Top Ten ’60s American Concept Cars

- in Cars

As part of our ongoing look at our favorite concept cars of all time, the following are our favorites from American automakers in the 1960s:

10. 1964 GM Runabout
Shown at the 1964 General Motors Futurama show, the Runabout was a compact, three-wheeled car designed for shopping and short-distance commuting. Among the car’s features were a sliding roof to ease egress and a shopping cart that rolled right into a wide slot in the rear section of the vehicle.

1964 GM Runabout
1964 GM Runabout

9. 1961 Ford Gyron
The Gyron was so wacky you have to love it. The Gyron not only had just two seats, it had only two wheels and would depend on some sort of gyroscopic devise to maintain its balance. Should such a system work, the car could bank itself like a motorcycle through turns. The design included small and retractable safety wheels so the car could be parked.

1961 Ford Gyron
1961 Ford Gyron

8. 1962 Ford Seattle-ite XXI
Oh those wacky folks from Ford… The Seattle-ite XXI was built for the Seattle World’s Fair and was a six-wheeler, with double axles up front, which someone thought would help with steering, traction and braking by having four wheels do the usual work of two. The vehicle’s other unusual feature was the fact that the car was designed to accept basically plug-in power units, ranging from regular gasoline engines to gas turbines or even a nuclear generator.

1962 Ford Seattle-ite XXI
1962 Ford Seattle-ite XXI
1962 Ford Seattle-ite XXI[/caption]
7. 1969 Chrysler Concept 70X
This large sedan was noteworthy because of its doors. On the passenger side was one large door that slid open much like the doors on modern minivans. On the driver’s side there were two doors which opened on special parallelogram hinges and thus opened parallel to the side of the vehicle. Safety was the design theme, and the rear-view mirror included a traffic proximity warning system.

1969 Chrysler Concept 70X
1969 Chrysler Concept 70X

6. 1961-62 Chrysler Turbine
Chrysler actually built 50 of these vehicles and put them into private hands on public roads. The cars were powered by aircraft-style gas turbine engines. The idea was to show the practicality of an alternative to the internal combustion piston-driven engine. The 50 cars were driven more than a million miles and the surviving cars have become prized by classic car collectors.

1961-62 Chrysler Turbine
1961-62 Chrysler Turbine
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5. 1962 Chevrolet Corvair Monza GT
Take your basic albeit souped-up Chevrolet Corvair but give it a very European exotic car body and you have the Monza, which actually appeared in two forms, SS and GT. The GT had a canopy-style roof that was hinged forward to provide access to the passenger compartment. The entire rear section of the car also was hinged at the rear to provide access to the engine. The SS was an open roadster with a very short windshield only on the driver’s side.

1962 Chevrolet Corvair Monza GT
1962 Chevrolet Corvair Monza GT




4. 1967 and 1969 Astro
General Motors did a series of Astro concepts between 1967 and 1969. Each was a low-slung sports car. Astro I and II were unveiled in 1967. Astro I was less than a yard tall, had no doors – the rear-hinged rear deck extended over the passenger compartment, and the driver had a rear-view mirror mounted in the roof to see what was behind. Astro II was slightly more conventional in its design, though it had a V8 engine instead of an air-cooled six. Astro III followed in 1969 and was very unusual in its architecture with three wheels, one in front to steer and two in the rear set into side pod fenders that hung on either side of an aircraft fuselage that housed an aircraft-style gas turbine engine.

1967 Chevrolet Astro I
1967 Chevrolet Astro I
1968 Chevrolet Astro II
1968 Chevrolet Astro II
1969 Chevrolet Astro III
1969 Chevrolet Astro III

3. 1962 Ford Mustang
Though not as stylish as the subsequent 1962 Cougar 406, 1963 Cougar II or 1965 XP Bordinat Cobra, the 1962 Mustang concept was more significant: It made its public debut at the 1962 U.S. Grand Prix race with Dan Gurney driving it around the Watkins Glen racetrack. The two-seat, rear-engine roadster was designed to be the road-going version of the Ford GT40 racecar. While the car didn’t make it into production, its name was used for a 1964 ½ model that enjoyed some measure of success.

1962 Ford Mustang
1962 Ford Mustang




2. 1960 Plymouth XNR
How delightful that this car’s name, XNR, was made up of the consonants from the name of Chrysler’s brilliant design director, Virgil Exner! XNR the car was a sleek sports machine and would have been Chrysler’s answer to the Corvette had it gone into production. The car’s most notable design feature was a tall tailfin that emerged from behind the driver and also served as a rollover bar. Perhaps less noticeable at first glance was the fact that while the car could seat two people, it was designed primarily for solo driving, with a wraparound windshield that protected only the driver’s side of the vehicle. Another nice feature was a leather case-style glove compartment that could be removed and used as a shoulder bag.

1960 Plymouth XNR
1960 Plymouth XNR
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1. 1965 Chevrolet Mako Shark
Chevrolet did two Mako Shark concepts in the mid-1960s. Each was basically a restyled Corvette. The ’65 Shark II gets my vote as No. 1 for the decade not because it was actually the most interesting concept car of the period, but because when I saw it, I simply fell in love with the car’s shark-like shape and especially its shark-style paint job that was almost white along with the rocker panels but then turned very dark gray and almost pure black by the time you got to the roof.

1965 Chevrolet Mako Shark
1965 Chevrolet Mako Shark

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