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From the Corvette Art Collection of Automotive Artist K. Scott Teeters
1998 Indy 500 Pace Car Corvette Pacing the Indy 500 For the 4th Time!
About the Print
This parchment paper art print measures 11" x 17".
Signed & numbered by the artist in a series of 500.
Every print is shrink wrapped on corrugated cardboard so that it stays flat and clean.
A delightful gift for the home or office of that special, hard to buy for Corvette person in your life!
Here's what one of our other prints looks like shrink wrapped.
About the Packing & Shipping We pack all of our prints in a flat cardboard box.
Packages are sent via USPS Priority Mail for speedy delivery.
All print orders are processed in 1 to 2 business days.
We will ship world-wide, but rates are based on your location.
For outside the U.S. shipping, e-mail lightoak@comcast.net for a shipping quote and include your name and FULL mailing address.
About the Car On This Print
Here's the story about this car from Scott's monthly column in VETTE Magazine, The Illustrated Corvette Series.
What we didn’t know in 1997 was that there was to be a three-stage rollout for the new Corvette. First, there was the big-splash introduction of the C5 in ’97 - the first new edition in 13 years. The following year, the ‘98 convertible stunned the motoring press, whose members seemed unprepared for such a well-rounded car. And finally, in ‘99 we saw the arrival of the new Corvette hardtop. This was the first fixed-roof Vette since 1967.
Automotive journalists were simply enraptured by the ’99 model. Car and Driver magazine voted the car to its “10 Best Cars of 1999” list, while the readers of AutoWeek magazine voted it “Best Car of the Year.” You can’t buy advertising like that! When testers can only complain about flimsy seatback latches or having to get out to put the top down, it’s clear that all the fundamental elements of a design are in place.
All of this netted GM increased sales for ‘99. Even though the base price was increased $1,667, to $39,171, buyers drove home 33,270 Corvettes, up 2,186 from 1998. The GM bean counters were very happy.
The other big news for 1999 was the Corvette’s return to factory-supported racing. Chevrolet contracted race-car builders Pratt & Miller to build two C5-R Corvettes to compete against the Vipers, Porsches, Ferraris, and others in production-based racing classes. The C5-R had 600 horsepower and weighed 2,510 pounds, paving the way for the 2006 C6.R Corvette racer. The ‘63 Grand Sport lives on.
Chevrolet has a reputation for regular evolutionary improvements and an occasional revolutionary leap. Aside from the introduction of the hardtop version of the car, the ’99 Corvette had three new options and a host of minor improvements. The “Telescoping Steering Column” option allowed a 20mm forward-to-aft adjustment for only $350. For $375, buyers could order the “Head Up Instrument Display,” which projected all or partial instrument information onto the base of the windshield. And for only $60, customers could get the “Twilight Sentinel,” which used a low-light sensor to automatically open the headlight covers and turn on the lights. Minor improvements included a new door-sill plate and improved, “next-generation” airbags. Aside from a revised cylinder-head design, the 345hp LS1 engine was unchanged.
Since the ‘99 Corvette didn’t gain or lose any weight, and the engine was the same, performance was as spectacular as on the ‘98 model: 0-to-60 in just 4.8 seconds, 13.2 in the quarter-mile, and a top speed of 175 mph.
Also, by ’99 “specialty” C5 Corvettes had started showing up from Mallett, Lingenfelter, Callaway and others. You could say that the Corvette definitely had its “mojo” back!
A Personal Note From the Artist...
I am often asked, how I got into drawing cars. Well, I was one of those guys in school that was always drawing cars on my book covers and along the margins of my notes. When I graduated from Collingswood High School (in Collingswood, NJ), I thought I wanted to be a draftsman. It didn't take long for me to realize that my heart belonged to illustration.
I kept drawing drag racing and muscle cars and in 1975 had my first illustration published in "Drag Racing USA" magazine, and have never stopped.
Eventually, in the early '80s, I went to Philadelphia College of Art and studied illustration. After I put together a portfolio, I began my freelance career. In the early '90s I had the unique opportunity to work in the "Boys Toys" R&D Department at Tyco Toys where I worked on Tyco RC, Tyco HO, Matchbox, and Matchbox Collectibles product lines. Not only did I have receive a first-rate education in product design and development, I worked with some of the most talented and creative people I have ever known.
No, it wasn't like the Tom Hanks movie, "BIG," but I did share many wacky times there.
All along though, I kept my hand in the magazine biz and am currently a contributing artist and writer for "VETTE Magazine". And I now produce a monthly online newsletter called "The Corvette Report" with all kinds of juicy tidbits for the Corvette enthusiast.
I also enjoy researching the best mix of cool gear and art for motorhead enthusiasts of all ages and maintaining and updating the the Corvette Gear eBay store, as well as our other websites that are listed below
Thanks for stopping by and please bookmarks us!
Scott
Got a question?
Send an e-mail to the busy guy below.
Thanks for considering buying from us.
You can learn more about us by clicking the "Meet the Seller" link towards the top of this listing.
This eBay store was created in October 2007. We have another eBay store, "Dude's Motorhead Shop" that has been open for business since April 9, 2000, has over 1,776 feedbacks, and a 100% positive feedback.
Also, you can visit our IllustratedCorvetteSeries.com website where we have hundreds of Corvette art prints from the first Vette in 1953 to today's Corvette. All illustrated by automotive artist, K. Scott Teeters.
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