Cunningham C-3 | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | B. S. Cunningham Company |
Designer | Giovanni Michelotti for Bertone |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | |
Layout | F/R |
Platform | Custom |
Powertrain | |
Engine | Chrysler Firepower V8 |
Transmission |
|
Chronology | |
Predecessor | Cunningham C-2R |
Successor | Cunningham C-4R |
The Cunningham C-3 is a Grand tourer, designed and built by the B. S. Cunningham Company beginning in 1952. [1] Intended primarily as a road car, enough C3 were meant to be built to homologate Briggs Cunningham's racing cars, making them eligible to race at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. [2]
To have his namesake cars homologated as a manufacturer for Le Mans, Cunningham needed to build 25 examples of the C-3. [3] [4] [5] [6]
Two pre-production cars similar in appearance to the C-2Rs were built at the company's West Palm Beach location; a roadster with chassis number 5205, and a coupe with chassis number 5206X. A third chassis, number 5206, was sent to the workshops of carrozzeria Vignale in Turin, Italy, where it received a new coupe body styled by designer Giovanni Michelotti, then working at Vignale. [5] [7] [8] [9] The factory considered chassis 5026 the official prototype, and subsequent cars received the Michelotti body style. [10] [11]
Twenty-seven C-3s were built. One reference reports eighteen coupes and nine convertibles. [3] Others report twenty coupes and five convertibles with bodies by Vignale, plus the two cars bodied at the West Palm Beach factory. [12] [7] While early factory pricing was US$8,000 (US$90,227 in 2021 dollars) for a Sports Convertible, and US$9,000 (US$101,506) for a Coupe, the cost of a C-3 had risen to US$15,000 (US$169,176) by 1951. [7]
The New York Museum of Modern Art named the C-3 Continental Coupé one of the "10 Best Contemporary Automobiles". [13] [3] [14]
When production of the C-3 ended, fourteen chassis in various states of completion remained. In 1955 during a disbursement of parts by Hilltop Trailer Sales, Chassis #5235 was purchased by Jack Shakespeare of Indiana. In 1957 subsequent owner John Hanley of Wisconsin commissioned a custom body designed by someone from Brooks Stevens Design Associates, which was fabricated by Bob Jones of Indianapolis. [15] [16]
The engine in the C-3 is the 331 cu in (5,424 cc) Chrysler FirePower V8 that Cunningham had first used in the C-2Rs, but now with a new intake manifold and four Zenith single-barrel carburetors, and a dual exhaust system. This raised power to 220 hp (164.1 kW) from the factory version's 180 hp (134.2 kW). [7]
The majority of cars received one of two different transmissions offered; the first four cars had a three-speed manual from Cadillac, while subsequent cars used Chrysler's Presto-Matic semi-automatic fluid-coupled two-speed with electric overdrive, for an effective selection of four forward ratios. [17] [18] [16] An exception was chassis 5223, which received a Chrysler PowerFlite transmission. [16]
The C-3's large-diameter tube chassis was similar to that of the earlier C-2R, but the racing car's De Dion tube rear suspension was replaced by a coil-sprung live axle located by an upper and lower trailing arm on each side. [19]
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