Impact
of John Delorean on Sports Cars
by SolveYourProblem.com
John
Delorean is now best remembered for his failed gull-winged
stainless steel car that became a time-travel device in the
highly successful “Back to the Future” series of films. He
is also associated with shady financial dealings and illegal
narcotics operations. A symbol of the 1980s excess, the recently
departed Delorean’s legacy seems anything but glorious. When
one reflects on Delorean, they likely remember footage of him
attempting to raise funds for his failing auto company by trying
to sell over twenty million dollars in illegal drugs.
A more carefully use at the automotive innovator, however,
cements Delorean’s status as a true legend in the sports car
field. Without the Delorean touch, it is likely that sports
car production and history would have taken a different direction
than it has.
It was Delorean, who in 1964, helped create the muscle car
movement in the United States when he decided the tired Pontiac
Tempest could be revived via the insertion of a massive V8
engine. The resultant GTO became, and remains, one of the most
beloved muscle cars in history. The GTO, or “goat” as sports
car enthusiasts often term it, became a hot-seller for Pontiac
and set off a chain of events that led to the muscle car era
in the United States.
Delorean was rewarded for his innovative thinking by promotions
into the highest ranks of American automobile executives. Despite
his success in the industry, he eventually opted to go his
own way, leaving the U.S. automakers behind and hoping to subsequently
compete with them.
Though Delorean’s efforts in Detroit created the muscle car
era of high-performance, big-engine sports sedans, his
true desire was to take his automotive notions even further. He
left Detroit and started his own manufacturing efforts in Northern
Ireland, aspiring to build a company that would compete with
Detroit’s big three. The Delorean Motor Company produced the
DMC-12, a brushed stainless steel sports car with a futuristic
look and trademark flip-up doors. It was never a major seller
and less than 9,000 of the famed Delorean DMC-12s ever hit
the streets. Nonetheless, experts credit the “Back to the Future”
car as a design inspiration for many makes and models to follow
from other manufacturers.
Some have compared Delorean’s story with DMC to that of Tucker
automobiles. Both were headed by strong individuals with new
ideas, both met significant resistance from existing manufacturers,
and both introduced aesthetic and mechanical refinements that
would later be adopted in the production of future automobiles.
Delorean’s business success, including hotel investments and
NFL football franchise ownership, was remarkable. His fall
from grace, however, was even more amazing. Accusations of
financial wrongdoings, allegations of cocaine trafficking,
and bankruptcy followed and combined to decimate the Delorean
empire.
Delorean announced in 1999 that he hoped to re-enter the sports
car industry and hinted that he had plans to produce a fast
sports car made primarily of plastic that would cost less than
$20,000 retail. Considering his success three decades earlier
with the GTO, Delorean’s announcement was met with a great
deal of interest. He seemed poised for a comeback. His dream
of a readily accessible sports car designed to fit any budget,
however, was never realized. Delorean died in 2004.
It may be easy to look at the Delorean story and see only
greed, excess and subsequent failure. A closer look at the
man who built the DMC-12, however, reveals one of the sports
car industry’s biggest influences and a man whose legacy should
include consideration of his remarkable achievements alongside
his very public failings.
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SolveYourProblem.com : 2007
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