First Corvettes Being Built - 1953

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  • Опубліковано 6 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 314

  • @thomasingersoll2574
    @thomasingersoll2574 7 років тому +48

    My father worked on those very first Corvettes.... in Flint Michigan... he told me some stories about THAT... like how they fixed water leaks that flooded the floorboards ...a tube of caulking did the trick...HAHAHA!!!... the first ones weren't very good cars and that's a FACT....but they became GREAT CARS eventually... we had several over the years including a Silver 1963 split-winow coupe and a 1967 427 4-speed....as company cars!!! I feel privileged to have been around at that time......

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  7 років тому +6

      Thanks for sharing your story.

    • @epasternak4206
      @epasternak4206 6 років тому +7

      Back when GM was the best automotive company on Earth , Corvette was the reason I wanted to work at General Motors

    • @felixmadison5736
      @felixmadison5736 11 місяців тому +2

      You WERE privileged! I was around then too, but only 4 years of age in 1953. I too would become a Corvette lover and model builder a few years after these first 'Vettes were built. A high school friend of mine purchased a brand new Corvette convertible right after he graduated in 1966. He ordered it with in our school colors: maroon paint job, with white interior. He drove it for about a year and has a 'slight' automobile accident. It was a total loss because of it being fiberglass.

    • @GeorgeMoynier
      @GeorgeMoynier 5 місяців тому +1

      Bummer!!!

    • @markbelanger7394
      @markbelanger7394 3 місяці тому

      Bullshit

  • @4bmain1969427
    @4bmain1969427 10 років тому +16

    Thank you, Corvette Workers, for giving me so many years of my dream car in High School, to the reality after I graduated...

  • @rhm35z
    @rhm35z 4 роки тому +8

    I never realized how labor intensive the production of the Corvette was. It makes me appreciate even more the manufacture of that little icon . For us that lived in the fifties.....we were really blessed.

    • @jasmith1867
      @jasmith1867 6 місяців тому +2

      Young people today cannot be told how wonderful it was in the US in the 50s-60s. They have no concept of our freedoms and carefree lives.

  • @GarySNortonPhD
    @GarySNortonPhD 8 років тому +19

    Great video. The man on the right with blond hair is John Wright. He was active in the hot rod scene in Lansing, Michigan. He died in a diving accident, diving for wreckage in the Straits of Mackinaw, Michigan. I oned a 1963 two top Corvette, in which I raced in many venues until 1972.

  • @adrianangelo351
    @adrianangelo351 10 років тому +64

    Some of this looks like film my father took at the GM Tech center. The guys in white worked in Part Fab… part of the Engineering staff. Parts for the 1st 300 were made at the Tech Center and assembled (I was told) in Flint. The guys in blue look like they were part of the final assembly. I do recognize one of the workers in white as being a Parts Fab employee. My dasd is 99 and I believe the last surviving person to have worked on the very 1st 3 corvettes before they went into production.

    • @adrianangelo351
      @adrianangelo351 9 років тому +17

      The first 300 body parts were made at Parts Fabrication, GM Tech Center in Warren Mi. My dads workers made them. He invented the process to make multiple parts out of a mold. This is my dads film.

    • @davidkendall3887
      @davidkendall3887 5 років тому

      @@adrianangelo351 when it didn't open until May, 1956?

    • @BobbyTucker
      @BobbyTucker 5 років тому +3

      I grew up in Flint, Michigan and I'm asked a lot about the first Corvettes, I didn't work for GM until September 1967, so I can't tell them much of anything other than they were built here. BTW, We built Chevelles and Monte Carlos when I worked there.

    • @BobbyTucker
      @BobbyTucker 5 років тому +1

      @@adrianangelo351
      Some of those bodies were built at the GM Tech center at the old place on Chevrolet and Fifth Avenue, in Flint.

    • @bengus8148
      @bengus8148 5 років тому

      @GRANT HART Yep...they were subbed out to an outside Company for a certain time as GM has zero knowledge of fiberglass workings.

  • @glenncanale9225
    @glenncanale9225 11 років тому +12

    Thanks, a great piece of Corvette history.

  • @petervitti9
    @petervitti9 4 роки тому +5

    Incredible! How they were built by hand!

    • @243wayne1
      @243wayne1 6 місяців тому

      Just like today...

