Only 333 pieces are to be manufactured.
-Aero Car Cordoba 1953 Argentina
-The desire to combine a turbine with the power of a simple combustion engine has occupied some engineers in the history of the car.
-Interest in such combinations is spreading around the world.
-Argentina, Eugenio Grosovich and Gianfranco Bric in Cordoba began working in the early 1950s, and they took a car from the local Justicialista brand and realized the idea of a turbine-powered car called Aerocar Did.
-The motorless chassis served as the undercarriage, but the bodywork, which did not correspond to the concept of two technicians, was eliminated, and they designed their own bodywork according to aerodynamic standards.
-Probably on the back of this body, made of fiberglass, is a 90-hp 4-stroke Chevrolet V6 engine, with an impressive 1.75m diameter propeller of an impressive old airplane located at the rear.
-It was the powerful wind caused by the propellers that thrilled the crowds who came to watch the test drive in the streets of Buenos Aires.
-There were many men and women on the street that day, so the strong wind lifted the skirt and the hat fluttered in the air, which made the audience more impressive.
-But the concept did not evolve further, and the car was forgotten after the propeller was dismantled in a workshop in a small town of La Falda in 1955.
( This is a machine translation. Please allow for possible misinterpretations in the text. )