• News
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • Media
  • About
  • News
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • Media
  • About
Sign up Now (For Free)

Sign up for our newsletter and receive the latest automotive news in your inbox!

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Thanks for subscribing!
News
Read Now
  • All News
  • Automakers
  • Automobiles
  • Auto Shows
  • Business
  • EVs & Environment
  • Guides
  • Lawsuits/Legal
  • Regulatory
  • Ride-Sharing
  • Safety & Recalls
  • Technology
Recent
  • Sales of New Vehicles Show Big Increase During May
  • Lucid Gets $3 Billion Lifeline, Mostly from Saudi Arabia
  • Faraday Future Reveals Launch Edition of the FF 91
  • UAW Plans to Get Aggressive for Coming Auto Talks
  • Toyota Plans to Build New All-Electric SUV in Kentucky in 2025
  • Stellantis Needs to Build Two Additional U.S. Battery plants, Tavares Says
  • EPA Releases Alfa Romeo Tonale Ratings
  • First Look: 2024 Chevrolet Colorado ZR2 Bison
  • NHTSA End its Tesla Gaming Inquiry Without a Recall
  • Bridgestone Puts Recycled Plastic into Indy 500 Tires
Editor’s Choice
    Reviews
    Read Now
    • All Reviews
      • Feeder
    • Classic Cars
    • Concept Cars
    • Convertibles
    • Coupes
    • Crossovers/CUVs
    • Diesel
    • Hot hatches
    • Hybrids
    • Luxury Vehicles
    • Minivans
    • Muscle Cars
    • Pickups
    • Sedans
    • Sports Cars
    • Super Cars
    • SUVs
    Recent Reviews
    • A Week With: 2023 Lexus NX 350h Luxury
    • A Week With: 2023 Volkswagen Tiguan SEL R-Line
    • First Drive: 2024 Toyota Grand Highlander
    • A Week With: 2023 Ford Mustang Mach-E Premium RWD
    • A Week With: 2023 Electrified GV70 AWD Prestige
    • A Week With: 2023 BMW XM
    • A Week With: 2023 Mercedes-Benz GLS 580 4Matic
    • First Drive: 2024 Audi Q8 e-Tron Prestige
    • First Drive: 2024 Volvo C40 Recharge Single Motor
    • A Week With: 2023 Ford Bronco Everglades Edition
    Editor’s Choice
      Guides
      Car Warranty
      • Endurance Warranty Reviews
      • BMW Extended Warranty
      • Extended Warranty For Cars Over 100k Miles
      • Extended Car Warranty Cost
      • Subaru Extended Warranty
      • CarShield Reviews
      • CarShield Cost
      • Aftermarket Car Warranty
      • CARCHEX Warranty Reviews
      • Reputable Extended Car Warranty Companies
      • Used Car Warranty Companies
      • Best Car Warranty
      • Is CarShield A Scam?
      • Mercedes Extended Warranty
      • CarShield Plans
      Insurance
      • How To Identify A Car Insurance Company
      • Geico Mechanical Breakdown Insurance
      • How Far Back Does A Car Insurance Company Look
      • Mechanical Breakdown Insurance For Used Cars
      • State Farm Mechanical Breakdown Insurance
      • Mechanical Breakdown Insurance From Progressive
      • Dollar A Day Insurance
      • Auto Insurance For SSI Recipients
      • Car Insurance Rates After A Suspended License
      • Auto Insurance For Salvage Vehicles
      • Average Cost of Dodge Ram 1500 Car Insurance
      • Car Insurance Florida
      • Full Coverage Auto Insurance
      • GrubHub Insurance
      • Amazon Delivery Auto Insurance
      Shipping
      • Car Shipping Companies
      • uShip Reviews
      • Auto Shipping From California To Hawaii
      • Montway Auto Transport Reviews
      • Cheap Car Shipping
      • Easy Auto Ship Reviews
      • Auto Shipping Miami
      • Auto Shipping To Alaska
      • Car Shipping Cost
      • Auto Shipping Hawaii
      • Auto Shipping Puerto Rico
      • Sherpa Auto Transport Reviews
      • Auto Shipping Atlanta
      • Auto Shipping Boston
      • Auto Shipping. Chicago
      About
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Terms of Use
      • Privacy Policy
      • Affiliate Disclosure
      • Sitemap
      TheDetroitBureau.com

      More than just “another” place to find news, reviews, spy shots, commentary, features, and guides about the auto industry. TheDetroitBureau doesn’t stop with the press releases or confuse a few lines of opinion with insightful, in-depth reporting.

      Contact Us

      Like what you see? Have some ideas for making The Detroit Bureau.com even better? Let us know, we’d love to hear your voice.

        Media
        Listen Now
        • Headlight News: All Episodes
        More from TheDetroitBureau
        • Guides
        • Latest News
        • Auto Reviews
        • Podcasts
        Headlight News

        TheDetroitBureau.com’s Headlight News offers a look at the past week’s top automotive news stories, as well as what’s coming up in the week ahead. Check out the week’s top story and our latest review…along with a dive into the past with this week in automotive history.

        home > news > History > The Rearview Mirror: The Birth of DeLorean

        The Rearview Mirror: The Birth of DeLorean

        A maverick GM executive builds an ’80s cultural icon.

        Larry Printz
        Larry Printz , Assistant Managing Editor
        Oct. 29, 2022

        It’s the car everyone knows, now an indelible part of the American cultural fabric: the DeLorean DMC-12 coupe.

        Its star turn in the 1985 Robert Zemeckis movie, “Back to The Future” starring Michael J. Fox enshrined it as an icon of the 1980s. And the company that built the car, DeLorean Motor Co., was established this week in 1975. And its beginning starts with an ending.

        Walking away from General Motors

        The 1981 DeLorean DMC-12 featured gullwing doors. Photo Credit: RM Sothebys

        April Fools Day, 1973; John DeLorean arrives at New York’s Waldorf Towers feeling numb. 

        “In less than 17 years, I had risen from being a greenhorn engineer at the Pontiac Division to an office on the prestigious Fourteenth Floor in General Motors’ World Headquarters in midtown Detroit,” DeLorean wrote in his book, “On A Clear Day You Can See General Motors.” “At 48, there are a better than even-odds chance of one day being President. But I was about to toss all that away.”

        Sitting in his room that Sunday night, DeLorean was acting on a feeling that had come to him gradually: the thought that innovation at General Motors had long since stopped. What the company was selling consumers was the same old thing.

        “There was no reason for them to change from one model to the next, except for the new wrinkles in the sheet metal, which to me wasn’t sufficient,” he recalled. 

        The next day, he went to the General Motors Building at 59th and Fifth Avenue in New York City, entered the 24th-floor office of GM Chairman Richard C. Gerstenberg, and handed in his resignation. The meeting lasted 20 minutes, after which DeLorean wasn’t in the car business for the first time in 25 years. But it wouldn’t stay that way for long.

        A new life and a new car

        Italian designer Giorgetto Giugiaro created the look of the 1981 DeLorean DMC-12. Photo Credit: RM Sothebys

        A GM maverick at a time when conformity was highly prized, DeLorean was always known for his relative flamboyance compared to most GM executives; he had dated Ursula Andress, Joey Heatherton and Tina Sinatra in the late ’60s. Now free of GM, the 48-year-old DeLorean married 28-year-old supermodel Cristina Ferrare in Los Angeles, and moved to New York City where he started his next venture: the DeLorean Motor Co.

        After obtaining seed money from Bank of America, he began developing his car, tapping Italian designer Giorgetto Giugiaro to shape its look. Giugiaro had penned the Lotus Esprit and Ferrari 250 GT SWB Bertone sports cars, among many others. For DeLorean, he penned a wedge-shaped coupe based on the 1970 Porsche Tapiro concept car he had created, with a stainless-steel body and gullwing doors. 