  • @christopherjones8025
    @christopherjones8025 2 роки тому +1

    Man a lot of work went into building one of these ! So much work and little pieces. Currently neighbor has a 53 helping him work on . Might be a 10 year project.

  • @jimrowe4177
    @jimrowe4177 6 років тому +3

    Amazing footage. These fellows were true pioneers.

  • @s1vrbck_fitness
    @s1vrbck_fitness 10 років тому +1

    Great video! I just bought my first Corvette, a 2015 C7 Z51 3LT. Love learning the history of these amazing cars.

  • @RivetGardener
    @RivetGardener 3 роки тому +1

    Beautiful and so stylish modern looking cars. What a huge jump in 13 years from the 1940 pre-war vehicles. Wow, I'd like to see those huge tools that molded those parts.

  • @Proteusbound
    @Proteusbound 9 років тому +78

    Fiberglass, resin, grinding, and paint work, without gloves, safety glasses, or respirators.
    These men are my heroes.
    Of course they're all dead from lung cancer, but they're heroes.

    • @DANNY40379
      @DANNY40379 9 років тому +9

      +Proteusbound yeah saw that too, kinda like those troops watching an atom bomb from a 'safe' distance

    • @jerrybushman
      @jerrybushman 6 років тому +4

      Exactly how I repaired fiberglass in the 80s. Luckily is started using gloves, goggles, and respirators in the 90s or I'd be dead now too. The chopper gun eliminated like 8 jobs per body build

    • @stonerpage3100
      @stonerpage3100 6 років тому +6

      ...lol... Back then it was so easy to expose your body to petroleum based products because studies weren't thorough enough, nor were they even obeyed. The caution label on the contact cement I used to spray in the seventies and eighties isn't just stamped on the side of the can, NOW, you also get a ten page detailed break down of all the poisons and what they do to you when exposed. I never wore gloves when doing the solvents. NOW? I can't even handle the shit on my skin or the fumes. It's a wonder I don't have cancer. The glass work is even more dangerous but also way funner to fab with. These old school techniques were a lot more time in. THIS was the era of hand made goods. We'll never see this again.

    • @jerrybushman
      @jerrybushman 6 років тому +4

      @@stonerpage3100 In the early 80s, I relined asbestos brake shoes and repaired fiberglass with no gloves or masks. In the 70s I welded galvanized tubing with no mask. No one cared

    • @stonerpage3100
      @stonerpage3100 6 років тому +4

      @@jerrybushman I remember loving the scent of body filler and base coat and all the different solvents and resin does smell cool while it's drying....hee hee...we're all gonna die of something it might as well be this...lol...

  • @robertcates4066
    @robertcates4066 7 років тому +2

    This is an awesome video, I am one of millions that think that the Corvette is the only way. Have all kinds of literature on the Vette, never saw anything like this. Keep them coming, if you can.

  • @carfixer52
    @carfixer52 3 роки тому +3

    My Dad worked for MFG in Ashtabula Ohio where he Hand layed up the first Corvette Body

  • @CEOkiller
    @CEOkiller 10 років тому +1

    My grandfather worked for GM from 1934-1966; he was in Tool & Die at Flint, MI. He did not work on the Corvette, but remembers watching them be built.

  • @My2ndtimearound
    @My2ndtimearound 6 місяців тому +1

    I wonder how many of those were junked at the factory deemed to be unsatisfactory.
    Very labor intensive builds.
    A lot of assemblers wore no masks or gloves.
    I’m amazed by this film.

  • @dannz2603
    @dannz2603 8 років тому +3

    Thanks, this is really interesting. At first I wondered what happened to the sound then of course I realized that this was infact a home movie and as you also said, it is rare footage.
    Strange to see the workers laying up the fiberglass without wearing gloves.
    Thanks again for uploading this.

  • @ewjxn
    @ewjxn 5 років тому

    Great film. This was shot in 1954. The plant was in St Louis then. Flint never had more then 5 cars on the lot and the Truck repair building they used for assembly was much smaller. At the end you see 2 54s with tan tops outside when the cars are driven out. 53s all had black canvas tops. Some 54s reportedly had black tops too (very few early cars)

  • @rickhalverson2014
    @rickhalverson2014 7 років тому +2

    Makes me want one even more.

