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Gene Winfield's Reactor: "The Jupiter 8"

Scott Kellogg

Commander
Red Shirt
Hey Folks,


The discussion on “Bread and Circuses” got me reading up on the car featured in that episode,
The Reactor, built by Gene Winfield, alias the “Jupiter 8”

It was built by Gene Winfield, the creator of the Shuttlecraft for TOS. And it’s actually a fully functional car.
REACTOR0003.jpg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Reactor_(show_rod)


The Reactor was an ambitious aluminum-bodied project. It was a mid-engined front wheel drive two seater, with a very low profile due to the Corvair Chevrolet Turbo-Air 6 engine flat six. It showcased a light aluminum body, like the Strip Star, but the technology went far beyond its novel bodywork. Winfield took the 180 hp (130 kW) turbocharged engine from a Corvair Corsa and mated it to the drivetrain from a Citroën DS (the futuristic French sedan), and retained the height adjustable Hydropneumatic suspension of the DS. (There’s conflicting information as to if it was a Citroën DS or a DI)

Citroën DS
Bornholm_Rundt_2012_%282012-07-08%29%2C_by_Klugschnacker_modified.jpg

The Citroën suspension allows the car to be raised from 4 inches to 9 & 1/2 inches on a liquid-air suspension. It has a hand crafted aluminum body, sequential taillights, electric doors and hood, four speed front wheel drive transmission.

The Reactor was built in 1964 for $20,000, and displayed at the Hartford Autorama. The buyer then sold the car back to Winfield for considerably less. Winfield brought The Reactor to Hollywood in 1966. “I didn’t know anybody” according to Winfield. He managed to show the car to the 20th Century Fox Studios transportation coordinator, and within two weeks the unique car had landed a television role.


It appeared in:
  • Bewitched, episode "Super Car" S3 E19 (The entire episode is written around the car.)
  • Star Trek, episode "Bread and Circuses" (as the Jupiter 8) S2 E25
  • Batman, episode "The Funny Feline Felonies" (as the Catmobile) S3 E16 (With cat ears, nose and tail bolted on)
  • "Mission: Impossible", episode "The Freeze”

Recently, the car has been featured at Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance.

Gene Winfield’s work can be seen on Get Smart (The Sunbeam Tiger), the “Star Car” from The Last Starfighter, the “6000 SUX” from Robocop, the bubbletop cars from Sleeper, and 25 vehicles for Bladerunner (With Syd Mead.) And of course, the Shuttlecraft from TOS Star Trek.
Catwoman-car.jpg


A good article on the car can be found at:
https://kustomrama.com/wiki/Reactor
 
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The car got a write-up in the Fall 1965 issue of Popular Customs magazine. (These pages are excerpted from a longer article about Gene Winfield. Click on image for link to full-size version.)


. . . It was built by Gene Winfield, the creator of the Shuttlecraft for TOS.
Gene Winfield headed AMT's Speed and Custom Division Shop in Phoenix, AZ, which built the shuttlecraft mockup. But calling him its "creator" is a bit of a stretch. The shuttlecraft was primarily designed by Thomas Kellogg, with additions by Star Trek art director Matt Jefferies.

It appeared in:

. . . Batman, episode "The Funny Feline Felonies" (as the Catmobile) S3 E16 (With cat ears, nose and tail bolted on)

pcVtJ0Um.jpg

Oh, the indignity! :wah:
 
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Dean Jeffries' Manta Ray custom car was used in that Mission: Impossible episode. The two cars are somewhat similar in appearance.
RZznJM3.jpg
Similar? I guess that's in the eye of the beholder. One has big exposed back wheels and the other has the back wheels behind body panels. One has a clear top and the other doesn't.
 
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The car got a write-up in the Fall 1965 issue of Popular Customs magazine. (These pages are excerpted from a longer article about Gene Winfield. Click on image for link to full-size version.)
Neat stuff! Thank you!
Now I can see where the headlight popouts were.
Come to think of it: Square Headlights would have been really unusual in 1964.

It's kind of sad: When I was little, I thought that all cars would look like this by 2020.
Instead, everything looks like a sneaker with no sharp edges like a toddler's toy so he won't hurt his siblings when he throws it at them.

Scott
 
To me, somehow the Manta Ray looks like it inspired several Hot Wheels designs from the same era.

I agree, the Silhouette for one, except for the fenders.

Come to think of it: Square Headlights would have been really unusual in 1964.

Very unusual, and illegal for public road use in the US.

It's kind of sad: When I was little, I thought that all cars would look like this by 2020.

Well thank God they don't, people still need somewhere to put their luggage!
 
I was thinking the front end looks like the front end of the Twin Mill.

Yeah, I forgot that one, but I definitely had one.

Square headlights were illegal in the US? Huh! I wonder why?

I think it was so the feds didn't have to keep evaluating and certifying new designs. You could have two 7 inch or (after 1957) four 5 ¾ inch circular lights, and that was it until 1975. I remember clearly the first time I saw a car with rectangular headlights, it was a brown Cadillac in the parking lot of a local department store. My aunt was pissed, too, because they had bought a black Grand Prix the year before the change and now it looked out of date.
 
To me, somehow the Manta Ray looks like it inspired several Hot Wheels designs from the same era.
I agree, the Silhouette for one, except for the fenders.
The Silhouette was actually a full-size, functional custom car built by Bill Cushenbery in 1963. AMT made a model kit of it and it was featured in the movie Beach Ball (1965).

zLFWNP0.jpg
 
The Silhouette was actually a full-size, functional custom car built by Bill Cushenbery in 1963. AMT made a model kit of it and it was featured in the movie Beach Ball (1965).

Cool, I did not know that.
 
See, I always through Trek shoulda rented one of those weird show cars, removed the wheels and put some spacey doohickuss in their place and make it a one or two person shuttle or something.
 
Do you suppose that the Jupiter-8 was in any way named
after Star Trek's contemporary main competition?

I doubt it. It was the 20th-century Rome planet, after all, so the car was named after the king of the Roman pantheon.

Although I admit there was a time in my life when I got the names confused and thought the Lost in Space ship was the Jupiter 8.
 
See, I always through Trek shoulda rented one of those weird show cars, removed the wheels and put some spacey doohickuss in their place and make it a one or two person shuttle or something.
That’s what I used to do to spacy looking hot wheels...tear off the wheels with my Dad’s pliers and try to fill them with something. My parents thought I was insane when I said wheels ruin the look of the car. I used to discard the pilots from toy planes too...the back of this reminds me of the new Batmobile...now just a muscle car..,
 
I so regret parting with all my Hot Wheels and Matchbook cars when I was a young man getting rid of "childish things." Stupid!
 
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