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Another look at the Pontiac "Ghost Car" seen here.
June 11, 1940. "General Motors exhibit at Golden Gate International Exposition, San Francisco. Transparent Car with Pontiac Chassis and Body by Fisher." 8x10 Agfa negative, originally from the Wyland Stanley collection. View full size.
Cool! I got to see this car up close about 15 years ago. The owner at the time lived in Terre Haute, IN and had a secret world-class collection that classic auto buffs could see by invitation only. Sadly, he has since passed away, and this car was sold to a new owner.
I worked with acrylics for 10 yrs. I immediately noticed the edge lit illuminated "Body by Fisher" plaque. It is neatly inset into the tubular based license plate holder, complete with dangling power cord.
Here's a question: could you actually drive it? I.e., was it an operating automobile or just a display piece? Seems to me that starting it up would cause all kind of mayhem with the plexiglass body (smoke, distortion, etc) but maybe the engineers were smarter than me, which is highly likely.
[It is a running car with, at last report, 86 miles on the odometer. - Dave]
The best part is that the body won't rust out.
In the early 1960's I purchased a Revell "Visible V8" model kit. If I remember correctly, once you put it all together, you could set the engine rotating with a two batteries in a remote control. I believe today's version of model uses a hand crank to set things in motion.
Isn't that the Invisible Man sitting behind the wheel?
She'd look much better in the passenger seat.
Allen Funt driving this beauty into a gas station in the mid-50's and the reaction he'd get.
This was a fascinating concept, particularly for people training to be auto mechanics, engineers, inventors, etc. to be able to see all the inner workings of how a motor vehicle works and is put together. I would be mesmerized just watching to see how rolling down the window works (where does it go?) and seeing how the doors lock, plus the steering mechanism, brakes, etc. Just as medical students have clear plastic human models to see what is where, one might be able to diagnose a car problem just by looking into the engine to see how things may be malfunctioning. I remember about ten or twenty years ago, there was an abundance of clear plastic cameras and telephones one could acquire and I did buy such a camera but I don't know where it is (like most of my stuff). I do love this car though, seeing how it is structured and all the complexities therein.
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