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General Motors Firebird

 
General Motors Firebird

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General Motors Firebird



 
 
For the latter General Motors-produced vehicle, see Pontiac Firebird
Pontiac Firebird

The Pontiac Firebird was built by the Pontiac division of General Motors between 1967 and 2002.The Firebird was introduced the same year as its platform-sharing cousin, the Chevrolet Camaro....
.
The General Motors Firebird is a series of three concept car
Concept car

A concept vehicle or show vehicle is a Automobile prototype made to showcase a concept, new styling, technology and more. They are often shown at Auto show to gauge customer reaction to new and radical designs which may or may not have a chance of being produced....
s designed by Harley Earl
Harley Earl

Harley J. Earl was an automotive stylist and engineer and industrial designer. He is most famous for his time at General Motors from 1927 until 1959, where he was the first Vice President of Design....
, and built by General Motors
General Motors

General Motors Corporation , founded in 1908, is the world's second-largest automaker after Toyota, ranked by 2008 global unit sales. GM was the global sales leader for 77 consecutive calendar years from 1931 to 2008....
 for the 1953, 1956 and 1959 Motorama
Motorama

Motorama was an auto show staged by General Motors Corporation from 1949 to 1961. These automobile extravaganzas were designed to whet public appetite and boost automobile sales with displays of fancy prototypes, concept vehicles and other special or halo vehicle....
 auto shows. They were very much inspired by innovations in fighter aircraft design at the time. None of the designs were intended for production, but instead were to showcase the extremes in technology and design that General Motors was able to achieve.






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For the latter General Motors-produced vehicle, see Pontiac Firebird
Pontiac Firebird

The Pontiac Firebird was built by the Pontiac division of General Motors between 1967 and 2002.The Firebird was introduced the same year as its platform-sharing cousin, the Chevrolet Camaro....
.
The General Motors Firebird is a series of three concept car
Concept car

A concept vehicle or show vehicle is a Automobile prototype made to showcase a concept, new styling, technology and more. They are often shown at Auto show to gauge customer reaction to new and radical designs which may or may not have a chance of being produced....
s designed by Harley Earl
Harley Earl

Harley J. Earl was an automotive stylist and engineer and industrial designer. He is most famous for his time at General Motors from 1927 until 1959, where he was the first Vice President of Design....
, and built by General Motors
General Motors

General Motors Corporation , founded in 1908, is the world's second-largest automaker after Toyota, ranked by 2008 global unit sales. GM was the global sales leader for 77 consecutive calendar years from 1931 to 2008....
 for the 1953, 1956 and 1959 Motorama
Motorama

Motorama was an auto show staged by General Motors Corporation from 1949 to 1961. These automobile extravaganzas were designed to whet public appetite and boost automobile sales with displays of fancy prototypes, concept vehicles and other special or halo vehicle....
 auto shows. They were very much inspired by innovations in fighter aircraft design at the time. None of the designs were intended for production, but instead were to showcase the extremes in technology and design that General Motors was able to achieve. The cars were recently placed on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan
Dearborn, Michigan

Dearborn is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is located in the Metro Detroit and Wayne County, Michigan, and is the tenth largest city in the U.S....
, and still make regular car show appearances.

History

General Motors had done research on feasibility of gas turbine
Gas turbine

A gas turbine, also called a combustion turbine, is a rotary engine that extracts energy from a flow of combustion gas. It has an upstream compressor coupled to a downstream turbine, and a combustion chamber in-between....
 engines in cars as early as the 1930s. It wasn't until the early 1950s that they began building an actual engine, with Emmett Conklin leading the project.

Firebird I

By 1953, the research team had produced the Firebird XP-21, later referred to as the Firebird I, which was essentially a jet airplane on wheels. It was the first gas turbine powered car tested in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
. The design is entirely impractical, with a bubble topped canopy
Bubble canopy

A bubble canopy is a Aircraft canopy made like a soap bubble, which attempts to provide 360? vision to the pilot....
 over a single seat cockpit, a bullet shaped fuselage made entirely of fiberglass
Fiberglass

Fiberglass, , is material made from extremely fine fibers of glass. It is used as a reinforcing agent for many polymer products; the resulting composite material, properly known as fiber-reinforced polymer or glass-reinforced plastic , is called "fiberglass" in popular usage....
, short wings, and a vertical tail fin. It has a Whirlfire Turbo Power gas turbine engine, which has two speeds, and expels jet exhaust at some . The entire weight of the car is .

At first, Conklin was the only person qualified to drive it, and he tested it up to , but upon shifting into second gear the tires lost traction under the extreme engine torque and he immediately slowed down for fear of crashing. The car was later test driven at the Indianapolis Speedway by race car driver Maury Rose. The car was never actually intended to test the power or speed potential of the gas turbine, but merely the practical feasibility of its use. The braking system differs from standard drum systems, in that the drums are on the outside of the wheels to facilitate fast cooling, and the wings actually have aircraft style flaps for slowing from high speed.

Firebird II

The second prototype, the Firebird II in 1956, was a more practical design: a four-seat, family car. It is a low and wide design with a large dual air intakes in the front, a high bubble canopy top, and a vertical tail fin. Its exterior bodywork was made entirely of titanium
Titanium

Titanium is a chemical element with the symbol Ti and atomic number 22. Sometimes called the ?space age metal?, it has a low density and is a strong, lustrous, corrosion-resistant transition metal with a silver colour....
. The engine output was , and to solve the exhaust heat problem it was fed through a regenerative system, which allowed the entire engine to operate at nearly cooler, and also power the accessories. Another innovation on the car was the first use of four wheel disc brake
Disc brake

The disc brake or disk brake is a device for slowing or stopping the rotation of a wheel. A brake disc , usually made of cast iron or ceramic composites , is connected to the wheel and/or the axle....
s, with a fully independent suspension
Independent suspension

Independent suspension is a broad term for any automobile suspension system that allows each wheel on the same axle to move vertically independently of each other....
, as well as a sophisticated guidance system which was intended to be used with "the highway of the future", where an electrical wire would be embedded into a roadway to send signals that would help guide future cars and avoid accidents.

Firebird III

The third design, the Firebird III, was built in 1958 and first shown at Motorama in 1959. It is another extravagant prototype with titanium skin, and no less than seven short wings and tail fins that were tested extensively in a wind tunnel. It is a two-seater powered by a Whirlfire GT-305 gas turbine engine, and a two cylinder gasoline engine to run all the accessories. Its exterior design features a double bubble canopy, and more technical advancements to make it more practical, such as cruise control
Cruise control

Cruise control is a system that automatically controls the rate of motion of a motor vehicle. The driver sets the speed and the system will take over the throttle of the car to maintain the same speed....
, anti-lock brakes
Anti-lock braking system

An anti-lock braking system, or ABS is a safety system which prevents the wheels on a motor vehicle from locking while brake.A rotating road wheel allows the driver to maintain steering control under heavy braking by preventing a skid and allowing the wheel to continue interacting Traction with the road surface as directed by driver...
, and air conditioning
Air conditioning

An air conditioner is an appliance, system, or Mechanism designed to extract heat from an area via a refrigeration cycle. In construction, a complete system of heating, Ventilation , and air conditioning is referred to as "HVAC." Its purpose, in a building or an automobile, is to provide comfort during either hot or cold...
. It also featured "space-age" innovations, such as special air drag brakes
Air brake (aircraft)

In aeronautics, air brakes are a type of flight controls used on an aircraft to reduce speed during landing.Air brakes differ from Spoiler in that air brakes are designed to increase Drag while making little change to lift , whereas spoilers greatly reduce the lift-to-drag ratio and a higher angle of attack required to maintain lift, re...
, like those found on aircraft, which emerged from flat panels in the bodywork of the car to slow it from high speeds, an "ultra-sonic" key which signaled the doors to open, and an automated guidance system to avoid accidents and "no hold" steering. The steering was controlled by a joystick positioned between the two seats. This gave the car a more futuristic feel and simulated the experience of flying a plane.

Motorama theme (1956)

The 1956 motorama projected movie projecting a future contrasted with the present; in the present (1956), a nuclear family
Nuclear family

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 of hot and perspiring convertible
Convertible

A convertible is a type of automobile in which the roof can retract and fold away, converting it from an enclosed to an open-air vehicle. Many different car body styles are manufactured and marketed in convertible form....
 occupants are attempting to travel to the beach - but they are stuck, imobile, in an insufferable freeway jam. In a flashforward
Flashforward

In literature, film, television and other media, a flashforward or flash-forward is an interjected scene that takes the narrative forward in time from the current point of the story....
 to the future, they are cruising at high speed in air conditioned comfort along an automated freeway (with no other vehicles to be seen) in their turbine-powered Firebird. The concept (now over fifty years old) was that this future was not unreasonably remote, and would be provided by General Motors, yet is consistent with current projections (2008) for future automotive travel
Vehicle infrastructure integration

Vehicle Infrastructure Integration is an initiative fostering research and applications development for a series of technologies directly linking road vehicles to their physical surroundings, first and foremost in order to improve road safety....
 using electronic vehicle control and improved highway infrastructure.

See also

  • Chrysler Turbine Car
    Chrysler Turbine Car

    Chrysler Turbine Cars were automobiles powered by gas turbine engines that the Chrysler Corporation assembled in a small plant in Detroit, Michigan, United States in 1963, for use in the only consumer test of gas turbine-powered cars....
    , a consumer prototype gas turbine design by the Chrysler Corporation.


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