The amazing design work of Virgil Exner. Known as The Copper Cobra. A one-off concept car on a Shelby Cobra chassis for the American Copper Development Association. Coachwork by Sibona-Bassano of Torino, Italy. A true piece of automotive art.
Дизайн автомобиля был разработан Вирджилом Экснером (Virgil Exner), который успел поработать в компаниях Studebaker и Chrysler. В «Студебекере» ему приходилось трудиться над проектами у себя дома, тогда как «Крайслер» выделил дизайнеру отдельную студию, где он создавал уникальные концепт-кары, задававшие тон всему модельному ряду концерна в 50-х годах прошлого века. Экснер стоял у истоков направления Forward Look, отличавшегося стремительными линиями и громадными плавниками, мода на которые в то время захлестнула Америку. Из-под его пера вышил прототипы
Dodge Firebomb,
Plymouth Explorer,
DeSoto Adventurer,
Dodge Firearrow и
Chrysler d’Elegance.
После ухода из «Крайслера» Экснер продолжил заниматься дизайном, публикуя свои работы в журнале Esquire. В нем-то президент фирмы Copper Development Association Джордж Хартли и увидел рисунок будущего Mercer-Cobra Roadster, загоревшись идеей воплотить этот проект в жизнь. Он связался с Экснером и договорился о постройке единственного экземпляра. В результате, шасси было предоставлено компанией AC Cars, а кузов изготовило туринское ателье Carrozzeria Sibona-Basano.
Главная цель, которая ставилась в процессе работы над автомобилем - это показать насколько универсальными и надежными являются такие материалы как латунь и медь.
В конструкции родстера используются элементы из латуни и меди с акриловым покрытием (чтобы избежать обесцвечивания), а молдинги и внешний декор изготовлены из кремнистой бронзы. Для дверных панелей салона, спинок сидений и приборной панели тоже используется бронза, а для изготовления спиц рулевого колеса — хромистая бронза. Сами кресла обшиты черной кожей, а лобовое стекло изготовлено из плексигласа.
В моторном отсеке также используется медь и латунь. Даже тормозные диски были созданы из специального сплава меди, который обладает высоким коэффициентом теплопередачи и способствует исключительной производительности.
В течение десяти лет автомобиль находился в собственности у компании Copper Development Association, которая на его примере демонстрировала возможности применения меди и сплавов в автомобилестроении. Позднее машина была продана коллекционеру.
The 1965 Mercer Cobra would never have been built had it not been for the Copper Development Association, which wanted to show the practical modern uses of copper in automobile design. But it certainly would not have looked the way it did were it not for Virgil M. Exner and his son, Virgil, Jr., who transformed it from concept to reality.
Virgil Exner's long styling career began at General Motors, where he is said to have created Pontiac's long-running hallmark, the "Silver Streak." In 1938, he was hired by Raymond Loewy, and contributed to the dramatic 1947 Studebakers, before disagreements with Loewy caused him to leave.
He soon joined Chrysler Corporation, where he produced his finest production styling: the famous "Forward Look" that wrested design leadership away from General Motors for the first time in a generation. By 1963, he had left Chrysler to freelance, and the Mercer Cobra was one of his, and his son's, first independent projects.
Design-wise, Exner was a traditionalist, who considered the timeless hallmarks of the Classic era as appropriate on modern cars as they were in the late 1920s and 1930s. This produced bold concepts both good and bad. The good included open-wheel designs to show off wire wheels, handsome traditional grilles, and rakish emphasis of fenderlines; the bad included "toilet seat" spare tire impressions and freestanding head- and taillamps, as seen on early 1960s Imperials.
When Esquire magazine asked the Exners to create renderings of what four famous Classics might look like in 1963, it was an assignment to their liking, playing to their strengths. Along with a modernized Packard, Stutz, and Duesenberg was a new Mercer. The "Cobra" half of the formula was provided by Caroll Shelby.
According to writer Michael Lamm, the Exners were approached by George M. Hartley, president of the Copper Development Association, at almost precisely the time they had finished the conceptual rendering of the modern Mercer. "The old Mercer had all that brass and copper, and so did the rendering of the modern Mercer," Hartley told Lamm. "So we said, 'All right, let's plan to build that one.'"
From Caroll Shelby the Exners ordered a bare Cobra chassis, all tubes, and a Ford V-8, which were shipped to bodybuilders Sibona-Basano in Torino, Italy. Sibona had broken away from Ghia, where he must have known Exner from the Chrysler-Ghia show car days, but he had been recommended specifically by designer Brooks Stevens.
"Sibona-Basano was a funny kind of place," Stevens said later, "with chickens running around the yard and junk everywhere. But they did wonderful bodywork and they charged much less than Ghia." Concurrently, the Italians were working on several Stevens prototype proposals for future Studebakers.
Hartley's Copper Association helped supervise the project and provided all the cupriferous metals that went into its trim: 11 different types to demonstrate color possibilities, including conventional copper alloys like brass (copper and zinc mainly) and bronze (copper and tin). The body and chassis were conventional steel.
The Copper Development Association displayed the Mercer-Cobra for a decade, but most of its ideas were rendered obsolete by the development of more modern, man-made materials, encouraged by government crash-protection standards. But the Mercer-Cobra is still distinctive today — and still very much in the Exner design tradition.