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This was at our "Cruise In" last Friday......Turbo Subie in the backseat.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1491878683.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1491878721.jpg |
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The Corvairs that Nader "owned" were donated to his Museum of Tort Law, not to him personally and he never bought one/drove one himself. If anyone has actually read "Unsafe at any speed," you will know the book is an indictment of the entire auto industry, not of the Corvair alone. The early Corvair accounts for only one of eight chapters in the book, but is the first chapter and that is the one the media pounced on when the book first came out. Everything he recounts about the Corvair is correct, especially about the budget minded decision not to equip the cars with front anti-sway bars, rear camber compensators, and to recommend low, out of spec front tire pressures (12-15 lbs.) which made the tires overloaded and unsafe if two or more passengers were in the car. Even John DeLorean, GM General Manager at the time, agreed that Nader's criticism was correct. Nader did not kill the Corvair by himself, but timing is everything. The car had always been a niche vehicle and was costly to produce vs the other cars in the GM line. It had already been decided that little, if any new developments for the car would be made after the '66 model and the car would be phased out. Chevy did no advertising for the Corvair after '67. His book came out just when the car had been redesigned and some of the safety issues had been addressed. Further, Ford had come out with the Mustang, and Chevrolet was looking to capture the economy market with more traditional cars, the Chevy II, Chevelle, and a sporty car to compete with the Mustang--the Camaro. Put these factors together and sales drop by half, and the fate of the Corvair is sealed. BTW, the first car I ever owned was a 1963 Corvair Monza, 4-speed. Loved it. |
I had 6 corvairs all 65 or 66
as at the time early 70's they were the cheapest good handling cars avg price paid was 100 , $200 max for 35k mile car they were cheaper to replace then fix then a buddy a chevy stealership wrench built two v8 swaps one a track car that owned the track record at PBR/moroso race track only beaten by a then new 3500cslr BWM factory racer |
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In short "Unsafe at any Speed" was the genesis of many industry wide safety improvements that are a part of every auto produced today. |
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I have read the book. Also I have read the rebuttal book called "The Assasination of the Corvair". The demise of the Corvair was certainly multifactorial. In the end rear engine air cooled cars would be relegated to a niche market rather than the mainstream which to this day is basically owned by Porsche alone. Quote:
As a matter of fact the Camaro was originally supposed to be the third generation Corvair. GM was developing the Astro 1 engine for it, would have been really neat: http://www.corvaircorsa.com/feature/cammer2.jpg |
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That is a nice color combo Don.
A collection of corvairs is being sold from an estate here in Prescott . This one just showed up on Craig's list. https://prescott.craigslist.org/cto/6100342189.html http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1493002431.jpg |
The Corvair was mentioned in the top ten cars next to be big dollar classics. I wouldn't mind the Turbo version....even though low on HP by today's standards there are still tons of spare parts and go fast goodies at Chebby prices, no Porsche tax. They were a hoot to drive.
Ralph Nader can go screw a goat..... |
Always dug the later '67 - up versions. Remember 1 in particular a '68 I think, riding in as a kid was pretty cool. Nice proportions / styling inside and out. It was a 2 door, 4 speed and I think had 4 carbs. Some of the styling cues again inside and out reminded me then of 1st gen Camaro's.
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