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The Dallara IPS is an open-wheel formula racing car chassis, designed, developed and built by Italian manufacturer Dallara, for the one-make Indy Lights spec-series, a feeder-series for the IndyCar Series, between 2002 and 2014.
The Dallara IL-15 is an open-wheel formula racing car chassis, designed, developed and built by Dallara, and is the current spec-chassis for the one-make Indy NXT spec-series, a feeder series for the IndyCar Series, which has been manufactured since 2015.
Car Picture Class 1973 Dallara 1300: Group 5 Sports Cars 1974 Dallara 1600: Group 5 Sports Cars 1975 Dallara Icsunonove: Group 5 Special Production 1976 Dallara/Wolf WD1: Can-Am: 1978 Emiliani 380: Formula 3: 1981 Dallara 381: Formula 3: 1982 Dallara 382: Formula 3: Lancia LC1: Group 6: 1983 Dallara 383: Formula 3: Lancia LC2: Group C: 1984 ...
This 1962 Ford Seattle is among 100 concept car images that Ford Motor Co. just added to its online archive site. Images are now available to the public for free downloading.
Companion – Russian model car brand from Gelendzhik, making models of Soviet/Russian trucks and buses of plastic (scale 1:43) Conquest- Handbuilt 1:43 white metal cars (incl. related brand Madison). Most models made by SMTS. Line discontinued and brought back in 2005. Conrad Models – Conrad Modell; German maker of promotional trucks and ...
The car was designed by a group of ex-Lotus engineers led by Paul Haussauer with styling by John Frayling. The company was set up in 1969, and small-scale production began in July 1971. The company was set up in 1969, and small-scale production began in July 1971.
In 1978 mini-car builder F.W. & Associates offered a miniature version of the SV-1 to existing Bricklin owners through the pages of the Bricklin International quarterly magazine. The cars were powered by a 3 hp (2.2 kW) Briggs & Stratton gasoline engine and could be ordered in any of the Bricklin factory colours. List price was $550.00.
Clay modeling (or clay model making) for automobile prototypes was first introduced in the 1930s by automobile designer Harley Earl, head of the General Motors styling studio (known initially as the Art and Color Section, and later as the Design and Styling Department).