Advertising Information  Contact Us  

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   DR1 Dominican Republic Forums > Open > General stuff
Register Blogs Arcade FAQ Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Chat Room

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old 01-07-2009, 06:19 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 2,491
PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 (878)
Default Car manufactured in the DR...

The first car made entirely by hands in the DR (not in an assembly line's factory).

The car was based on the Kit Car style still going strong in the US, but with the caveat that it was built with its own chassis and body 100%.

Using already available drive train, engine and transmission parts, the builder was able to bring to life his own dream of what a car should look like to him.

If you read the story behind is creation, is nothing short of outstanding...

























DDR Motorsport - The best Kit car in the Market - DDR Motorsport
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 01-07-2009, 06:48 AM
Robert's Avatar
DR1
 
Join Date: Jan 1999
Posts: 11,611
Blog Entries: 1
Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 Robert Level 9 (1739)
Default

Nice McLaren F1 look alike.

I think you will find others have built kit cars in the DR.
I have seen a few floating around in the past 10 years.

It looks like they build the kits in Florida.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 01-07-2009, 07:43 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 2,491
PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 (878)
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert View Post
Nice McLaren F1 look alike.

I think you will find others have built kit cars in the DR.
I have seen a few floating around in the past 10 years.

It looks like they build the kits in Florida.
The car above in question was not built from a kit but from scratch as a kit itself! The builders used their know-how on related fields to construct the chassis (the most important part of the whole concept) using a relatively sized actual vehicle as a model.

What distinguishes this built is the fact that the chassis and body that make up the actual car, were built from their conceptual ideas. Something rarely replicated if only in very limited instances on the kit-car manufacturing process.

The idea was to build an affordable super car look kind of vehicle that didn't compromise so much as kits are well known to do.

He moved to the US in order to continue his work in an environment rich with facilities to that aim.

Kit cars are pretty much custom body parts that are made to fit a set selection of already built car's chassis. This kit is one world apart from its design to completion on that regard.

Heck! If this is his first working concept, we can only imagine what he could achieve with the right tools and workshop in FL...

I like the car for its design curves and freedom to go beyond what an already aftermarket chassis could provide. The actual transmission and motor, given the conceptual initiation is understandably lacking. So far they're working on a more powerful and race-like V8 offering using Porsche’s traction and stability controls.

I'm a strong believer that automakers since Ford's first assembly line, have tried too hard to build all their vehicle's components; yet while aftermarket parts in so many levels have proven to surpass the original manufacture's ones by huge margins.

Can you imagine the robust GM models paired with Honda's or Toyota's engines? Give me a Brembo super brake over manufacture's stock options anytime!


I like the yellow one!

Last edited by PICHARDO; 01-07-2009 at 07:50 AM..
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 01-07-2009, 07:47 AM
Moderator
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,961
Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 Berzin Level 9 (1878)
Default

This is very interesting. I have a few questions pertaining to this.

In the Colonial Zone there is a place alongside the river by Diego Colon's house where the hevitos gather(or used to) to blast music from their car stereos.
I was wondering if they still do this or have the police cracked down on this tradition.

These hevitos have some pretty incredible car stereo systems, complete with elaborate lighting.

Where do these guys get the parts to do the modifications to their rides?

Do they have clubs where they gather together to discuss aftermarket modifications and show their cars off?
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 01-07-2009, 07:54 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 6,268
cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 (2625)
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by PICHARDO View Post
The first car made entirely by hands in the DR (not in an assembly line's factory).
Quote:
Originally Posted by PICHARDO
He moved to the US in order to continue his work in an environment rich with facilities to that aim.
So which is it?
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 01-07-2009, 07:55 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 2,491
PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 (878)
Default

Necessity is the mother of all inventions Berzin, but in this case, the DR is the father of the child and husband of Necessity...
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 01-07-2009, 07:59 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 2,491
PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 (878)
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by cobraboy View Post
So which is it?
The car you see was built IN the DR by the DOMINICANS involved in the project. He later moved to FL in order to pursue his dream and build the cars as he's doing so today.

Several friends and biz people in the DR provided him with aid to have the car and himself shipped to the kit car show in the US. His car was the hit on the show understandably.

He later packed his bags and moved for good to the US in order to build his biz there...

