The history of the Volpe, a small two-seat vehicle made by Alca
(Anonima Lombarda Cabotaggio Aereo), is full of lights and shadows.
The concept was certainly luminous: the tiny car was 135 kilos, two
and a half meters in length, only a little over a meter in width and
height, and could reach a maximum speed of 75 km/h. It was launched in
Rome on March 30, 1947, during a show presented by the famous comedian
Erminio Macario, and anticipated the “microcars” (or “bubble cars”) that
would have been successfully sold throughout Europe about a decade
later. The Volpe responded to the needs of the Italian market, still in
recovery from the war. It was innovative, yet simple, easy to drive,
robust. And cheaper than Fiat’s Topolino, the beauty queen among the
cars produced in that period by the Turin-based company.
But then the lights dimmed with the charges for fraudulent bankruptcy
that hit Alca in 1948: the company had not provided a number of
customers with the cars they had paid for, illegally holding on to the
equivalent of five and a half million euros.
Thus no more than ten Alca Volpes were ever manufactured; even fewer
have survived until this day, on exhibit inside museums or in private
collections.
http://www.italianways.com/the-alca-volpe/
15 Ağustos 2013 Perşembe
Kaydol:
Kayıt Yorumları (Atom)
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder