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Silhouette (show rod)

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Silhouette
Overview
ManufacturerBill Cushenbery
Production1962
DesignerDon Varner
Body and chassis
ClassShow car
Body style2-seat Bubble top
LayoutFR layout
Platform1956 Buick
Doors1 (hinged canopy)
Powertrain
Engine

Silhouette was an award-winning show car built by Bill Cushenbery in 1962. It debuted at the 1963 Oakland Roadster Show.[1]

History

Silhouette was designed in collaboration with artist Don Varner.[2] Its all-original body made it Cushenbery's first full show car, rather than custom car.

Silhouette debuted at the 1963 Oakland Roadster Show and earned Cushenbery his first Master Builder Award.[1] It won first class in the "Tournament of Frame" at the show, which prize included a trip to Paris, France for Cushenbery and his wife.[3][4] Later the car toured as part of Ford's Custom Car Caravan.[5]

Silhouette was mistakenly sold to a bodyshop in North Hollywood, then later bought by a friend of Cushenbery's who planned to restore it. The partially disassembled car was on a trailer when the car and trailer together were stolen.[6][7]

In 2013 it was reported that the bubble top and some mechanical parts had been found, but the engine and the rest of the body remained missing.[8]

Features

Silhouette was built on a shortened 1956 Buick chassis. Cushenbery hand-hammered the body out of 20-gauge steel. In the style of some other show rods of the time, Cushenbery added a bubble canopy roof — front-hinged and supplied by Acry Plastics in this case.[9][10] The body was candy-painted with a mixture of black, red, and gold.[1]

Silhouette made extensive use of electric controls on the dash or hidden in the car's trim for things like raising and lowering the bubble top, opening the hood and trunk, starting the engine, turning on and off the lights, and running the blower fans.[11]

The tires were mounted on reversed Cadillac wheels.[1]

The car was originally powered by a Buick Nailhead V8 that was later fitted with Hilborn fuel injection.

By the time the car appeared in Ford's Custom Car Caravan, the Buick engine had been swapped out for a 427 cu in (7.0 L) Ford FE engine.[3][11][5]

Models and media

Silhouette appeared in the 1965 movie "Beach Ball".[3][12]

It was also in the opening and closing sequences of the 1968 television special "Wonderful World of Wheels", driven by narrator Lloyd Bridges.[13][14]

A 1/25 scale model of the car was issued, then revised and reissued twice more, by AMT.[15]

A 1/64 scale model of Silhouette was one of the original "Sweet 16" Hot Wheels cars issued.[16] A model of the car was also manufactured in 1/43 scale by Mebetoys, and sold in the US as part of their "Gran Toros" line, and in Italy as part of their "Serie Sputafuoco", or "Spitfire series".[17] Mebetoys was bought by Mattel in 1969.

Silhouette was mentioned in a magazine article written by Tom Wolfe titled "The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby".[18]

  • Rod & Custom, January 1963
  • Hot Rod magazine, May 1963
  • Car Craft, August 1963 — ROD SPECIAL, A Profile of Bill Cushenbery
  • Popular Customs, January 1966
  • Hot Rod Deluxe, May 2009 — 15th Annual Oakland Roadster Show, 1963

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Mauldin (1998), p. 83.
  2. ^ Wessner, Jerry (11 July 2005). "Tha California Star". Hot Rod.
  3. ^ a b c Kvipt, Sondre (29 December 2019). "Bill Cushenbery's Silhouette". Kustomrama.
  4. ^ Shelton, Chris (16 April 2015). "The Kings of the Late Custom-Car Golden Age". Hot Rod.
  5. ^ a b Gustavson, Mark S. "The Phantom Past". The Predicta Project.
  6. ^ Weesner, Jerry (May 1997). "A conversation with Bill Cushenbery and Friends". Custom Rodder. pp. 44–48.
  7. ^ Mauldin (1998), p. 88.
  8. ^ "Where is the Bill Cushenbery Silhouette?". Jalopy Journal. 5 July 2013.
  9. ^ Mauldin (1998), p. 83–84, 87.
  10. ^ Rothermel, Rich (April 2000). "Dean Jeffries: Runnin' Flat Out Since 1951". Rod & Custom. pp. 67, 71.
  11. ^ a b Lawlor, John (January 1966). "A Top Customizer Discusses His Climb up the Ladder to Customizing Success". Popular Customs.
  12. ^ "Beach Ball, Movie, 1965". IMCDB.
  13. ^ Mauldin (1998), p. 87.
  14. ^ "World of Wheels - Lloyd Bridges". Jalopy Journal.
  15. ^ Ukrop, Joey (11 September 2015). "The Silhouette in Three Forms". Jalopy Journal.
  16. ^ MacKenzie, Angus (19 May 2020). "The Real-Life Crazy Cars That Inspired the Original Hot Wheels". Motor Trend.
  17. ^ "Hot Wheels Mebetoys Silhouette Sputafuoco Heisse Räder 6616, loose 1967". Worthpoint. 26 March 2013.
  18. ^ DeWitt (2002), p. 49.

References

  • Mauldin, Calvin (December 1998). "Bill Cushenbery: Custom Creations for the Future". Rod & Custom. pp. 83–89.
  • DeWitt, John F. (1 February 2002). Cool Cars, High Art: The Rise of Kustom Kulture. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1578064021.