  • @bigstuff52
    @bigstuff52 6 років тому +2

    King Rose..Thanks for posting this...These vettes were built at the what is now the Flint Truck Plant...They had a building on the north side of the plant that later became an assembly engineering center...At least that's what my dad told me..He worked for GM here in Flint for 36 years and I worked for GM at the Grand Blanc Plant for 30 years.A lot of people talk about the guys not wearing respirators,gloves etc,etc..In a way I got to chuckle because before the govt started jumping on GM about air quality,you could drive by the truck plant where the vettes were originally made and smell the lacquer from the paint shop 24 hours a day...Think about the neighborhoods that butted right up next to this plant and there is one neighborhood that had houses for the GM workers that came to Flint in the 50s..Actually it was probably safer in the building with the ventilators running than outside in the neighborhood...Today you can drive by the plant while they're working and you can't smell a thing...I never knock govt regulations..thanks again....subbed and liked...

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  6 років тому

      Thanks for watching and sharing your memories. I'm not sure if this wasn't a prototype. One of the GM engineers gave it to me and my foggy brain seems to remember that this was done at the Tech Center prior to manufacturing. I could be wrong.

    • @BobbyTucker
      @BobbyTucker 5 років тому

      I worked at the truck plant for three years til I quit and moved out of state for 35 years. That truck plant you mentioned is on Van Slyke Rd.

  • @connorthe1st
    @connorthe1st 7 років тому +1

    I've always loved the 1953 Corvette. Very sharp.

  • @ozzstars_cars
    @ozzstars_cars 8 років тому

    Enjoyed the footage and thanks for sharing it. Things are a lot different today when I toured the Bowling Green Assembly Plant this past summer. If these first generation guys could see all the modern computers and robots that do the grunt work today there heads would have exploded!

  • @SpockvsMcCoy
    @SpockvsMcCoy 5 років тому +1

    Fascinating footage. In the early days of the Corvette, General Motors must have lost a lot of money per sold unit due to very high labor input per vehicle. Sales of the car picked up considerably around the 1958-1959 era which is probably when the production process became more automated. Those white "ice cream" suits were commonly worn by working class men in that era...as long as they had minimal exposure to dirt, grease, oil, etc. My grandpa retired in 1971... I remember him wearing his old white work clothes when he painted around the house.

  • @ttiwkram
    @ttiwkram 9 років тому +3

    That's a hoot when the guy gives it a kick at 19:52. you can just imagine "craaaack!"

  • @carsbyjeff
    @carsbyjeff 9 років тому +1

    Incredible, thanks for sharing!!!

  • @scdevon
    @scdevon 9 років тому +6

    Wow. So much labor.
    I wonder if the resins and glues have held up for 62+ years on any of these original cars. This was really experimental stuff in 1953,

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  9 років тому +2

      scdevon They were clearly figuring it out as they went along.

    • @scootergeorge7089
      @scootergeorge7089 9 років тому

      Fiberglass predates WWII.
      www.classicglasspars.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=77:the-history-of-fiberglass&catid=117&Itemid=439

    • @carloswentmissing
      @carloswentmissing 9 років тому +2

      scdevon my friend has a 1954 Corvette and it has held up better than he has..The glue joints are not to be seen in the finish. The paint is a little worse for wear..But all in all a nice car.

  • @connorthe1st
    @connorthe1st 7 років тому

    What an accomplishment. GREAT job.

  • @anthonyforti
    @anthonyforti 10 років тому +5

    I've heard there were maybe 15 Corvettes in the back parking lot at one time at the plant finished and ready to be picked up. With all the work involved I can see them only building two a day. They moved the plant from Flint to St. Louis, Missouri in '54 and they produced 3640 that year. In 1955 they only built 700 cars.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому +1

      YUP and Ford "killed" them with the "mini" Bird!

  • @dhy5342
    @dhy5342 9 років тому +28

    No wonder they only made 300. It took all day just to do one.

  • @KingRoseArchives
    @KingRoseArchives  11 років тому +3

    Thanks for watching. I think it's amazing seeing the origins of the Corvette. We get to witness the creation. I discovered this footage when I was researching the series, Automobiles, I produced in 1995. It's the series that launched the History Channel and in fact, my show about the Corvette was the first show on the History Channel. But I only used a short clip from this in that show. I've wanted to find a way to share it in its entirety ever since.