The car you see atop is the one he made and tested in the DR as well...
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 01-07-2009, 08:00 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 2,491
PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 (878)
Default

Home-Built DDR Kit Car Set To Invade America - Kit Car
A Homebuilt Car That Leaves Them Slack-Jawed!
By Eric Geisert



Have you ever sat back and considered what it takes to be a pioneer? If it is true that we are all products of our environment, then what is it about some folks who go far beyond the norm and provide a brand-new way of looking at things?

The kit car industry has been around since the late 1940s (when fiberglass was first introduced) and gained popularity in the '60s and '70s. But that fact is true only for the United States and England. Elsewhere in the world, though you can find them, kits are more often than not something of an anomaly.

Outside the U.S. and Britain, cars are just vehicles used to transport people and things between point A and point B. So to make a personal statement by building a car from scratch is virtually unheard of in many parts of the world, especially in the Third World. This includes the Dominican Republic, the second largest island in the Caribbean, where Diego Grullon has lived all 37 of his years.

But Diego is personally on the threshold of a new era. For most of his life, he's dreamed of building his own car from the ground up. When he was 20 (in '90) he received coverage in his local newspaper for building a Bondo and cardboard scale model of a car he designed himself (not something you'd find everyday in Santo Domingo).

We all may have doodled on paper and come up with some type of dream car when we were growing up, but keep in mind no car has ever been built from scratch in the Dominican Republic, and everything carwise in the country has to be imported. So when Diego decided in 2002 to build a full-size car for himself, it was going to be a job no one else in his country had done.

Most of the time in construction, whether it be a house or a car, you can go to someone or somewhere and get the advice of those who have encountered the regular problems you might have in that endeavor. But because no one Diego could find had ever undertaken what he was about to do, it made for a difficult decision: to invest a lot of time and money in something that may not turn out the way he wanted it to. But after spending years thinking and agonizing about whether he should or shouldn't, Diego figured it would be better if he tried rather than just think about it forever.

Diego had constructed a small-scale station buck back in the late '90s, and spent some time with racer Luis Mendez working on a GT racing team. He visited race shops and took pictures of frames and bodies, gaining a general knowledge of how a supercar should be set up. He'd already been poring over whatever European car magazines he could find, and ever since he was a small boy when his mother, Jeannette, would buy him toy cars, he'd been amazed by the shape of Porsche 917 and 962s, wanting to someday drive one of them on the street instead of the racetrack.

But the wheels didn't start turning for this project until after he had a bad experience with a local BMW dealer. Diego had saved his money and bought a new M3, and after owning it only five months, took it back to the dealer due to some engine problems incurred at the factory. They kept his car for a month. It got to the point Diego had to hire a German translator to write a letter to BMW's president in Germany! What's worse, when the dealer was out on the street testing Diego's car, they wrecked it! A long battle was drawn out over the difference between what Diego felt the car was worth and what the dealer thought, but with the money Diego received from the settlement, he decided to build his dream car.

He initially thought the project would take about a year, but it ended up taking four, and a lot more money, too. Though he had no garage (just a one-car, three-wall carport attached to the house he shares with his mother), Diego began his project by building a full-size station buck from plywood. The buck took six months to complete, and since he'd made no front elevation sketches, he winged it when he created his car's center area, starting with the windshield and working out from there. The windshield shape would give him a degree of layback for the A-posts, which would in turn give him the roof's shape. The side glass would be flat, and no rear glass would be needed.

The car's general shape was dictated by Diego's earlier drawings, and the location for the wheel openings was based on observations he'd made of a Toyota MR2, from which he intended to use both the drivetrain and suspension pieces. With the buck completed, he and his friend and righthand man on the project, Juan Ovalle, used polyurethane foam to fill the space between the stations, then covered the entire car with a skim coat of Bondo (check the photo layout starting on page 22 of this magazine for the complete series of construction photos).

The next step was to build the molds and pull body pieces in order to assemble an entire car. Through some trial and error, he was eventually able to get all the body sections made. In '04 Diego purchased a '95 MR2 and began designing a chassis to accommodate the parts. But for a reality check, keep in mind that electricity, at least as a 24-hour source, is not guaranteed in the Dominican Republic, and is both rare (as is the 220-volt current needed to power a welder) and expensive.

