The VIPER CAR was amazing in this short-lived 90’s TV SERIES

Today’s Fireball SKETCH is a slightly upgraded version of the VIPER Car. Although a short-live TV Series that went from 1994-1999, the car was cool and the idea inspired by KNIGHT RIDER. So… Fireball had to do this one and it’s now available in the Garage Store! New SKETCH every day!!

*The Fireball Tim Garage is an Automotive Pop Culture Lifestyle Brand featuring the incredible work of Concept Artist Fireball Tim Lawrence. Almost 400 Movie, Classic, Supercar and Muscle Car Art is featured in the garage on thousands of products. Plus, select Artist and Celebrity Signature Series! 10% goes to LA DOG RESCUES.

Custom Orders, Commissions are available. His work is featured in over 50 Museums worldwide and his TV shows have reached over billion viewers.

WATCH! Pennzoil’s “THE LAST VIPER…”

Watch Pennzoil say goodbye to an iconic American sports car in The Last Viper.

About THE VIPER from Wiki… The Dodge Viper is a sports car manufactured by Dodge (SRT for 2013 and 2014), a division of FCA US LLC from 1992 through 2017 having taken a brief hiatus from 2010-2013. Production of the two-seat sports car began at New Mack Assembly in 1991 and moved to Conner Avenue Assembly in October 1995.

Although Chrysler considered ending production because of serious financial problems, on September 14, 2010, chief executive Sergio Marchionne announced and showed a new model of the Viper for 2012. In 2014 the Viper was named number 10 on the “Most American Cars” list, meaning 75% or more of its parts are manufactured in the U.S. The Viper was initially conceived in late 1988 at Chrysler’s Advanced Design Studios.

The following February, Chrysler president Bob Lutz suggested to Tom Gale at Chrysler Design that the company should consider producing a modern Cobra, and a clay model was presented to Lutz a few months later.

Produced in sheet metal by Metalcrafters, the car appeared as a concept at the North American International Auto Show in 1989. Public reaction was so enthusiastic that chief engineer Roy Sjoberg was directed to develop it as a standard production vehicle.

Sjoberg selected 85 engineers to be “Team Viper”, with development beginning in March 1989. The team asked the then-Chrysler subsidiary Lamborghini to cast a prototype aluminum block for the sports car to use in May.

The production body was completed in the fall, with a chassis prototype running in December. Though a V8 engine was first used in the test mule, the V10, which the production car was meant to use, was ready in February 1990.

Official approval from Chrysler chairman Lee Iacocca came in May 1990. One year later, Carroll Shelby piloted a pre-production car as the pace vehicle in the Indianapolis 500 race. In November 1991, the car was released to reviewers with first retail shipments beginning in January 1992.

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