IMC Apolo 5000 GT 1965, Estados Unidos
Fotografia
The Apollo was an American sports car/personal automobile, initially manufactured from 1962 to 1964 by
International Motor Cars in Oakland, California.
Engineered by Milt Brown and designed by Ron
Plescia, it featured handmade Italian aluminum coachwork by Intermeccanica, with a choice between two-seater convertible or fastback styles. Power came from a 215 cu in
(3.5 l) or 300 cu in (4.9 l) Buick engine mated to a 4-speed manual.
The initial company built 42 cars before
suspending production while seeking new financing. IMC allowed the sale of
body/chassis units to Vanguard Motors in Dallas, Texas, to produce cars under the Vetta Ventura name.
These were made until 1966 as a stop-gap measure to keep the carrozzeria (body
producer Intermeccanica) in business until new backers were found. Other
production arrangements followed.
A total of 90 have been produced to date by
all entities.
Frank Reisner,
a former chemical engineer born in Hungary, raised in Canada and educated in
America, established a company that later produced complete bodies --
painted and trimmed -- for the Apollo as well as the Texas-built Vetta Ventura
(which was the same car with a different name). Reisner, on holiday in Italy in
1959, decided that he loved Turin and set up shop there as Intermeccanica producing tuning kits for Renaults, Peugeots, and Simcas.
The Apollo project was the dream of a young
California engineer, Milt Brown, who desired to build an American answer to
European GTs, such as the Aston Martin DB4 and Ferrari coupes. Brown, who was looking for a
coachbuilder, met Reisner at the Monaco Grand Prix in 1960. A deal was made and the first
Apollos were built by early 1963 by Brown's International Motor Cars.
Intermeccanica hand formed and trimmed the steel bodies in Turin, Italy,
and then shipped them by sea to Oakland, California, where
the drive train was installed. The prototype's design was by Milt Brown's
friend, Ron Plescia, but the nose was too long and the rear vision limited, so
Reisner commissioned former Bertone stylist Franco Scaglione to revise it.
The finished car, sold by Brown's
International Motorcars of Oakland, was well received and had famous owners
such as Pat Boone. The base price was $6000 and the top speed was
claimed to be 150 mph (240 km/h).
A prototype 2 + 2 was shown in New York in
1965. It was shown again in 1966 as the Griffth GT.
International Motor Cars sold 42 cars (40
coupes and one spyder, including the prototype) before production stopped in
mid-1964 due to lack of financing. IMC then made a contract with Reisner (to
keep his operation going) allowing Intermeccanica to supply body/chassis units to
Fred Ricketts, owner of Vanguard Industries, an aftermarket supplier of auto
air conditioners in Dallas, Texas. Vanguard sold it as the Vetta Ventura. The
intent was to give IMC time to find new financing as well as keep
Intermeccanica alive.
Vanguard built only 11 cars, with shop
foreman Tom Johnson purchasing the leftover 11 body/chassis units and
completing them as late as 1971.
A third attempt to produce the Apollo was by
attorney Robert Stevens. His Apollo International company of Pasadena,
California completed only 14 cars, with foreman Otto Becker finishing another
six. Four body chassis/units were never claimed by Apollo International and
were sold by US Customs to Ken Dumiere.
A pair of Apollo 3500 GTs were used to
portray the Thorndyke Special race car which was featured in The Love Bug, a 1968 Disneymovie. One of the
pair has been fully restored.
Reisner later developed projects such as the
Griffith, the Murena GT, and the Italia by Intermeccanica. Intermeccanica went
on to produce the Veltro 1500, the Griffin (which was a version of the
prototype Apollo 2+2), the Phoenix, and the Omega among others.
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