    • @jhsfiftyonefifty4060
      @jhsfiftyonefifty4060 7 років тому

      That was a great show. I remember it. Thanks for doing it. They were all very well done. That is probably the first time I saw this footage.

  • @stevenhall9009
    @stevenhall9009 Рік тому +1

    The title says.... The first Corvettes being built 1953. As they lay fiberglass to construct the body, once constructed it's tail light section is of a 1956 Corvette?

  • @Mark-um7ey
    @Mark-um7ey 6 місяців тому +1

    Crazy watching the early production videos. Workers safety was secondary at best. Workers look like they were dressed as a good humor ice cream vendor 😂

  • @critchley3819
    @critchley3819 11 років тому +1

    This is amazing, this has made me wonder if they still do it the same way..

  • @fladrummer1
    @fladrummer1 8 років тому +2

    great vid thanks for posting

  • @johnjaco5544
    @johnjaco5544 3 роки тому

    Excellent video thanks

  • @sjelliott1961
    @sjelliott1961 11 років тому

    Awesome footage,,thanks for sharing!

  • @G8GTJav
    @G8GTJav 11 років тому +44

    Wow, nobody was using respirators or gloves. Crazy.

    • @thelegend3798
      @thelegend3798 5 років тому +3

      Real men don't exist anymore.

    • @freebird7284
      @freebird7284 4 роки тому

      it wasn't about YOU it was about the job.

    • @ZCAR355
      @ZCAR355 4 роки тому

      Yes, and asbestos was the best thing since sliced bread.

    • @busmirror
      @busmirror 3 роки тому +1

      It wasn't until the early 70s that I saw my first paint can with any warning other than, 'DO NOT TAKE INTERNALLY', and that can's entire skull & crossbones label was dedicated to reviving someone if they were overcome while using. It was DUPONT'S IMRON supplied by UPS that we applied on their brown trucks.

  • @LuisLopez-yr8ri
    @LuisLopez-yr8ri 8 років тому +2

    thanks for the video is really cool I'm working on this cars 53-54 is really good lot fabric glass and work !!!

  • @billrichter8871
    @billrichter8871 Рік тому

    Very skilled workers!

  • @my31and37
    @my31and37 10 років тому +4

    Great to see this old footage, very cool to see them hand laying the cloth...surprised to painting with no respirators though..even in the 50s...

  • @georgeholbein5830
    @georgeholbein5830 3 роки тому +1

    And the sound track....Stellar, just like GM 👍

    • @jasmith1867
      @jasmith1867 6 місяців тому

      Was that the sound of an old projector?

  • @willsco76
    @willsco76 10 років тому +38

    It's funny to see the workers dressed like the ice cream man right down to the hats.

  • @armandoflores5297
    @armandoflores5297 9 років тому +2

    read in a trade mag in the late 90s that the average life span of the bodyman right up to the late 70s was around 39yrs old. can't tell how reliable this publication was at time, sure as fuck served as food for thought.

  • @patrickcouch3956
    @patrickcouch3956 10 років тому +17

    Wow. So glad that this footage exists for future generations to see how cars were 'hand-built' in the USA in the '50's. Interesting..... I see a lot of things in the workplace going on here though that OSHA would have a stroke over. Doesn't seem like the safest place to work.

    • @pencilneck22
      @pencilneck22 10 років тому +2

      The thing that amazes me is how much time consuming hand work it took to put together the bodies! You could have built 6 or 7 steel '53 Chev passenger car bodies in the time it took to make one Corvette body. I guess one saving grace is that the mechanical bits (frame, brakes, suspension drive train, etc.) back then were '53 Chev passenger car sourced which made them pretty inexpensive and I guess that offset the high cost of the body build.

    • @eddiedawkins5360
      @eddiedawkins5360 6 років тому

      OSHA would have a field day

    • @BobbyTucker
      @BobbyTucker 5 років тому

      I see they weren't using any breathing apparatus either, that had to be good for the lungs.

