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1938 Buick Y-Job Concept Car

Source: General Motors and SW

The 1938 Buick Y-Job is generally considered the industry's first concept car. Created by General Motors Styling and Buick Engineering, it was designed by Harley J. Earl, GM's first design chief, and built on a production Buick chassis modified by Charlie Chayne, then Buick's chief engineer.  Power was supplied by a Buick 320 cubic inch straight 8.

Buick called it "Y" because so many makers dubbed experimental cars "X." Styling and mechanical features of the "Y Job" showed up on GM products, particularly Buick and Cadillac, throughout the '40s. Particularly noteworthy is the introduction of a wide horizontal grille with thin vertical bars, which remains a Buick styling feature to this day.

The car served as Harley's Earl personal transportation for many years, until he replaced it with the 1951 General Motors LeSabre dream car.


1938 Buick Y-Job Concept Car Pictures and Specifications

General Information
 Year  1938
 Manufacturer  Buick
 Model  Y-Job
 Trim  Concept
 Body Type  Coupe
 Base MSRP  N/A
 Curb Weight  N/A
Engine / Transmission
 Type  N/A
 Cylinders  N/A
 Horsepower  N/A
 Torque  N/A
 Redline  N/A
 Drive Train  N/A
 Gear Type  N/A
Performance
 0-60 mph  N/A
 0-100 mph  N/A
 ¼ Mile  N/A
 Top Speed  N/A
 Gas Mileage  N/A








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