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Encyclopedia > Bricklin automobile
This article or section should be merged with Bricklin SV-1

The Bricklin automobile was a futuristic gull-wing sports car with a unique acrylic body produced in 1973 and 1975 in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.


With safety an integral part of the sportscar's concept, it was called the "Bricklin SV-1" (Safety Vehicle 1). Innovative, the car was constructed with many features that were far ahead of its time. The design included a unique acrylic body using a vacuum forming process that bonded color-impregnated acrylic to each fiberglass body panel. As a result of this type of process, scratches to the vehicle's surface could easily be buffed out. At a time when most automobiles still had heavy chromed-metal bumpers, the Bricklin had impact absorbing urethane bumpers that became the industry standard twenty years later. As well, the sportscar came equipped with a roll bar and side door guard bars, and, using more technology as a result of NASCAR testing, the fuel tank was protected to reduce the risk of puncture and fire in the event of an accident.


In the mid 1970s, competition in the North American sportscar market was basically limited to the Chevrolet Corvette and the Datsun (Nissan) "Z" models. While the more stylish Bricklin's emphasis was on safety, the lightweight vehicle performed extremely well with its powerful Ford 351 cubic inch (5.75 L) V8 engine. With its sleek appearance, exotic gull-wing doors that opened and closed at the touch of a button, advanced safety engineering, and priced to compete, automobile dealerships across the United States and Canada were clamoring for the new sportscar.


With great fanfare, the first Bricklin sports car rolled off an assembly line in Saint John, New Brunswick on July 1, 1974 but, under a cloud because of the financial problems plaguing the company, criticism from the media spawned much speculation as to the viability of the company. With the financial concerns came rumors of quality problems that were later revealed to be minor and normal for any new vehicle startup, particularly one with advanced technology. However, when information came to light that Malcolm Bricklin, whose blue jeans and cowboy boots went against the grain of dignified business executives, had used some of the government money to prop up his other business in the United States, criticism reached such a point that the government did not dare inject needed funds into the business. As a result, after producing only 2,854 Bricklins, the company went into receivership in 1976.


The car became a collector's item over time with many still on the road today.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Asia Times Online :: China Business News - China autos: Finding a key to America (1050 words)
Chinese automobile companies are marked by some of the most sophisticated and modern capital-asset infrastructures, in many cases on par with some of their larger Japanese, South Korean and US competitors.
Bricklin's initial efforts, exhaustively covered in the US in no small part because he is always a good story, were newsworthy in a larger sense because his partnership with Chery also promised to bring into narrower focus the competitive threat represented by China's auto manufacturers.
Bricklin's explanations have ranged from Chery finding bigger players in the market to work with to safety problems with the designs from Chery; the former seems more likely, as the latter would seem to have prevented Chrysler from partnering with Chery given its stated purpose of exporting the Chery product into North America.
Bricklin automobile (500 words)
The Bricklin automobile was a futuristic gull-wing sports car with a unique acrylic body produced in 1973 and 1975 in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.
Bricklin had been involved in the automobile industry importing the Japanese Subaru into the United States.
With great fanfare, the first Bricklin sports car rolled off an assembly line in Saint John, New Brunswick on July 1 1974 but, under a cloud because of the financial problems plaguing the company, criticism from the media spawned much speculation as to the viability of the company.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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