The Y-Job was GM’s first concept car and an icon in the automotive industry. Constructed in 1938 under the direction of Harley J. Earl, GM’s first design chief, the Y-Job made the rounds of the auto show circuit. But the Y-Job was not a turntable queen; Earl regularly drove the low-slung two-seater on the streets of Detroit where its appearance must have seemed as alien as a flying saucer.
But dream cars, like yesterday’s newspapers, have a short shelf life. The Y-Job’s innovative styling and advanced features soon paled alongside even more futuristic products from GM’s supercharged design staff. The Y-Job was eventually consigned to a warehouse, and later transferred to the Sloan Museum in Flint, Mich. There the Y-Job languished in dusty anonymity – until a burgeoning interest in Detroit’s fanciful dream cars rescued the Y-Job and its descendants from obscurity.
As historians and enthusiasts began to appreciate the significance of these landmark vehicles, the Y-Job was returned to its former glory as the centerpiece of a concept car revival at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Mich. In 1993, the Y-Job came home to the GM Design Center in Warren, Mich., where it now resides as an honored member of GM’s heritage collection.
Story by GM
1938 Buick Y-Job Concept Gallery
See full 1938 Buick Y-Job Concept Gallery here
In Detail
engine | Straight-8 |
displacement | 5244 cc / 320.0 in³ |
power | 105.1 kw / 141 bhp |
specific output | 26.89 bhp per litre |
f brake size | mm / in |
r brake size | mm / in |
wheelbase | 3194 mm / 125.7 in |
front track | 1486 mm / 58.5 in |
rear track | 1516 mm / 59.7 in |
length | 5293 mm / 208.4 in |
width | 1890 mm / 74.4 in |
height | 1476 mm / 58.1 in |
gear ratios | :1 |
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