
Hi-Dee-Hi there friends and neighbors! Seems I've been off doing
things and let a month (or two) get by me. I already had a few specific
cars that I'd designated for scrutiny, and was in the works on several
of these, when the 1999 Mainline Cars site on the Hot Wheels Homepage popped
up. Of course, being a devout sports car fah-reak, I am more than
pleased with the selection of cars coming up. It looks like a great
balance of GT cars, rods, concepts, customs, and…uh, duds.
.
Anyway, I couldn't help but notice a car in the line-up that fits the
bill of
"Car that Mattel couldn't get the rights to do, and instead designed
a car
VERY similar to it, and called it something else". Or something.
Last year it was the Cat-a-Pult. This year, it's the TURBOLENCE!
.
This 1999 First Edition looks to be really sweet. Classic long
hood, flowing lines, and retro-aero styling look like they've been pulled
straight from the 1957-58 Lister Jaguars. These marvelous cars were
quite successful in the sports car circuits of that era, chalking up many
victories in the able hands of none other than Jimmy Clark and Sterling
Moss, to name just two.
.
Designed and built by Brian Lister, who himself started racing in a
Morgan 4/4 in 1948, the Lister marquee began life in 1953 with somewhat
skeptical backing from the family wrought-iron factory his father owned.
Given six months to show progress, the initial designs carried an MG XPAG-Series
4 cylinder engine. Throughout it's life, the evolving one-of-a-kind
creations would carry primarily Jaguar 6 cylinder motors, some Chevrolet
V-8's, and a few other odd power plants.
.
Sprayed a bright green, not the traditional British Racing Green, and
adorned with a yellow center stripe, the car found success on the racetracks
of the world. The turning point came at Spa in 1958. The Lister
team, with Brian's longtime friend and colleague William Archibald Scott-Brown
driving, had a wonderful battle going on with the Ecurie Ecosse (you Jag-o-philes
know that name well) car of Masten Gregory. During the race, Archie crashed
and lost his life.
.
Brian nearly withdrew from racing altogether, having lost his friend,
and the only real works driver the team had ever had. A number of
drivers were contacted, but most had obligations. Sterling Moss,
a true hero of the British racing psyche, WAS available, and along with
Bruce Halford carried on with the Lister, chalking up many more wins.
.
So look for yourself. IS the Turbolence the motor-enhanced, smoothed
out version of the Lister-Jag? Or is it just some concept land-speed
record car? Or is it JUST a fluke, a design so timeless that it resurfaces
from the very well of shared imagination that automotive enthusiasts carry,
forever perpetuating itself in the designs of our cars, in our quest
for speed and grace? Or something.
.
Post Script: Right, whatever. I should be back on track
shortly to catch up on a few missing months worth of car tidbits.
In the mean time, email Mattel and the makers of the yet to be finished
Hot Wheels Playstation game, and give them your input on what you want
to see in a car game. The same goes for what kind of actual cars
you want to see produced. From the looks of the '98 and '99 line-ups,
the designers are paying attention to what we want. Ferrari 250 GTO
please!
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