Autopedia
Register
Advertisement
Chevrolet-Bel-Air-front
Chevrolet Bel Air Concept
Chevrolet
aka {{{aka}}}
Introduction 2002 North American International Auto Show
Class Concept Car
Body Style 2-door convertible
Length 191 in (4,851 mm)
Width {{{Width}}}
Height {{{Height}}}
Wheelbase 111 in (2,819 mm)[1]
Weight {{{Weight}}}
Transmission 4-speed 4L60-E automatic
Engine 3.5 L (214 cu in) L52 I5
Battery {{{Battery}}}
Electric motor {{{Electric motor}}}
Power {{{Power}}}
Similar {{{Similar}}}
Designer {{{Designer}}}


The Chevrolet Bel Air Concept was a concept car that was presented in 2002 at the North American International Auto Show. It features a few styling and design cues from the best remembered tri-five (1955–57) models, such as the chrome windshield frame, traffic light viewfinder, and a gas filler cap behind the tail light, similar to 1956–1957 Chevy's gas cap behind the chrome trim on the back of the tail fin, but more reminiscent of the 1948–1958 Cadillac gas cap tail light. It also features the same body on frame hydroforming technology (used in the frame rails of the Corvette and GM's midsize sport-utility vehicles) and a sheet metal body, on a 111 in (2,800 mm) wheelbase, and a 65 in (1,700 mm) track. Suspension is short long arm up front and Hotchkiss drive in the rear. It rides on five-spoke aluminum wheels with 18 in (46 cm) red line tires and anti lock discs all-round. The elegant, yet simple interior features a twin-element instrument panel, column-mounted gearshift and bench seats covered in soft high-tech fabrics colored red to match the exterior that are cleverly designed to slide forward for easier backseat entry. It also served as a showcase for their new turbocharged inline five-cylinder concept engine based on the L52 (Vortec 3500), straight-5 truck engine. According to a September 2002 GM press release, the all-aluminum 3.5 L (211 cu in) 20-valve DOHC engine, with a bore of 93.0 mm (3.66 in), and a stroke of 102.0 mm (4.02 in), that delivers up to 315 hp (235 kW) and 315 lb⋅ft (427 N⋅m) of torque, mated to a Hydra-Matic 4L60-E electronically controlled four-speed automatic. A virtual "turbo boost" button on the steering wheel activates the powertrain control module to trigger a more aggressive spark and fueling calibration for maximum horsepower. It also led the 13th Annual Stater Brothers Route 66 Rendezvous as the official vehicle in September 2002. General Motors has shown no interest in producing the car.[2] In 2006, it was spotted stripped down in a GM parking lot.[3]


Photos


1d13b7a14d7bf5c4b1d88fe0e7b5c9eb~2
CHEVROLET

General Motors Company


Buick | Cadillac | Chevrolet | GMC | Holden | Hummer | Opel | Vauxhall | Daewoo


Current

Cars: Aveo · Bolt EV · Camaro · Corvette · Cruze · Malibu · Menlo · Monza/Cavalier · Onix/Joy · Optra · Sail/Aveo

Trucks: Colorado/S10 · D-Max · Montana · S10 Max · Silverado/Cheyenne (1500-3500HD)

SUVS: Blazer · Bolt EUV · Captiva · Equinox · Groove · Suburban · Tahoe · Tracker · Trailblazer (SUV) · Trailblazer (crossover) · Traverse · Trax/Seeker

Vans: Express · N300/Move · N400/Tornado Van · Orlando · Spin

Commercial Trucks: F-series · N-series/LCF · Silverado (4500HD-6500HD)

Future

Blazer EV · Equinox EV · Silverado EV

Historic

490 · Baby Grand · Classic Six · Little Four · Little Six · Series H · Styleline · 150 · 210 · Bel Air · Biscayne · Brookwood · Corvette · Delray · El Camino · Blazer · Camaro (1967 · 1982) · Chevelle · Chevy II/Nova · C/K · Corvair · Parkwood · Camaro · Impala · LUV · Monte Carlo · Monza · Vega · Astro · Beretta · Chevette · Celebrity · Citation · Corsica · S10 Blazer . Spectrum · Sprint · S-10 · Tracker · Cavalier · Lumina · Lumina APV · Monte Carlo · Orlando · Prizm · SSR · TrailBlazer · Uplander · Venture · Matiz/Spark · Titan · Bison · Bruin · Opala (Brazil) · Veraneio · Chevrolet Van · Omega · Aveo · HHR · Cobalt · Avalanche

Concept

Super Nova · Bel Air · Volt Concept · Biscayne · SS · Mako Shark · Mako Shark II · Manta Ray · S3X · M3X · T2X · Beat · Groove · Trax · Colorado Cruz Concept Truck · WTCC Ultra · Corvette Rondine Concept · Corvette Indy Concept · Corvette Nivola Concept · Corvair Sebring Spyder Concept · SR-2 Concept · XP-897GT Two-Rotor Concept · Borrego Concept · Corvair Coupe Speciale Concept · Prisma Y Concept · Journey Concept · Nomad Concept · Sting Ray III · Corvair Monza GT · XP-880 Astro II · Lumina Sizigi Concept · Corvair Monza SS · Sabia Concept · Corvair Monza GT · Highlander Concept · Tandem 2000 Concept · Traverse Concept · California Camaro Concept · XT-2 Concept · Romarro Concept · Triax Concept · Corvair Testudo Concept · Astro Vette Concept · XP-700 Concept · Corvette Geneve Concept · CERV I Concept · CERV II Concept · CERV III Concept · CERV IV Concept · Camaro Concept · XT-2 Concept · Orlando Concept · GPiX Crossover Coupe Concept · Camaro LS7 Concept · Camaro GS Racecar Concept · Camaro Black Concept · Camaro Dale Earnhardt Jr. Concept · Corvette Stingray Concept ("Sideswipe") · Silverado ZR2 Concept · Jay Leno Camaro Concept · Camaro Synergy Concept · Camaro Chroma Concept · Camaro Dusk Concept · Camaro Graphics Concept · Aveo RS Concept · Volt MPV5 Concept · Camaro SSX Track Car Concept · Corvette Z06X Track Car Concept · Corvette Jake Edition Concept · Volt Z-Spec Concept · Spark Z-Spec Concept · Cruze Z-Spec Concept · Sail EV Concept

Racing

Corvette C5-R · Corvette C6.R · Corvette C6.R GT2 · Corvette C7.R · Corvette C8.R


Vehicles · Category · LS Engine


Louis Chevrolet and William C. Durant Corporate website A brand of General Motors


Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Chevrolet Bel Air. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Autopedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


  1. Newbury, Stepehn (2002). The car design yearbook 1. Merrell Publishers Limited. 
  2. 2002 GM press release
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration' not found.
Advertisement