shipping order most likely originated with Earl himself.

Earl might have gotten the golden car back for some reason, and, since he was already driving the red car, had no need for it. Earl surely knew Cord, although they weren't really close friends. Still, their acquaintance was confirmed by Harley Earl's son, Jim, as well as Charles Cord.

Interestingly, the name requesting shipment on GM Styling Section packing sheet SS-532 is that of Ken Pickering. Retired since 1989, he'd trained as an engineer, albeit with a flair for design. He started at Fisher Body in 1949 and moved on to GM Styling in the autumn of 1952. Until 1954, he worked under Fred Walther in Styling's experimental engineering department.

This was where the various show-car mechanisms, like convertible tops, windshields, door-hinge geometry, etc., were developed for fabrication. Ken recalled working on the Oldsmobile F-88. But when asked why it was shipped to E. L. Cord, he responded that he'd searched his memory, even called some old friends, but finally said, "I just cannot imagine why we did that."

The 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 has managed all these years to keep its secrets, and it probably always will. Unless records exist somewhere within GM Design Staff -- the library there was not searched -- it is doubtful that anyone will ever know for sure which 1954 Oldsmobile F-88 still exists, or who was responsible for letting it out of the corporation's grasp in the first place. Even with all we know, there's still an awful lot we don't.

The above story is from
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/1954-oldsmobile-f881.htm
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" We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution." - Abraham Lincoln

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