-->
Drop Down MenusCSS Drop Down MenuPure CSS Dropdown Menu

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Tractorri: The Italian Raging Bull in an American Mustang Suit

Fusion Beast - Choosing between raw American muscle and the sharp elegance of Italian engineering often feels like standing at a crossroads with no clear path. Do you go for the thunderous growl of Detroit steel or the precision-tuned symphony of an Italian supercar? For most, it’s a dream scenario that never leaves the imagination. But every once in a while, someone dares to merge both worlds into something that defies all labels. That’s exactly what happened with a machine known as the Tractorri, an Italian raging bull dressed in an American Mustang suit by R&H Motor Car Group.
The 2009 Tractorri Custom Coupe built by R&H Motor Car Group. (Picture from: Techeblog)
At first glance, it may look like a familiar 2006 Ford Mustanglong hood, fastback profile, and plenty of attitude. Yet beneath the skin lies a secret: the heart and soul of a Lamborghini Gallardo. This unique creation was unveiled in 2009 and even became a centerpiece at the 2019 SEMA Show, where it stunned audiences as proof that passion and imagination can bend the rules of car culture.
Front view of the 2009 Tractorri Custom Coupe. (Picture from: Techeblog)
The process of uniting these two very different cars wasn’t simple or cheap. With a reported cost of around $700,000, the Tractorri required entirely custom bodywork. Its builders borrowed styling cues from more than just the Mustang and the Gallardothere’s even a touch of Porsche in the mix, thanks to elements inspired by the 911 Turbo. Steel fenders, side skirts, and a perfectly blended rear end featuring Gallardo taillights completed the Frankenstein fusion.
Left sude view of the 2009 Tractorri Custom Coupe. (Picture from: Techeblog)
Underneath it all, the magic lies in the mechanics. Power comes from Lamborghini’s 5.0-liter V10 engine paired with a six-speed automatic gearbox, sending force to all four wheels. The setup also includes anti-lock brakes and a front lift systemsupercar technology hidden under muscle car clothing. What results is a Mustang that doesn’t just roar, it howls with Italian fury.
Interior view of the 2009 Tractorri Custom Coupe. (Picture from: Techeblog)
The name itself, Tractorri, is more than just a quirky choice. It’s a respectful nod to Ferruccio Lamborghini’s beginnings as a tractor builder before he became a legend in the world of performance cars. Even the paintwork reflects the drama: a deep crimson red body split by a bold white stripe that runs through the middle, reminding anyone who sees it that this isn’t just another modified Mustang
Engine view of the 2009 Tractorri Custom Coupe. (Picture from: Techeblog)
Inside, the cabin continues to lean toward Lamborghini DNA. The dashboard and center console were transplanted straight from a Gallardo, with its controls and original seats adapted to fit. Alcantara covers the headliner and door panels, while illuminated sill plates give the interior a modern glow. For something built more than a decade ago, features like keyless entry and a personalized book documenting the entire build process make it feel like both a time capsule and a statement piece. 
Rear side view of the 2009 Tractorri Custom Coupe. (Picture from: Techeblog)
Despite being a showstopper, the Tractorri wasn’t built to be a garage queen. It has clocked around 4,000 kilometers since its debut, a reminder that it was designed to be driven, not just admired. Every kilometer tells the story of two automotive philosophies colliding and somehow working in perfect harmony.
Today, the Tractorri stands as more than just a custom project—it’s a bold answer to the question enthusiasts have been asking for decades: what if you didn’t have to choose between American power and Italian passion? For one car, at least, the impossible became real, and the result is a masterpiece that still sparks awe years after it first hit the road. *** [EKA [15072019] | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | R&H MOTOR CAR GROUP || GAS MONKEY GARAGE | BARRETT-JACKSON | TECHEBLOG ]
Note: This blog can be accessed via your smart phone.

