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Panoz AIV Roadster

Panoz Roadster, AIV Roadster
Panoz Roadster.jpg
Overview
Manufacturer Panoz Auto Development Company
Production 1992-1995 (44 Roadsters produced),
1996-1999 (176 AIVs produced)
2015-present
Assembly Braselton, Georgia 30548, United States
Body and chassis
Class Sports car
Layout FMR layout
Powertrain
Engine Ford V8 5.0L (Roadster),
Ford V8 4.6L (AIV)
Transmission 5-speed Borg-Warner T-5 manual
Dimensions
Curb weight 2,570 lb (1,170 kg) (AIV)

The Panoz Roadster is a sports car launched in 1992 by the American manufacturer Panoz Auto Development Company of Georgia. The Roadster was succeeded by the AIV Roadster in 1997. They were built using aluminum, similar to that of the Plymouth Prowler first sold several years later in 1997. The Panoz Roadster was the first American built aluminum intensive vehicle.

Panoz had purchased the rights to a frame designed by Frank Costin used in a defunct Irish sportscar called the TMC Costin. Panoz had Freeman Thomas design a new body for the car. Aluminum body panels were produced by Superform USA, resulting in bodywork both light and strong. Ford Mustang running gear, engine, and transmission were used, as was a solid rear axle and independent front suspension. A seven-man crew built the first ten cars, and other workers were added later to the production team. The Costin chassis was never put under a production car, instead the early Roadsters featured a TIG welded stainless steel tubing frame, and extensive use of CNC machined and stamped parts.

The Roadster had no top or tonneau cover, and no provision or intention of having either. No automatic transmission was offered, only the manual 5-speed. A small heater core delivered warmth to the windshield for defrosting, since the US DOT requirements mandated it. There was no radio, no heater, no air conditioner, and further more no place to install any of those.

Some Roadsters were fitted with a custom engraved plate atop the intake manifold with the owner’s name and the Panoz logo. A few cars were built to a factory specification, but most were custom ordered by the individual buyers.


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Wikipedia

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