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While the style of a car may be just as important to some as to how well the car runs, automobile manufacturers did not begin to pay attention to car designs until the 1920s. It was not until 1927, when General Motors hired designer Harley Earl that automotive styling and design became important to American automobile manufacturers. What Henry Ford did for automobile manufacturing principles, Harley Earl did for car design. Most of GM's flamboyant "dream car" designs of the 1950s are directly attributable to Earl, leading one journalist to comment that the designs were "the American psyche made visible." Harley Earl loved sports cars, and GIs returning after serving overseas World War II were bringing home MGs, Jaguars, Alfa Romeos and the like. Earl convinced GM that they needed to build a two-seat sports car. The result was the 1953 Corvette, unveiled to the public at that year's Motorama car show.
Taking its name from a small, maneuverable fighting frigate, the first Corvettes were virtually handbuilt in Flint, Michigan in Chevrolet's Customer Delivery Center. The outer body was made out of a revolutionary new composite material called fiberglass, offering the strength of steel without the weight. The tradition continues even today, as no Corvette has ever had anything other than a fiberglass outer skin. Underneath that radical new body were standard Chevrolet components, including the "Blue Flame" inline six-cylinder engineAn engine is something that produces some effect from a given input. The origin of engineering was the working of engines. There is an overlap in English between two meanings of the word "engineer": 'those who operate engines' and 'those who design and co, two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission and drum brakes from Chevrolet's regular car line. Though the engine's output was increased somewhat thanks to a triple-carburetor intake exclusive to the Corvette, performance of the car was decidedly lackluster. Compared to the Ford ThunderbirdThe Ford Thunderbird is a car manufactured in the USA by the Ford Motor Company. It was conceived as a response to the Chevrolet Corvette and entered production for the 1955 model year as a two-seater quasi sports car, going on sale on October 22, 1954. with its 312 in3 (5.1 L) V8 and British and Italian sports cars of the day, the Corvette was underpowered, required a great deal of effort as well as clear roadway to bring to a stop and even lacked a "proper" manual transmission. Up until that time, the Chevrolet Division was GM's entry-level marque, known for excellent but no-nonsense cars...and nowhere was that more evident than in the Corvette. A Paxton superchargerA supercharger (sometimes called a blower or a positive displacement pump is a gas compressor used to pump a fuel/ air mixture, the charge into the cylinders of an internal combustion engine. This increases the mass of oxygen and fuel in the charge making became available as a dealer-installed option in 1954 which greatly improved the Corvette's straight-line performance, but sales continued to decline. GM was seriously considering shelving the project, thereby leaving the Corvette as little more than a footnote in automotive history, and would have done so if not for two important events. The first was the introduction of Chevrolet's first-ever V8 engine in 1955, and the second was the influence of a SovietThe Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR ( Russian: ; tr. Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik (SSSR) also called the Soviet Union ( ; tr. Sovetsky Soyuz , was a state in much of the northern region of Eurasia that existed from 1922 until 1 emigre in GM's engineering department, Zora Arkus-Duntov . Arkus-Duntov simply took a 283 in3 (4.6 L) version of the new engine and backed it with a four-speed manual transmission. That modification, probably the single most important in the car's history, helped to turn the Corvette from a two-seat curiosity to a genuine sports car and Thunderbird contender. It also earned Arkus-Duntov the rather inaccurate nickname of "Father of the Corvette."