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12 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent source of Corvette history,
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This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
I am a Corvette nut. I love everything about the Corvette. This book gives great insight to how the Corvette came into being and how they were made. I've always been fascinated by car assembly plants and how they can turn out so many cars in a relatively short period of time. Now you can see pictures and read comments by the people that were on the line. From the beginning in 1953 to today's Bowling Green Assembly Plant. You'll be fascinated at how these cars come together.
The author also gives some great information about the different generations of Corvette. It's not just about the factories and the assembly lines. I highly recommend this book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book,
By
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This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
Great book for the Corvette fanatic. Lots of pictures. Great history of the Corvette and great info about the building of the Corvette and the different factories used to build it since it's intoduction.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fact filled interesting read.,
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This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
Great book with many interesting facts and photos covering the 56+ years of manufacturing America's only true sports car. Glad to see that it was pointed out that the Corvette got its start in Flint, the home of Buick. My only complaint is the miss-mash organization of the photos. They do not follow the text or chapters and bounce around from one decade to another, often on the same page.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Corvette Factories:Building America's Sports Car.,
By
This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
The Corvette Factories: America's Sports Car-Mike Mueller Book.
Excellent Small Hardcover minus the dustjacket, Showcases various stages through different times. Not necessarily in order,Lots of Black & White And some color Pictures of Flint,St.Louis And Bowling Green. Some pictures have been seen before(minus the factory pictures). The ZR1 is covered.(not being built,just a quick overview).The New Grand Sport is not included.C6.R is not there(Not built at Bowling Green). My only compliant would be it's too short and a quick read.Nonetheless,A Corvette Book For Corvette Lovers, and a Different type of Corvette book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book,
By
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This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
The subject is well presented. Photography is excellent and complements the text well. A great overview of the evolution of the factories and the corvette itself. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the corvette.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Waste of time Corvette book,
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This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
I am a big Corvette fan. I have most of the books written about Corvettes and their history. This book adds nothing new. There is very little information on manufacturing, nothing you have not read before. More importantly is it a chronological mess. You bounce between model years with very little continuity. You want to know about the production and manufacture of Corvettes finds something else to read.
Bottom line the book is a rip off.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
SpeedReaders.info Review,
By Speed Readers (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car
by Mike Mueller Mike Mueller has scavenged the General Motors Media Archives and we are the better for it. His 192 page book, The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car is filled with more than 300 photographs, 150 in color, that start out to tell the story of the three factories that have built America's sportscar, but in the end provide a detailed history of the famed fiberglass flyer. This is not Mueller's first book about Corvettes; in fact he has written almost a dozen of them over the past decade and a half. This is not a bad thing as it means the information provided in The Corvette Factories has been well-vetted by editors and enthusiasts. The long history of the Corvette has thus already been covered elsewhere by the author and by others. This new book, which combines photographs from the earliest production efforts with present day shots of cars from notable Corvette collectors, along with Mueller's research, contributes additional dimension to the Corvette story. Corvettes sit in a sort of nether world between the guys with gold chains and real car enthusiasts. Despite a long history stretching to drag strip success and road racing victories in places like Daytona, Sebring, and Le Mans, the car's detractors cite its broad blue-collar appeal as evidence that it isn't a real sportscar. This is unfortunate, because even the earliest Blue-Flame Special six-cylinder powered Corvette from 1953, with its automatic transmission and white-wall tires was, in reality, more than a match for many of the pukka British roadsters. Most of us think we know something about the history of the Corvette. That it was GM's first production experience with fiberglass, or that it originally was provided with a six-cylinder engine and that no plans were in place to power it with a V-8. Other tidbits, like the fact that although Zora Arkus-Duntov is considered by many to be the "father" of the Corvette, the reality that he wasn't even around during its conception might be new to those of us not steeped in Corvette lore. Mueller, quoting Arkus-Duntov and other sources explains that GM's legendary vice president in charge of styling, Harley Earl, should get the credit for GM's new baby. Working for Earl, Bob McLean led a small group of designers developing the concepts in 1952 for GM's Motorama show that opened at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in January 1953. Zora Arkus-Duntov didn't start working at General Motors until May of 1953. And here is another tidbit: The frame and suspension for the first Corvette was designed by another GM legend, Maurice Olley. The vehicle dynamics genius whipped up a sturdy frame and suspension system in just ten days, using many in-stock and proven Chevrolet components to avoid the need for extensive testing. This is information that is no doubt available in other places, but Mueller pulls it together in this tightly written package. Despite their long history sitting atop Chevrolet's product line, Corvettes have been produced in only three factories. The first 300 cars were built in a makeshift facility in Flint, Michigan in 1953. Production moved to St Louis when it went full-scale in 1954, and remained there until 1981, when Corvette production was relocated to Bowling Green, Kentucky. Building Corvettes in each of these three plants is well documented in the book with detailed black and white and color photographs of workers building fiberglass sportscars. If Mueller had merely summarized the production facilities, the book would have been interesting to Corvette fans. But by going much further than this he has produced a book that is fascinating even if you have never fallen under the car's spell. There have been six generations of the Corvette, and each is covered in great detail describing not only how the cars were made and by whom, but providing information about options, colors, special models, accompanied by quotes from contemporary magazine stories. Mueller even tours the National Corvette Museum, located across the street from the Bowling Green factory. Life has not always been easy for the Corvette. The oil crisis and exhaust emission legislation in the 1970s strangled much of the performance from its V-8 engine. Then a $24.2 billion loss in 1992 for GM had the company seriously considering pulling the plug on its sportscar, even as the 1 millionth Corvette was rolling off the Bowling Green assembly plant in July of that year. But the Corvette survived and the C5 and C6 generations of the car are often mentioned in the same sentences as the best from Porsche and Ferrari. The Corvette Factories isn't the first book written about Corvettes, nor will it be the last. In a scant 192 pages however, Mike Mueller has managed to make The Corvette Factories a book that deserves your consideration. Copyright 2009 Kevin Clemens (speedreaders.info)
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Nice volume/excellent content,
By
This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
This was a present to a Corvette owner who was very impressed with the quality of the content and style of the book
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Corvette History,
By
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This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
Having managed an R&D Lab in Ashtabula Ohio wanted to see if Molded Fiberglass, located in that town, received its due credit for building the first Vette bodies. It did! Great research - found out more than I had known about the early Corvette history. Had a fellow working in the Lab who had worked for Molded Fiberglass and built some of the first bodies. He also built prototypes for several years after.
Excellent book. Lots of details regarding construction methods etc. Tried to buy a Vette in 1974 but even having an uncle who managed a Chevy dealership in NJ, who tried to get me one, there were none available with over 37,500 sold that year. This despite the fact that even the 454 had only 270 HP. Had to buy a Datsun 260Z. No regrets, great car once headers and Hitachi SU fixes eliminated the poor pollution controls used at the time! First Vette was whe we moved to SC and I bought an '87 then a '93 40th Anniversary. But none can come close to my current 436 HP LS3 2008 coupe. Recommend the book to Vette lovers as well as those who would love to have one. Even those who turn their nose down to Vette's in favor of European cars can find out how my 2008 weighs only 3200 pounds and the 6 speed gets 28 mpg on the highway! Go Chevy!
4.0 out of 5 stars
The corvette factories:building Americas sports car,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car (Hardcover)
The book was received with little wait and in good condition. The book was more than I expected. Great illustration, easy read. I am pleased with my purchase.
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The Corvette Factories: Building America's Sports Car by Mike Mueller (Hardcover - November 16, 2009)
$40.00 $29.20
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