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Vintage
Corvette SS
It was a classic story of a promising
car that didn't have a chance to really prove itself.
And from it was born one of the more significant legends
of Corvette history.
The Corvette SS began in 1956 as
a pet project of General Motors' styling director Harley
Earl, who wanted Chevrolet to take on the big names
in international endurance racing. Earl's initial idea
was to design a racy body, drop it onto a Jaguar D-Type
chassis, and swap the Jag's six for a Chevy V8.
But that notion wouldn't do for Corvette
engineering guru, diehard racing fan Zora Arkus-Duntov.
When he heard of the plan, he pushed for an all-new
chassis design that would incorporate ambitious engineering
concepts. Duntov's arguments won out, if for no other
reason than the fact that the D-Type's main structure
was a monocoque configuration and therefore had no separate
frame to drop any sort of body onto.
To save time, Duntov purchased a
Mercedes-Benz 300SL frame and from that drew much of
the inspiration -- if not verbatim design elements --
for the Corvette SS's structure. To this platform, he
added a race-prepared 283-cid Chevy V8, a de Dion rear
axle, and an experimental braking system.
The car's hasty debut was the 12
Hours of Sebring, in early 1957. Juan Fangio and Stirling
Moss had initially agreed to pilot the car in the race,
but development delays plagued the car, giving the superstar
drivers second thoughts. These misgivings proved well
founded -- replacements John Fitch and Piero Taruffi
battled a number of gremlins from the very beginning
of the event, and were forced out after just 23 laps.
The SS nonetheless showed considerable
promise when it was running well, and the team looked
forward to trying the car at Le Mans that year. Unfortunately,
the Automobile Manufacturers Association enacted its
infamous racing ban before the June event, relegating
the Corvette SS to being a testbed and show car.
But the story doesn't end there.
In 1958, Earl's successor, Bill Mitchell, bought the
spare Corvette SS chassis. He then collaborated with
his staff to design a new body for it and he campaigned
the car himself -- "privately," so as to dodge
the AMA ban. Mitchell's racer was significant for introducing
one of the most beloved of all Corvettes shapes, the
1963-67 Stingray design.
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