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A#438 Solved: 1988 GM SRV-1 (Stealth)

Started by Arunas, January 10, 2011, 01:22:03 PM

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del78


Arunas

Quote from: del78 on January 15, 2011, 09:22:09 AM
GM?

GM it is! What's the model name? Locked for 24 hours.

del78

SRV-1 (Stealth)

"According to Automotive News, the SRV-1 loosely represented Group Lotus. Clark Lincoln, chief designer of Advanced Studio 2, said that it was known internally as the Stealth and designed to be the ultimate advanced two-seater sports vehicle. The car was proposed to have all sorts of electronic gadgetry, including sticks to steer the car, doubling as a shifters (somehow). Communications systems, voice-activated controls, heads-up display, and night vision. Whew. I'm missing the last page of the article so there might be more, I don't know. The car is a really beautifully executed styling exercise, and influenced the design of the '92 Camaro. Let's just let it go at that. I do remember a fiberglass scale model of the car on display in the production studio hallway for quite a while. Like somehow it was supposed to inspire new frontiers in taillight bezel design. Nonetheless it was a gorgeous sculpture."

Arunas

Quote from: del78 on January 15, 2011, 11:07:53 AM
SRV-1 (Stealth)

"According to Automotive News, the SRV-1 loosely represented Group Lotus. Clark Lincoln, chief designer of Advanced Studio 2, said that it was known internally as the Stealth and designed to be the ultimate advanced two-seater sports vehicle. The car was proposed to have all sorts of electronic gadgetry, including sticks to steer the car, doubling as a shifters (somehow). Communications systems, voice-activated controls, heads-up display, and night vision. Whew. I'm missing the last page of the article so there might be more, I don't know. The car is a really beautifully executed styling exercise, and influenced the design of the '92 Camaro. Let's just let it go at that. I do remember a fiberglass scale model of the car on display in the production studio hallway for quite a while. Like somehow it was supposed to inspire new frontiers in taillight bezel design. Nonetheless it was a gorgeous sculpture."

Correct!