    • @jimmieroan9881
      @jimmieroan9881 5 років тому

      @@pencilneck22 your comment is the first ive seen in years indicating chassis parts, im an old fart and like most teenagers back in those day just consumed magazines and any article about the automotive, i remember clearly that the first corvette's used the passenger car frame shortened, when i repeat this in todays world im called an idiot, and after spending not just hours but days researching that very subject i can't find one word that would verify it. now later in life i was involved in the restoration of classics etc using parts books, interchange manuals, lots of the old motors books and masters catalogs, long before the internet, i became the guy to call when you needed to find a part, so that did show me at least that the parts were used for years, tie rod ends, bearings, control arms etc, most pass car and corvette parts were the same i believe at least till the 63 came out.

    • @Oscarphone
      @Oscarphone 5 років тому

      @@jimmieroan9881- Pencilneck22 is my old account. Rather than try and look up the password I'll use this account. I'm a little on the seasoned side myself and spent the best part of 20 years (from the early 60s) selling used parts from my old man's yard and referencing (and digesting) Hollander Interchange Manuals. The early Corvettes were passenger car frames no matter what anybody may tell you. And the running gear including the brake drums and control arms, etc. were too. Not sure on the shortening but it would have been at the rear frame horns if done as the overhang on the Corvette is less than the passenger car. As far as I know the Blur Flame six they used was the passenger car version found in any Chev but with multiple carbs and some dress-up bits and in 53 they used a Powerglide trans and no manual was offered. Smells real "developmental" to me and GM could have lessened the cost considerably using existing car bits util they were sure it would be a hot seller. I'm not 100% on this part but I'm fairly sure, until the independent rear was used GM used the same 53 Chev passenger car frame and suspension parts. If not, they used stuff that sure looked a lot like it.

  • @busmirror
    @busmirror 3 роки тому

    Assembled in what had been the new car final check area until a dedicated plant was constructed. North American Rockwell (The aircraft Co.) was in charge of lamination, as seen here. Note the use of aircraft CLECOS during assembly.

  • @Mark-um7ey
    @Mark-um7ey 6 місяців тому +1

    I will itch for a month just watching this video lol

  • @neilwoji
    @neilwoji 10 років тому +2

    Unfortunately that is NOT a Flint Michigan GM plant. That is the Molded Fiberglass plant in Ashtabula, Ohio. All Corvette bodies are built at MFG. YES you read that correctly...all the bodies are built there....and if it was not for Robert Morrison, founder of MFG, there may not have been a Corvette car at all. A very interesting account of how the Corvette became a fiberglass car body is retold at www.moldedfiberglass.com/about-us/corvette-story

    • @19WhatUp98
      @19WhatUp98 Рік тому

      Very true. My great Uncle was Robert Morrison and I visited Ashtabula every summer as a kid and played golf on Uncle Bob's golf course with my Grandpa. Great memories.

    • @garyc7868
      @garyc7868 24 дні тому

      Not true, the tools, glass forms and perhaps a few tryouts were built in Ohio . The initial body parts were laid in Warren Michigan, exactly as stated. The filming of the parts layup was made by a Parts Fabrication worker at Parts Fabrication. I worked at Parts Fab for 35 years as as a Metal Model Maker as did three of my father’s brothers. Actually worked with a few of the fellows in the film. In fact a couple of the name tags are readable. The hats they wore were functional as they kept splashed polyester resin from getting in your hair. Many, if not of those guys were still alive and kicking well into their 70s . Of my three uncles, one made it to 91, the other two, both heavy smokers into their late 70s. Neither died from lung related issues.
      But the initial production body parts were not made in Ohio. Parts Fabrication did that. The body parts were assembled in Flint.

  • @highwaystar8310
    @highwaystar8310 10 років тому +15

    God Bless those fiberglass tecs. I hope they did not get any illnesses from working with those products without any safety protection, no gloves, no respirators, safety goggles etc.

  • @tomashton1781
    @tomashton1781 6 років тому +1

    nice hats.

  • @DonnyDope02
    @DonnyDope02 2 роки тому

    Amazing how they already had fiberglass perfected.

  • @richardphilpott1225
    @richardphilpott1225 Рік тому +1

    back in them days OSHA stood for Old School Hells Angels

  • @gabinadina
    @gabinadina 9 років тому +2

    Had no idea these cars were hand built. Fascinating video, but it could really use some background music.

  • @parnellitube
    @parnellitube 10 років тому +5

    Wow, even the floor pan is fiberglass. I never knew that.