Vespa 400: The Unexpected Microcar Beyond the Iconic Scooter

Unexpected Shift - There’s something instantly nostalgic about the name Vespa. For most people today, it sparks images of a charming two-wheeled scooter gliding through narrow European streets. Yet, hidden in the brand’s long history is a lesser-known experiment that quietly broke expectations—Vespa 400: This is not a scooter but a car, a small four-wheeled vehicle that challenged what the Vespa identity could be.
Piaggio micro car named Vespa 400. (Picture from: Otosia)
Back in the late 1950s, when urban mobility was evolving rapidly, Piaggioan Italian manufacturer best known for its scootersventured into unfamiliar territory. Instead of refining its iconic two-wheelers, the company introduced a microcar that carried the same Vespa badge. The result was the Vespa 400, officially produced between 1959 and 1961, though its development began earlier. Interestingly, the car itself was built in France by ACMA (Ateliers de Constructions de Motos et Accessoires), a partner already trusted to manufacture Vespa products, including a military scooter variant, the Vespa 150 TAP  in the early 1950s.
Drawer that serves as a place to put the battery on the front. (Picture from: Otosia)
Despite its shift to four wheels, the Vespa 400 retained a strong visual connection to its scooter roots. Its compact body, rounded edges, and minimalist proportions echoed the simplicity that made Vespa scooters so beloved. Yet, it also introduced unique quirkslike doors hinged from the center pillar, opening in an unconventional direction that immediately set it apart from typical cars. The fabric canvas roof added another playful touch, allowing drivers to open it up and enjoy fresh air, almost like riding a scooter but with more stability.
This mini car has a capacity of 4 passengers, but the rear is still too small for adults. (Picture from: Otosia)
Under its tiny shell, the Vespa 400 housed a modest but cleverly engineered powertrain. It used a 393 cc air-cooled, two-cylinder, two-stroke engine with a perfectly square bore and stroke configuration. This design delivered balanced performance across different speeds, even if outright power was limited. Producing around 18 horsepower, the engine was paired with a 3-speed manual transmission that drove the rear wheels. While those numbers may sound modest today, they were more than adequate for a microcar of its era, enabling it to reach speeds of around 80 to 90 km/henough for city travel and short intercity trips.
This 393cc capacity engine is capable of producing up to 14 horsepower of power. (Picture from: Otosia)
Its layout also reflected practical thinking. The engine sat at the rear, freeing up space at the front for storage. Inside, the cabin was simple and efficient: two adult seats up front and a small rear cushion suitable for children. In total, it could carry up to four people in a pinch, though comfort was clearly optimized for two adults. Compared to modern microcars, it even offered slightly more interior flexibility, despite its tiny footprint.
Rear side view of Vespa 400. (Picture from: Otosia)
The Vespa 400 arrived at a time when Europe was embracing affordable, space-efficient vehicles to meet post-war mobility needs. Microcars were not just a trend—they were a necessity. Within its first two years, around 20,000 units were produced, showing there was real interest in the concept. However, by 1961, production came to an abrupt stop. The exact reason was never officially disclosed, leaving enthusiasts to speculate about market competition, shifting consumer preferences, or internal strategic decisions at Piaggio.
Today, the Vespa 400 stands as a fascinating reminder that even the most iconic brands are capable of surprising detours. It wasn’t just a small car; it was a bold statement that Vespa could exist beyond scooters, even if only briefly. Seen through a modern lens, it feels like a precursor to today’s urban mobility solutions—compact, efficient, and slightly unconventional—proving that innovation often comes from stepping outside familiar boundaries. *** [EKA [26042019] | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | KABAROTO | GRIDOTO ]
Note: This blog can be accessed via your smart phone.KABAROTO,ML

Friday, April 17, 2026

Fiat 850 T Visitors Bus: Marcello Gandini’s Luxurious Six-Door Minibus

Industrial Elegance - When people talk about visionary car design, the conversation almost always drifts toward dramatic supercars with wedge-shaped silhouettes and daring proportions. That’s why the name Marcello Gandini is so often linked with legends like the Lamborghini Countach and the Lamborghini Miura—machines that redefined what cars could look like. Yet hidden in Gandini’s portfolio is something far less expected, but no less fascinating: a six-door Fiat minibus designed with the same forward-thinking mindset as his most iconic creations
The 1975 Fiat 850 T Visitors Bus, a “VIP bus” designed by Marcello Gandini and built by Bertone, blends innovation with practicality. (Picture from: ItalPassion)
The story begins in the industrial heart of Italy during the 1970s, when Gianni Agnelli was rapidly expanding the empire of Fiat. With factories growing and international attention increasing, Agnelli wanted a vehicle that could transport important guestsbusiness partners, politicians, and dignitariesthrough these facilities in a way that felt both efficient and prestigious. Rather than settling for a standard utility van, he turned to Bertone and entrusted Gandini with creating something entirely new: the Fiat 850 T Visitors Bus, a “VIP bus” that would reflect innovation as much as practicality
The Fiat 850 T Visitors Bus, built on the Fiat 850 T platform, featured a bold geometric, almost brutalist design with clean lines and six individual doors—one for each passenger—prioritizing both visual distinction and ease of access. (Picture from: ItalPassion)
What emerged in 1975 at the Turin Motor Show was anything but ordinary. Built on the mechanical base of the Fiat 850 T, the minibus featured a striking geometric form that felt closer to architectural design than automotive convention. Its boxy, almost brutalist exterior rejected softness in favor of clean edges and bold surfaces, making it visually distinct even among experimental vehicles of its era. This was not a van trying to blend in—it was a statement piece, quietly futuristic in its own industrial way. 
The Fiat 850 T Visitors Bus offered an unexpectedly refined interior, with individual seats that emphasized comfort, privacy, and a sense of personal space beyond typical utility vehicles. (Picture from: ItalPassion)
The most intriguing aspect of the vehicle was its unconventional layout. Instead of traditional side access, Gandini introduced six individual doorsone for each passengercreating a rare configuration that prioritized ease and dignity of entry. Inside, the experience was elevated far beyond what one might expect from a utility-based vehicle. Each seat stood alone, offering personal space, while the cabin was finished with surprising refinement. Above it all, a large panoramic Plexiglas roof flooded the interior with light, allowing passengers to observe factory operations from a bright, almost lounge-like environment
The Fiat 850 T Visitors Bus combined its avant-garde design with practical engineering, using a rear-mounted 843 cc four-cylinder engine and semi-automatic transmission for smooth, controlled movement rather than speed. (Picture from: ItalPassion)
Despite its avant-garde appearance, the engineering remained rooted in practicality. The rear-mounted 843 cc four-cylinder engine produced modest power, paired with a semi-automatic transmission designed for smooth, controlled movement rather than speed. This was intentional—the minibus was never meant for highways, but for gliding quietly through factory corridors, ensuring guests could move comfortably without distraction. Even features like dual air-conditioning systems, rare at the time, reinforced its role as a carefully crafted experience rather than just transportation. | 1VyCwDXNTSM |
Production of this remarkable vehicle was extremely limited, with fewer than six units believed to have been built and only a couple known to survive today. Originally registered under Fiat in Turin, at least one example served exactly as intended before passing through private hands and eventually into collector circles. Today, the six-door Fiat minibus stands as a reminder that innovation doesn’t always roarit can also move quietly, carrying people through the very places where automotive history is made, wrapped in a design that dared to treat even a factory shuttle as a work of art. *** [EKA | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | ITALPASSION ]
Note: This blog can be accessed via your smart phone.

Tom Holden’s 1959 El Camino 'Ultimus': A Radical Custom Icon

Futureforged Maverick - There’s something undeniably captivating about machines that refuse to follow the rules. In a time when many cars are restored to factory perfection, the true standouts are often those shaped by bold imagination. The late 1950s and early 1960s marked a turning point in custom car culture, when builders began shifting from heavy modifications to more stylized, expressive designs—yet a few creators chose to go even further, crafting vehicles that felt like rolling visions of the future. 
The 1959 Chevrolet El Camino Ultimus Custom is viewed from the front, featuring a smooth, grille-less fascia and its iconic dual bubble tops that emphasize its space-age styling. (Picture from: JalopyJournal)
Among those visionaries was Tom Holden, a Detroit-based builder who understood that standing still meant falling behind. After achieving success with his earlier Ranchero project, he realized the scene was evolving rapidly. That realization hit home when he encountered a 1959 model from Chevrolet, prompting him to start fresh. He purchased a brand-new Chevrolet El Camino in 1959 and began transforming it almost immediatelyan ambitious move considering he continued using it as a daily driver while the modifications were underway
The 1959 Chevrolet El Camino Ultimus Custom is captured in profile, highlighting its low stance, extended body lines, and futuristic canopy design with the door open. (Picture from: JalopyJournal)
The build itself was a gradual but relentless process. Rather than completing it in one phase, Holden reshaped the vehicle step by step, refining both form and identity over time. The exterior was heavily reworked, with redesigned front and rear sections, extensive shaving of trim, and dramatically altered fins created by cutting deep into the body. One of its most unforgettable features came in the form of twin blue bubble canopies, vacuum-formed at Cadillac Plastics in Detroit. These прозрачные domes gave the vehicle a futuristic silhouette that looked as though it belonged to a different era altogether. 
The 1959 Chevrolet El Camino Ultimus Custom features a futuristic interior crafted with help from a Chrysler concept car upholsterer, complete with floating headrests, a television, telephone, and tape recorder. (Picture from: JalopyJournal)
Inside, the transformation was just as daring. With assistance from a neighbor experienced in crafting interiors for Chrysler concept cars, the cabin evolved into a showcase of forward-thinking design. Floating headrests added a sense of weightlessness, while built-in features like a television, telephone, and tape recorder reflected the technological optimism of the early 1960s. It wasn’t just about luxury—it was about imagining what the future of driving could look like, long before such ideas became mainstream. 
The 1959 Chevrolet El Camino Ultimus Custom is shown from the rear with its dramatic reshaped fins, custom tail treatment, and distinctive twin bubble canopies. (Picture from: JalopyJournal)
When the car entered the show circuit around 1963, it quickly became a sensation. At prestigious events like the Detroit Autorama, it secured major awards including Best Truck, Best Custom, and Best Interior, along with consecutive People’s Choice wins. It even received a Special Achievement Award from Ford Motor Company, highlighting its influence beyond brand boundaries. These accolades cemented its place as one of the most daring and celebrated customs of its time.
The 1959 Chevrolet El Camino Ultimus Custom was photographed at Galpin Speed Shop, where Dave Shuten had announced in January 2023 its restoration for that year’s Grand National Roadster Show. (Picture from: Kustorama)
Decades later, its story continues to evolve. By February 2018, the car was owned by Rick Klibenski of Michigan, and it reached a wider audience through its appearance on American Pickers. More recently, restoration plans announced by Galpin Speed Shop in 2023 signaled a renewed appreciation for its historical and artistic value. Far from being a relic, it remains a vivid reminder that true creativity doesn’t fade—it simply waits for the right moment to be rediscovered. *** [EKA | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | KUSTOMRAMA | JALOPY JOURNAL | TECHEBLOG | JIMS59 ] 
Note: This blog can be accessed via your smart phone.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Lancia Appia Sport Vignale: A Bold One-Off Design by Michelotti

