AREX Off the Walls, an American Roadster Experimental
Automotive design studio walls are generally plastered with sketches, a wallpaper of ideas drawings that arc up there for inspiration but rarely taken down and transformed into hardware.
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Automotive design studio walls are generally plastered with sketches, a wallpaper of ideas drawings that arc up there for inspiration but rarely taken down and transformed into hardware.
In the 1950s they were dubbed “dream cars” when they dazzled the public at General Motors Motoramas.
If you stretch the yardstick of automotive development about two feet beyond current thinking, that’s where you’ll find the pedals of the American Roadster Experimental (AREX) prototype sports car.
Outrageous thoughts race through your head as you listen to Dave Stollery reel off his car’s projected performance statistics – like 0 to 60 in 3.7 seconds, the quarter-mile in 11.3 seconds and (if your foot stays jammed against the floor) a top end of around 200 mph. Cool!
Automotive design studio walls are generally plastered with sketches, a wallpaper of idea drawings that are up there for inspiration, but rarely taken down and transformed into