Easily one of the wildest General Motors dream cars of the Motorama era, the Olds Golden Rocket was the epitome of Jet Age design. Let’s take a closer look.
Throughout the 1950s, Harley Earl and his forward-looking crew at the GM styling studios frequently turned to aircraft and space travel for their inspiration. There might be no better example of the automaker’s guided-missile design theme than the far-out Golden Rocket, Oldsmobile’s Motorama dream car for 1956. “The Supersonic Age comes to automobile styling!” the company proclaimed.
Constructed in fiberglass on a shortened Oldsmobile passenger car perimeter frame with a 105-inch wheelbase, the Golden Rocket was essentially a bullet on wheels in side view (above.) But under the skin, the show car was fairly conventional with a 324 CID, 275-horsepower Olds Rocket V8 up front, Hydra-Matic automatic transmission, and leaf-spring rear suspension. The custom wheels employed integral brake drums, and a pair of fuel tanks were housed in the rear fenders. Note the “dotted-line” segmented whitewalls, a novel feature that never went any further.
At a little more than 200 inches long but less than 50 inches tall, the Rocket sported an impressively low silhouette, which required some ingenuity in the packaging of the two-seat cabin. For easier entry and egress, a roof panel popped up when the door was opened on either side, while the steering wheel rim swung upward and the bucket seats rose three inches and pivoted on their mountings. Upholstery was blue and gold leather, while the speedometer was housed in the steering wheel hub. The lap belts and driver pedals display a strong aircraft influence.
While the Rocket seems to be one of the more obscure GM dream cars in current times, it did include some ideas that turned up later on the General’s production models. The stubby rocket-type tailfins would adorn some memorable Cadillacs of the early ’60s, while the split-window teardrop rear window is extremely familiar. It was next tried on a dead-ended 1958 Corvette styling proposal, then famously appeared on the 1963 Corvette Sting Ray coupe. As with a number of GM Motorama dream cars, the fate of the Golden Rocket was not officially documented, reportedly, but it hasn’t been seen or heard from in years and is presumed destroyed.
I like the segmented whitewalls.
Having fuel tanks in the rear fenders sounds like a not-super-good idea with repect to safety. The steering wheel with (apparently) no central support column might have been a positive safety feature. It is, of course, difficult to evaluate either concept based on a sketchy description and photos, which is probably all that is available now.
I’m guessing the aerodynamic design results in very little storage trunk space, especially after having to put a spare tire in it. Perhaps a “dream car” shouldn’t BE practical — and, of course, one would never subject a dream car to crash tests.
The 58-60 Thunderbird, and especially the 61-63 Thunderbird dash to console must have been influenced by this car; 61 T-Bird dash below;
https://static.cargurus.com/images/site/2012/03/20/10/10/1961_ford_thunderbird-pic-901110930913974650-1600×1200.jpeg
The winglets above the rear wheel arches spoil the side view. And the front says lift! 100mph and the front wheels would not be on the ground!
Dont quite know about that steering wheel, with power steering probably fine but without it would flex bad!
The front reminded me of the early 50s Studebaker.