Sculpted Audacity - There’s something endlessly fascinating about how post-war Europe reimagined mobility—not just as transportation, but as art in motion. In that creative surge, small coachbuilders and visionary designers found space to experiment, blending engineering with sculpture. One of the most intriguing outcomes of that era is the Lancia Appia Sport Vignale, a car that feels less like a product and more like a bold design statement shaped by ambition and imagination
The Lancia Appia Sport Vignale emerges as a rolling expression of bold imagination, a one-off 1956 creation where Giovanni Michelotti’s vision meets Vignale’s craftsmanship. (Picture from: Carrozzieri-Italiani)
The story begins with Lancia, a brand known for its engineering elegance, which set out to explore bespoke possibilities using the Appia platform. Among the coachbuilders invited to interpret this vision was Carrozzeria Vignale, which embraced the challenge with enthusiasm. At the heart of the project was Giovanni Michelotti, whose design language was both daring and refined. Rather than producing a single predictable concept, Vignale developed three distinct interpretations, with this particular Appia Sport standing out as a unique prototype built on chassis 81200.1001separate from the more widely recognized production variant by Zagato
The Lancia Appia Sport Vignale captures attention with a fresh, integrated front design featuring a grille and headlights unified beneath a bold “Appia Sport” script, subtly backed by a restrained Lancia emblem. (Picture from: Carrozzieri-Italiani)
Visually, the car captures attention in a way that still feels fresh today. Its front end is defined by an integrated grille and headlight arrangement, crowned with a confident “Appia Sport” script that replaces traditional badging. Behind it sits a restrained Lancia emblem, subtly reinforcing identity without overpowering the design. Michelotti’s use of a two-tone color scheme enhances the car’s sculptural quality, while white wall tires ground it firmly in its era. Perhaps the most memorable feature is the flowing chrome bumper that wraps around the front, traces the bodyline toward the A-pillars, and continues into delicate tail fins. This continuous chrome gesture creates a sense of motion even at rest, tying the entire design together with an elegance that feels both experimental and cohesive. 
The Lancia Appia Sport Vignale showcases Michelotti’s sculptural two-tone design, accented by white wall tires and a flowing chrome bumper that wraps elegantly into subtle tail fins. (Picture from: Carrozzieri-Italiani)
Beyond its aesthetics, the Appia Sport Vignale represents a pivotal creative dialogue between manufacturer and designer. It hints at stylistic ideas later seen in cars like the Nardi Raggio Azzuro, itself derived from the Lancia Aurelia platform, showing how design ideas often ripple across projects and years. More importantly, it marked the beginning of a deeper collaboration between Lancia and Vignale, eventually influencing production models like the Convertible and Coupe Lusso. Seen from today’s perspective, this one-off creation isn’t just a relic—it’s a reminder of a time when boundaries were fluid, creativity was fearless, and even a single car could quietly reshape the direction of automotive design. *** [EKA | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | CARROZZIERI-ITALIANI | WIKIPEDIA ]
Note: This blog can be accessed via your smart phone.