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 4 роки тому

      Why wouldn't it be?

    • @washingtonpereiraneto6979
      @washingtonpereiraneto6979 3 місяці тому +1

      A Fiber Glass era muito comum nos carros especiais fabricados no Brasil Puma ,SM Santa Matilde, Miura , etc...

  • @DANTHETUBEMAN
    @DANTHETUBEMAN 6 років тому +5

    those molds would be worth a lot of they could still lay up parts out o them. a carbon fiber 53 would be nice.

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad 4 роки тому +1

      probably still in a landfill somewhere, because out of sunlight they will be there forever.

  • @jeffwisener1378
    @jeffwisener1378 5 років тому +1

    Apparently many commenting here do not realize surfboards are still hand shaped or finished by hand, glassed by hand using either polyester resin or epoxy and not much has changed since these videos.

    • @r.o5865
      @r.o5865 4 роки тому

      That's cuz nobody gives a shit about surfboards.

  • @ronslaughterandalice1018
    @ronslaughterandalice1018 9 років тому

    WOW,,,, frame 20:37 you can see some sitting in the background. I was thinking that was the prototype. so 300 really was a lot of man hours for the first year and that's not counting the R&D and engineering hours. Throw in the sub's and materials I'm thinking they were rolling the dice at that time. Glad they won.

  • @donwhite3820
    @donwhite3820 5 років тому

    And the rest is HISTORY !!!!

  • @elkameno1959
    @elkameno1959 11 років тому +2

    I'm guessing this is a secret factory - far away from the safety inspectors. Great to see this

    • @garyc7868
      @garyc7868 24 дні тому

      1953 ,(NOT 1954) Warren Michigan, now the GM Technical Center

  • @duncanvince23
    @duncanvince23 11 років тому

    The American Dream Machine, Is Brought To Life.

  • @richardgoldman8761
    @richardgoldman8761 6 років тому

    @17:30 wicked!
    Grinding fiberglass!

  • @milfordcivic6755
    @milfordcivic6755 9 років тому +6

    No gloves, no respirators, no safety glasses, no ppe whatsoever. I wonder how many of these workers died of cancer.

  • @phillipanderson2607
    @phillipanderson2607 5 місяців тому +1

    To think about all that fiberglass they are breathing in their lungs and not wearing protective gloves for their hands. The chemicals too on their skin. They come a long way on safety now. I guess they could tolerate fiberglass in their skin. They were hard working people back then. Beautiful cars .

  • @RobertPlattBell
    @RobertPlattBell 10 років тому

    These were assembled at my school - General Motors Institute, in Flint, MI (so my professors told me). It was not a school building at the time, of course. They were basically all hand-built. Sorry there is no sound, it would be interesting to hear.

  • @JimmyMakingitwork
    @JimmyMakingitwork 3 роки тому

    That guy worked how many years making fiberglass parts with no gloves on.
    Cool video.

  • @SuperChuckRaney
    @SuperChuckRaney 11 років тому +1

    anyone notice he is spraying a dark dark blue or Black at 19:00? then follows spraying a Polo white? this is definately in the spray booth and NOT the mold relase as in the early part. Primer maybe?
    a 1953 in Black or Dark blue would be Ground Breaking.
    this is film from a variety ? of times? not all 1953? the body Drop shows a 54 Hubcap >?

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  10 років тому

      The engineer who gave me the film shot it and he may have shot it over a period of more than one year. He wasn't really very clear. Thank you for helping us determine what and when.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому

      Black or Dark blue would show EVERY "ripple" in those fiberglass panels! Wouldn't be pretty!

  • @rambojambone4586
    @rambojambone4586 2 роки тому

    Did they stop scratching from the fiberglass yet?

  • @SixShooting
    @SixShooting Рік тому

    Long Live Corvette! 🇺🇸

  • @sonny12681
    @sonny12681 4 роки тому

    This is why the first corvette is worth a lot of money.

  • @adrianangelo351
    @adrianangelo351 9 років тому

    Not sure if the two men at the start of the film are Ed Cole and Octive (?). The very 1st Fiberglass car was a 1952 Chevy. They used the body parts to make molds then replaced thee metal parts with fiberglass. I understand they finished in the middle of the night then took it for a spin. later ran it at the proving grounds, rolled it and found not too much damage. Decided to make a show Corvette. Once Harley Earl bragged (at a car show) it would be a production car they had to figure out a way to make multiple parts.

