General Motors' Firebird III on display at the Century 21 Exposition, Seattle (1962) RetroFuturism

Finding Your Car Made Easier with Reviews, Detailed Specs & the Car's Location. Search Now. Select from a Huge Range of Vehicles available for Sale at Carsguide. Start Now! The General Motors Firebird comprises a quartet of prototype cars that General Motors (GM) engineered for the 1953, 1956, and 1959 Motorama auto shows. The cars' designers, headed by Harley Earl, took Earl's inspiration from the innovations in fighter aircraft design at the time.

General Motors Firebird II Concept Car Photograph by Jim West

Motivated by the space race, a generation of General Motors employees created the revolutionary Firebird series of concept cars. Today, GM continues to challenge expectations of what can be achieved. "We're generally trying something right at the limit of what could be done." - Norman James, retired General Motors designer. This is the General Motors Firebird I concept from 1954 - the first working gas turbine car in the US. Although it wasn't called the I when it was first built, because they hadn't built the. General Motors did so in 1964 when it unveiled the Firebird IV at its Futurama Exhibit at the New York World's Fair. Photo: General Motors Completely unrelated to the Firebird that Pontiac. Weight: 2800.00 lbs (1,270.06 kg) Engine: Single Stage, Axial Flow Turbine, 370 horsepoweer @ 26,000 rpm Learn about the 1954 Firebird I in the GM Heritage Collection.

General Motors Firebird (1950s) r/RetroFuturism

The General Motors Firebird II, a gas-turbine powered engineering concept car, was introduced at the 1956 GM Motorama. Firebird II was the successor to the famous 1954 Firebird I. Made in the USA 1950s Airborne Fin Tales You can find several classic GMCs for sale in the Classic Driver Market. Is it a car? Is it a plane? Well both, sort of. GMC's Firebird concept of 1953 was the first of a trio of concept cars that brought fighter jet styling and technology to the road… 1994 Pontiac Firebird Trans AM Auto. $32,950*. Excl. Govt. Charges. 171,000 km. Coupe. Automatic. 8cyl 5.7L Petrol. Finance available. We work with a finance company to offer you finance options to buy this car. Built in 1958, it was the only member of the Firebird trio to have any direct impact on the design of General Motors production vehicles. The 1959 Cadillac featured some of the Firebird III's surface development and its severe rocker panel tuck-under.

The GM Firebird I was a turbinepowered, fighterjet inspired concept

The General Motors Firebird comprises a quartet of prototype cars that General Motors (GM) engineered for the 1953, 1956, and 1959 Motorama auto shows. The cars' designers, headed by Harley Earl, took Earl's inspiration from the innovations in fighter aircraft design at the time. GM Pontiac. Australian Muscle Car Sales. Call Mike Selby 0414 278 604. Facebook. Instagram. YouTube. Home List a Car Find a Car Contact. Latest Cars Aussie Muscle (58) U.S.. For sale is a 1976 Pontiac Firebird Formula 400 running Pontiac's renowned 6.6 Litre V8 and T-350 automatic transmission. A genuine W66 Formula option car, this is a. General Motors stood alone in 1956 as the biggest manufacturing company the world had ever seen. It so thoroughly dominated the American auto industry, there was talk of breaking the company up. But Detroit's mighty collosus didn't spend glory days resting on its laurels, instead it looked ahead to envision a future we're just beginning to see now. Photo: General Motors LLC. One of the wildest concept cars ever created, the Firebird I XP-21 paved the way for three more gas turbine-powered GM prototypes released in the 1950s. Along with the.

GM’s spaceage Firebird turbinecar concepts on display

Completed in 1953, in time for the January 1954 Motorama at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, the Firebird I holds the distinction of being the first gas turbine car unveiled in the United States (Chrysler's first turbine-powered car debuted to the public a couple months later, in March 1954). Pontiac, or formally the Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors, was an American automobile brand owned, manufactured, and commercialized by General Motors.Introduced as a companion make for GM's more expensive line of Oakland automobiles, Pontiac overtook Oakland in popularity and supplanted its parent brand entirely by 1933.. The moniker "Pontiac" stems from the Ottawa's tribal chief title.