5,000 lb. SSR ver 10.40 ET 87 Grand National
#13
Very impressed! Not a terribly popular vehicle to mod, let alone to that level. It would make you cry if you knew what the original plan for the SSR was. I started working for ASC Inc. in 1999 and the building i worked at was kind of a "catch all" for a bunch of GM projects (mostly mid-cycle enhancements). One of the "secret" projects was a nostalgia truck organized through GM advanced studio. It was a joint design project between ASC designers and GM designers. The winning design was taken to 3D model and a 1/4 scale foam model was going to be made. The winning designer was actually a guy from ASC by the name of Doug Ungemach and the 3D modeler was a guy who co-owned a 3D design studio in Troy Michigan. From Concept to scale model, not a SINGLE GM employee had a hand in the design (the show truck interior was done by a GM designer though). The original concept was a compact pickup with nostalgic design with a V8, usable bed, and a price point below $25K. From the show truck to the production vehicle, too many idiots got their hands on it. I was never really on the project but watched from a distance and felt terrible at how such a great concept could turn into a bloated, expensive, pig. One of my close friends was lead designer on the production interior and he had to fight tooth and nail just to get halfway decent interior materials. When I see one, I always lament about what could have been a killer truck. Kudo's to you for giving the SSR some dignity.
#15
Very impressed! Not a terribly popular vehicle to mod, let alone to that level. It would make you cry if you knew what the original plan for the SSR was. I started working for ASC Inc. in 1999 and the building i worked at was kind of a "catch all" for a bunch of GM projects (mostly mid-cycle enhancements). One of the "secret" projects was a nostalgia truck organized through GM advanced studio. It was a joint design project between ASC designers and GM designers. The winning design was taken to 3D model and a 1/4 scale foam model was going to be made. The winning designer was actually a guy from ASC by the name of Doug Ungemach and the 3D modeler was a guy who co-owned a 3D design studio in Troy Michigan. From Concept to scale model, not a SINGLE GM employee had a hand in the design (the show truck interior was done by a GM designer though). The original concept was a compact pickup with nostalgic design with a V8, usable bed, and a price point below $25K. From the show truck to the production vehicle, too many idiots got their hands on it. I was never really on the project but watched from a distance and felt terrible at how such a great concept could turn into a bloated, expensive, pig. One of my close friends was lead designer on the production interior and he had to fight tooth and nail just to get halfway decent interior materials. When I see one, I always lament about what could have been a killer truck. Kudo's to you for giving the SSR some dignity.
#20

BTW, there was a GM designer who was a part of the project (I think he might have been the lead for GM advanced) who was going around with a napkin sketch, after the concept was introduced, telling everyone who would listen that he penned the original concept on a napkin at lunch one day. He even turned it into a speaking gig. I wish I could remember his name, he was a real D-bag. I asked Doug how he felt and he couldn't have cared less. I always thought it was pretty underhanded but that's how the car design industry goes. Some folks try to hitch their coat tails on a hot project and hope it carries them out of the muck and into an executive position. I can't blame them I guess, it worked for Brian Nesbit (he supposedly penned the original PT cruiser and parleyed it into an executive design position at GM)
Last edited by Boober; Sep 22, 2012 at 09:15 AM.



