NOW
AVAILABLE!!!


Illustrated Corvette Series Portfolio




















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249 CLIP ART IMAGES

C1 Corvettes: 1953 to 1962

Illustrated Corvette Series No. 10
Q- Corvette Engineering Study

Price: $19.95 + $3.95 Postang & Handlin

Unframed Print

Framed Print (Click HERE for details.)

Or, call our toll-free line 1-800-858-6670 to place your order.

Here's the story...

In light of the new C5 Corvette, the 1957 Q-Corvette is not only the most forgotten Corvette, but the most profound of all concept Corvettes! Mechanical designs for the C5 were actually laid out in this very unique 1957 prototype.

Early in 1957, Chevrolet was in the beginning stages of developing a completely new small car concept that would eventually become the Corvair. Corvette designers saw that the transaxle and independent rear suspension from the Corvair could be used to develop a totally new and revolutionary Corvette. With this exotic piece of hardware, Zora Arkus-Duntov and his designers saw this as a golden opportunity for a new and very different Corvette for 1960.

The rear mounted transmission/axle helped balance the weight of the Corvette. Drum brakes were mounted inboard to reduce unsprung weight. Even the starter motor was on the transaxle for weight balancing. The transaxle case was aluminum and could be offered as either a 4-speed manual or automatic.

Up front an all-aluminum, fuel-injected 283 engine with a dry-sump oil system was proposed. There were to be no steel valve guides, valve seats or piston sleeves. This was to help achieve the target weight of 2,225 pounds.

The proposed structure of the Q-Corvette was a steel platform similar to the 356 Porsche. Because of the transmission location, the interior would have been larger, even though the length and height were smaller than
the production Corvette. The fastback roof had a permanent arch behind the
cockpit and removable roof panels. At the leading edge of the windshield, there were no A-pillars.

Bill Mitchell suggested to stylists Bob Veryzer and Pete Brock that the styling should come from the slimness of the Pininfarina / Abarth cars with a strong horizontal line and bulges over the wheels in the upper surfaces. The pointed nose had driving lights in the grille opening and manually operated pop-up headlights. Mitchell's Sting Ray Racer used most of the same styling ideas.

By the late 50's the economy was in bad shape, so GM killed the expensive Q-Corvette. As it was, Corvettes were hardly profitable. So the Q-Corvette was an on-paper and clay-only prototype with some great ideas that took 30 years to produce.

Be sure to check out the NEW Illustrated Corvette Series Portfolio.

This portfolio of Scott Teeters' "Vette Magazine" series, covers every production Corvette from 1953 to 1996. Also included are all of the major Corvette show cars, engineering prototypes, concept cars, and several Corvette racers.

For complete information about this exciting new item, CLICK HERE!


All of our prints are only $19.95 + $3.95 for shipping & handling.

Click HERE to place an order via "snail-mail" for an
Illustrated Corvette Series Parchment Paper Print

Framed prints are now only $44.95 + $10.00 for shipping & handling.

Click HERE to see samples of our framed Corvette prints.

Or, you can call toll-free at 1-800-858-6670 from 9 am to 9 pm EST
to place your order today.

249 gif images of Corvettes.


Scott's Corvette Clip Art Collection is
NOW AVAILABLE...
Click HERE.

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Click HERE to place an order an Illustrated Corvette Series Parchment Paper Print.
To return to the Home Page for the Corvette Directory, click HERE.



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