Also, it seems that the car still exists and was set to be restored, according to this 2018 Hemmings article. Some photos of the pathetic (though apparently restorable) wreck are shown as well.
Both "dream" and production cars of the mid-1950s were prone to sporting jet fighter / science-fiction rocket details. So it was to some extent with the XM-Turnpike Cruiser. But, for the most part, the design could have entered production. The car itself was no powerless "pushmobile," being built on Mercury engine and chassis components.
I've always rather liked the design.
The Mercury XM-Turnpike Cruiser.
The scooped out rear fender area feature was used on 1958 and 1959 production Mercurys in reduced form.
This photo shows the car painted red. Most color images have the car painted a variation of pink.
Aside from those rocket pods below the bumpers, the front is a nice simple design.
The rear is jazzier thanks to those side scoopouts as they wrap to house the taillights.
Showing the original color scheme.
Those roof panels that open when the doors do is a dream car feature that almost certainly would not have reached production.
Now for three 2018 views of the Turnpike Cruiser via Hemmings.
Now do the production version!
ReplyDeleteTom Maruska put countless hours into a seriously professional restoration of the Mercury XM-Turnpike Cruiser, and he documented every step of the long journey:
ReplyDeletehttp://tommaruskacars.us/DONE!/Done.html