XP-719: The Lost 1959 Corvette That Challenged Everything We Know

Hidden Divergence - It’s easy to assume that the story of a legendary car like the Chevrolet Corvette has already been told from every possible angle. But sometimes, history hides in plain sight—tucked away in an old photograph, waiting to challenge what we thought we knew. That’s exactly how a little-known experiment from 1959 resurfaced, revealing that the idea of a radically different Corvette had been quietly explored much earlier than most people realize.
The XP-719 Corvette is presented in a studio setting, emphasizing its bold front-end design and clean, futuristic surfaces that set it apart from its contemporaries. (Picture from: MotorTrend)
The discovery began with a single black-and-white factory photo, dated February 1, 1960, found in an archive folder simply labeled “1959 Corvette.” At first glance, the car looked out of place. Its proportions didn’t match any production model from that era, and its rear-focused stance gave it a character closer to a mid-engine sports car than the long-hood design people associated with Corvettes of the late 1950s. The photo itself carried standard factory markingsframe number, photographer identificationbut the real clue was handwritten on the back: a note describing it as the first mid-engine Corvette proposal from 1959.
The XP-719 Corvette is captured from a rear three-quarter angle, highlighting its sculpted tail, integrated vents, and distinctive rear-engine proportions. (Picture from: MotorTrend)
Curiosity led to further digging in the archives of General Motors, where more images surfaced, showing the car in multiple stages of development. Alongside them was a sparse engineering recordalmost empty, yet still revealing. It identified the project as XP-719, a V-8 rear-engine Corvette initiated on June 4, 1959, developed in a division known as Advanced #4. The project was led by engineers Carl Renner and Ron Hill. While Hill remains largely undocumented, Renner had already played a meaningful role in shaping Corvette design, contributing to signature elements like the sculpted side coves and later rear styling detailssubtle influences that can also be traced in this unusual prototype.
The XP-719 Corvette is presented as a full-scale 2D design mockup, illustrating its low, flowing proportions and early vision of a rear-engine layout. (Picture from: MotorTrend)
The car itself showed clear signs of an idea still being refined. Early versions featured small air ducts positioned ahead of the rear wheels, hinting at the challenges of feeding air to an engine mounted behind the driver. There were even traces of asymmetrical, fin-like detailingvery much in line with late-1950s design language. By 1960, those ducts had grown noticeably taller, suggesting the team was actively addressing cooling needs as the concept evolved. Another detail, often overlooked but fascinating, was a working mockup of a stowable hardtop designed to tuck beneath the rear decklidan inventive touch that blended engineering curiosity with practical thinking.
The XP-719 Corvette showcases its experimental rear section, where pronounced cooling vents hint at the engineering challenges of housing a V-8 behind the cabin. (Picture from: MotorTrend)
The existence of XP-719 also fits neatly into the ambitions of Zora Arkus-Duntov, the driving force behind many of the Corvette’s performance breakthroughs. Duntov had long pushed for a mid-engine layout, believing it would unlock a new level of balance and capability. Around the same time, he was developing experimental platforms like CERV I, and the proportions of XP-719 even raise the possibility that its body may have been intended for such a chassis. Later projectslike XP-880, XP-882, and XP-892would carry the mid-engine idea further into the spotlight during the late 1960s and early 1970s, but XP-719 shows that the concept had already taken shape years earlier, quietly and almost unnoticed.
The XP-719 Corvette reveals its innovative stowable hardtop mechanism, illustrated through a skeletal mockup showing how the decklid folds and stores within the rear compartment. (Picture from: MotorTrend)
What makes this prototype so compelling today is not just what it was, but how easily it disappeared. It’s missing from most Corvette history books, barely documented even within internal records, and largely absent from modern discussions. That silence suggests the project was likely set aside early, as General Motors chose to stay with a conventional front-engine layout for the next generation. Still, XP-719 lingers as a fascinating detour in the Corvette’s story—a reminder that behind every iconic machine, there are bold ideas that never made it to the road, yet quietly shaped what came next. *** [EKA | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | MOTORTREND | HOTROD ]
Note: This blog can be accessed via your smart phone.