Diego was able to get a sponsorship from a local construction company that allowed him to use one of their generator/welders while he and Ovalle built his chassis. He also made good use of two books: Chassis Engineering (by Herb Adams) and Fiberglass & Composite Materials (by D. Aird Forbes). That, plus the time he'd spent examining all those race car chassis, paid off, as the pair was able to design and construct an appropriate base from which to hang the drivetrain and suspension.

Once the chassis was fitted with all of its parts and the body hung, Diego decided to debut his creation at the Association of Handcrafted Automobiles' 2005 Fun In The Sun event at Knott's Berry Farm in Southern California. As anyone who has ever picked a date to finish a car by knows, the days are long and expensive leading up to the occasion. Diego, who owns a sign shop that makes banners and billboards, neglected his business for four months (to the point where his regular customers thought he'd gone out of business) while he worked to finish the project. The arduous and expensive task of getting the car out of his country, into and across the United States with a Jeep and an open trailer, and finally to the show in SoCal was worthy of a chapter in Homer's Iliad!

He'd had the help of some very good friends in his country to get the car to this point, so, tired and beaten from the grind, Diego still managed to debut the car at Knott's, but it wasn't a driver and it wasn't finished to the standards he had set for it. But considering what he had accomplished--building a car from scratch with less tools than what you'd find in a basic high school shop class in the United States--is nothing short of a miracle. The opportunity generated interest in Diego's vehicle, and after he created the DDR Motorsport - The best Kit car in the Market - DDR Motorsport Web site, people who had seen or heard about the car could follow up with him on what his next step would be: mass production.

For this next level, Diego enlisted the help of Kerry Hitt, a composite and fiberglass expert based in Pennsylvania who helped him in 2004 when Diego needed information on pulling the molds off his car. Kerry is FAA-approved for making fiber-reinforced parts for airplanes, and he is also big in the Corvette racing world and the Grand American Rolex Sports Car Series (having personally won the Grand American AGT Driver Championship in 2002). Hitt offers different racing body kits for Corvette owners (see the ACPHome Web site for more on Advanced Composite Products), and feels there is a future in what Diego has brought to the table.

Hitt and Diego are currently working out the details to produce the chassis and bodies in the United States, possibly adding more carbon fiber pieces and even a V-8 powertrain to the mix. The current car is called the DDR SP4 (a sport prototype with a four-cylinder engine), but the eight-cylinder version will be called the SP8, with possible Corvette suspension and a Porsche G50 transaxle. At 2,280 pounds, the car should scream with a V-8 powerplant! Future versions should also include righthand drive versions for the Japanese, Australian, and U.K. markets.

Hitt's shop is also close to the Carlisle Fairgrounds, where the Import-Kit/Replicar Nationals are held, so spring 2006 was the perfect opportunity to bring the car to the show with a small crew--this time as a driver. Onlookers were slack-jawed when they walked up to the car, and if he'd charged a quarter to answer everyone's question of "What is it?" he would have made back his investment! The show went well for Diego, and more folks will undoubtedly be driven to the DDR Web site for updates.

To keep on top of the project's next phase, Diego is looking into moving to the U.S.--yet another major step in realizing his dream. He's already set up shop in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, but the cars will be built (with kits being offered at $23,700) and shipped out of Hitt's shop in Pennsylvania.

Though he can't tell the future, he's sure by the traffic on his Web site, plus the comments people have made so far about his car, he has something people want. Focusing on getting it to them is what Diego Grullon is now committed to working out. KC



Home Built SP4 DDR Kit Car - Kit Car Magazine
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 01-07-2009, 08:13 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 6,268
cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 cobraboy Level 10 (2625)
Default

You need a donor car, and hardware from other manufacturers.

He built a kit car prototype, a chassis and body. He didn't manufacture the car. He relied heavily on other manufacturers work. It may be a Dominican first, but there are a bazillion who did the same thing elsewhere before him.

Nice ride, though.

BTW-KC is one of those publications where someone pays to have a spread written about them. It's their business model, unless it's changed in the last few years. You commit/buy a certain level of advertising and you get a positive article.
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 01-07-2009, 08:14 AM
Gold
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 2,491
PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 PICHARDO Level 8 (878)
Default



The man himself!



The Beast himself!
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
car , manufactured

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


The contents of this webpage are copyright © 1996-2010.  DR1. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO