Manta Mirage | |
Manufacturer: | Manta Cars |
Production: | 1974-1986 |
Class: | Sports car |
Layout: | RMR layout |
Engine: | Chevrolet small-block V8 |
Transmission: | Chevrolet Corvair transaxle |
Wheelbase: | 960NaN0 |
Length: | 1600NaN0 |
Width: | 750NaN0 |
Height: | 390NaN0 |
Weight: | From 19000NaN0 with engine |
Designer: | Brad LoVette |
Manta Cars was owned and operated by American brothers Brad and Tim LoVette, and was located in Costa Mesa, California, from 1974 to 1986 (Manta Cars moved their production facility and showroom to 2914 Halladay Avenue, Santa Ana, California around 1980). Manta produced the Manta Mirage, and later produced other component kit cars, including the rear-engined Volkswagen Beetle-based Manta Montage, and the mid-engined Montage-T, which had a custom space frame chassis and used GM X-body V6 drivetrains. The Montage-T recreated the elusive McLaren M6GT.
A very accurate reproduction of the classic 1953 Corvette was to be added to their product line, and although a prototype was built, Manta Cars ceased production in 1986, having sold about 1,000 factory-built and component cars.The Manta Mirage was an American mid-engined vehicle produced by Manta Cars. The Mirage, originally referred to as just the "Manta", or the "Manta Can-Am", was a lightweight, road-legal racing car. The Mirage's steel space frame chassis was fitted with a high-output V8 engine and four-speed transaxle. Most Mirages were equipped with or Chevrolet small-block V8 engines, and several vehicles were fitted with V8s sourced from Chevrolet, as well as V8 engines sourced from Ford. The original Mirage design mated the Chevy V8 to a Corvair transaxle via a Kelmark adapter and remote shifter. The bodywork was all hand-laid fiberglass, colored in a range of gel-coat colors. Gull-wing doors were fitted to a removable top section, while the doors flip forward for entry. With curb weights as light as, the cars could be built by the factory or their owners to be extremely fast.
The Mirage was one of the 48 cars stolen in the original 1974 movie version of Gone In 60 Seconds, directed by H.B. Halicki. One can also be seen in Halicki's 1983 film Deadline Auto Theft.
A modified Manta Montage, built by Mike Fennel and Unique Movie Cars, was the car in the first season of the 1983 TV show Hardcastle and McCormick. A Montage also appeared in the 1991 movie Highway To Hell. A Manta Mirage is modified in the History Channels Counting Cars episode "Red, Hot and Dangerous".
Note: Manta Mirages do not appear in the 1975 movie Death Race 2000. These cars were a basic Canam style built on a VW pan, and were built by Dick Dean.