You can usually find a great leader by the subsequent accomplishments of those who were inspired. If Timbs did meet up with Preston Tucker and decided to build his own car, he certainly wouldn't be the last one to try and do so. From the Chicago Sunday Times, 4-23-1949:


I wouldn't be surprised, though, if it didn't start out as a Tucker sportscar proposal, and then grew a whole new identity as things began to unravel at Tucker Corp. The model looked unfinished and unpainted in the May 1948 photo and the Neidlinger-Tremulis newspaper article wasn't until April, 1949. So what happened in-between, I'm not sure. I've seen this model described elsewhere as the "Tremulis Nightlinger" car, but even though that would be a great name, I think that was a mispronunciation of "Neidlinger". In any case, Pontiac Studios was hired to photograph Alex and the model:

As Alex would say, his completed designs are best looked at through a rear-view mirror. So, in the interest of keeping the design new and fresh, and not having Photoshop at his disposal, he took his pen to the studio photos. In this case he wanted to work over the front fenders and the top.




From there he went back to the drawing board to incorporate his new concepts into the final rendering, complete with wind brakes and racing cockpit fairing:

The original model was reworked to add the fenders to the front and repainted. He also built the removable port-holed moon-roofed hardtop to go with it:

It then resurfaced at K-F where it was used in several of their promotional pieces illustrating their version of the Car of the Future at Kaiser-Frazer:


And here's Tremulis at K-F with the finished model on his credenza.

And the drawing on the boards at the time was billed as another one you'll never own...

Tuckeroo, have you got more info on the model at Tucker Corp.? By the way, you've been blasting those AutoPuzzles...
SuperFleye, I can't wait to see what you uncover with the Timbs-Tucker connection...
TuckerCar,