  • @plastic1492
    @plastic1492 6 років тому +1

    Would love to see them build the c2 models , can't see the production per hour being very high .

  • @ikegee7420
    @ikegee7420 9 років тому +1

    still a good number on the survival of the first vettes

  • @connorthe1st
    @connorthe1st 7 років тому +1

    It's totally unbelievable how many man hours went into that first car. It should
    have cost a lot more even back then.

  • @chemicalspore
    @chemicalspore 5 років тому

    The First Corvette looked like a pain in the ass

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому

      Driving one with that "HO" Blue Flame 6 hooked to a 2-speed "slush box" would be the REAL pain in the ass during a "stoplight Grand Prix"!

  • @JCKustom13
    @JCKustom13 11 років тому +1

    Where did you find this footage? This is amazing!
    Who is the idiot that gave this a thumbs down?!?!

  • @metaltiger7297
    @metaltiger7297 9 років тому +6

    Any color you want - as long as it's white.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому

      The white color tends to "hide" the all the imperfections of the fiberglass. Black is the WORST. This is the reason the Fiero was not available in black until GM refined the SMC process making for smoother body panels.

    • @mikehileman9476
      @mikehileman9476 4 роки тому

      And you coukd get any engine option as long as it was a Blue Flame Six...

  • @markcrawford8876
    @markcrawford8876 5 років тому

    I think it would be safe to say, not all of these cars were created equal!

  • @spartygw
    @spartygw 11 років тому +1

    Respirators are for wimps.
    Great stuff! Thanks for posting.

  • @kmsupercars
    @kmsupercars 4 роки тому

    They were very labor intensive to build.

  • @williamcharles9480
    @williamcharles9480 8 років тому +4

    Those guys had to have been hand picked first class body men. Working production with a virtually new process and product. I'm wondering if these guys were company supervisors building these first units? The reason I question this is it seems that the UAW would have stepped in on the personal protection part of these builds if union workers were doing this work without even gloves for protection.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому

      This WAS 1953 (Dark Ages). These guys were GLAD to have good paying jobs. The health risks took "a back seat" to a fat paycheck! Some of these videos even show workers smoking while putting cars together!

  • @carlosg1165
    @carlosg1165 4 роки тому

    A lot of work for sure

  • @captlazer5509
    @captlazer5509 3 роки тому

    The men shown here were high on fumes making it. Ventalation was probably a couple of large fans and an open bay door.

  • @josephsolis3018
    @josephsolis3018 8 років тому +2

    Mike Hammer drove one in the Mickey Spillane movie, based on the book, KISS ME DEADLY! Mike Hammer drove the best sport cars and always had the best looking gals around him.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому

      Definitely 2 thumbs up for the Gals, the car not so much...

  • @steventica5687
    @steventica5687 3 роки тому

    I wonder if that fiberglass body would survive in a crash or if the whole body would just splinter into pieces.

  • @waynegillette9649
    @waynegillette9649 9 років тому +2

    just watching the unprotected activities with fiberglass and chemicales make me itch!!

  • @KevinJoyceNYluxuryhomes
    @KevinJoyceNYluxuryhomes 9 років тому +1

    Their hands were not itching after bear handing fiberglass?

    • @KevinJoyceNYluxuryhomes
      @KevinJoyceNYluxuryhomes 9 років тому

      That almost sounds unbelievable. Have you tried it?

    • @KevinJoyceNYluxuryhomes
      @KevinJoyceNYluxuryhomes 9 років тому

      Wow, I touched fiberglass insulation once with bare hands and the itch was unbearable. I still think I will wear gloves. lol

  • @SuperChuckRaney
    @SuperChuckRaney 11 років тому +1

    Hey King Rose there is a guy Micheal Brown ? doing a series on Corvettes now, you might make a deal on some footage

    • @SuperChuckRaney
      @SuperChuckRaney 11 років тому

      It is on Velocity Channel

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  10 років тому

      I should contact him.

    • @SuperChuckRaney
      @SuperChuckRaney 10 років тому

      yes. Micheal filmed a segment at my bosses house > of his Corvettes. Micheal also has a ton of Corvettes of his own.

  • @richfalcione9435
    @richfalcione9435 5 років тому

    FYI, the early Corvette bodies were made by a company called Molded Fiber Glass in my hometown of Ashtabula OH. In fact, an early Corvette was presented to them on the 50th anniversary and is in their showroom.

  • @VitoBertaudeau
    @VitoBertaudeau 8 років тому

    gracias y compartido

  • @thebrisbanebennetts
    @thebrisbanebennetts 8 років тому +2

    Seriously, where do you find these clips?
    They are great.
    Regards
    Tim.

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  8 років тому +4

      This is what I did professionally for several years. I produced automotive history programming for numerous outlets and spent a good portion of my time digging up archive films. I also hired a researcher in Europe to do the same thing over there. I have a small portion of what I discovered and am trying to work my way through this, digitize it and put it on UA-cam to share with people. I find it fascinating to see the raw material as it looked when it was made without any other content wrapped around it.

    • @thebrisbanebennetts
      @thebrisbanebennetts 8 років тому +2

      Well I for one am very glad you are doing this. Any information re the processes and procedures used to manufacture these and other cars help immensely when completing restorations. As previously mentioned, Thanks so much for sharing.

    • @wilkesjournal
      @wilkesjournal 7 років тому

      Agree and thank you. There are plenty of other people who can chop it up, add cheesy background music and inaccurate narration to it later. I very much appreciate seeing it here first in the raw, unedited format. Thanks.

    • @BobbyTucker
      @BobbyTucker 5 років тому

      @@KingRoseArchives
      A little suggestion? Maybe you should find a few of the older guys who worked for GM back then and interview them before they all die off. BTW, I just subbed too.

    • @richardsmith3726
      @richardsmith3726 4 роки тому

      King Rose Archives 5

  • @joeprete7424
    @joeprete7424 6 років тому +1

    Fiberglass wasn't itchy back then?

  • @mww-vy2ej
    @mww-vy2ej 8 років тому +3

    and probably cleaned their hands with thinners to get the resin off.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 років тому

      Yeah, I hear that acetone is REAL GOOD hand cleaner..

  • @rlu1956
    @rlu1956 Рік тому

    What an era, eye ball gauging and "looks good" quality checks....WAIT!
    Hard to believe they sold any...at times.
    C-8 today....so well engineered.

  • @1940limited
    @1940limited 10 років тому

    Flint was Buick City, GM's oldest and largest plant at the time. Were the Corvettes built there?

  • @ericcarbonell9927
    @ericcarbonell9927 10 років тому +1

    Is that fiberglass they are laying? Wow. I imagine these were not the usual clothes they wore- they would be covered in paint from head to toe. No wonder they only built 300 that year. What an work-intensive project!

    • @KingRoseArchives
      @KingRoseArchives  10 років тому

      That's fiberglass. It was an ongoing experiment.

    • @ericcarbonell9927
      @ericcarbonell9927 10 років тому

      Really amazing to see how a car is built. Great footage.

  • @72mustangfb
    @72mustangfb 8 років тому +2

    Where do you work? oh I work in the cancer shop building the new corvette, no resperator's, gloves or any protective measures taken. Nobody thought about suing GM back then but today would be a different story, I'll bet every one of though's guy's died from cancer..

    • @gan7658
      @gan7658 8 років тому

      rhenk mehengmeheng

  • @radioguy1620
    @radioguy1620 7 років тому +3

    I understand all fiberglass work was done by MFG co , the same co that built boats. my boss went to the boat factory one day back in the early 60,s and the owner showed him a field full of vette bodies, told him he could take them all, he didnt , but probably all rejects. still,

  • @thomasmann1319
    @thomasmann1319 2 роки тому

    Would it kill them to wear gloves and a maski?

  • @OneKauz
    @OneKauz 4 роки тому

    Pioneers in the 1st youtube creators...

  • @nomiclas
    @nomiclas 10 років тому

    It's amazing how they just dive right in w/o gloves.no breathing mask.1953,Later on they show the tech grinding with a mask on and some have gloves and some don't.At least you know the stuff was available to them.some just figure they're tough I guess.

  • @libertywagon3197
    @libertywagon3197 8 років тому +3

    I didn't know Lyndon Johnson had anything to do with the first Corvettes?