        Underneath the wedge-shaped, stainless-steel skin, DeLorean proposed a mid-engine car built using a fiberglass chassis, and sought the assistance of Colin Chapman, the founder of Lotus Cars. What evolved was a rear-engine car with a conventional chassis developed by former Pontiac colleague Bill Collins, who was part of the development team of the wildly successful Pontiac GTO.

        Power came from a 2.9-liter V-6 engine developed for use by Peugeot, Renault and Volvo. Mated to a 5-speed manual or a 3-speed automatic transmission, it generated 130 horsepower and returned 22 mpg according to contemporary accounts. That’s about the same as a diesel-powered 1981 Cadillac Brougham.

        Financial pressure mounts

        The 1981 DeLorean DMC-12 came in one color: stainless steel. Photo Credit: RM Sothebys

        As the prototype was developed, DeLorean was deciding on where to build it. Before reaching a tentative agreement with the U.S. Department of Commerce and the government of Puerto Rico to develop a plant on a former Air Force base, he courted officials from Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Canada, and Spain.

        The Puerto Rico deal included a 90% tax exemption for 15 years with possible renewals in exchange for the 2,000 jobs, $20 million payroll and 3,000 related jobs the plant would produce. 

        All seemed set until DeLorean received another offer, this one from the British government offering $100 million in British government loans to build a factory in Dunmurry, Northern Ireland near Belfast in the heart of Northern Ireland. Despite the violent sectarian conflict occuring there, DeLorean chose Northern Ireland. But financial pressures loomed.

        “Once the project had come to Northern Ireland, it was quite clear that we were going to run out of money the day we produced the first car,” says Barrie Wills, DMC’s director of purchasing and supply at the time told Forbes magazine.  

        The arrival of the DMC-12

        The 1981 DeLorean DMC-12’s rear-mounted 6-cylinder engine produced 130 horsepower. Photo Credit: RM Sothebys

        Production was expected to begin in 1979, but engineering delays and budget overruns would delay it until 1981. DeLorean wanted the car to be sold for $12,000, which is why it’s called the DMC-12. It ended up selling for $25,000, rising to $29,825 in 1982 and $34,000 in 1983.

        That put it up against the faster Chevrolet Corvette and close to that of the more luxurious Mercedes-Benz SL by 1983. An even-pricier version appeared in the 1980 American Express Christmas catalog, which advertised a DeLorean plated in 24-karat gold for $85,000. Seven people put down deposits.

        Nevertheless, when the DMC-12 did arrive, the automotive media approved. 

        “Giugiaro’s rounded-doorstop sculpture looks magnificent in the flesh, and the machinery is good enough to spark a fiery love affair after one quick drive around the block. The DeLorean is not a hard-edged answer to the 911 Porsche, nor is it another fatuous Corvette-clone,” wrote Don Sherman, in his initial review of the car in 1981. 

        “The handling is safe and satisfying, the V-6 engine surprisingly mellow in its newest assignment. The interior is roomy, comfortable, and reasonably well thought out. Most important, the DeLorean passes the critical enthusiast’s test: it’s fun to drive.” 

        The pressure that never subsided

        About 9,000 DeLorean DMC-12s were built. Photo Credit: RM Sothebys

        But money problems persisted. Building the cars in Ireland led to a three-week delay until they reached the United States. And a poor exchange rate cost the company dearly. 

        A plan to go public would have raised a much-needed $120 million, but England’s prime minister wouldn’t hear of it. They had been given $100 million, and wouldn’t be given any more. Nor would the government allow them to go public. Within a year of starting production, the company was in trouble. 

        By October 1982, the money problem had grown so bad, John DeLorean was detained after agreeing to fund a fictitious cocaine smuggling operation in the hopes that it would bring in more money for his business. DMC entered into bankruptcy a week later. Production lasted ended in 1983 after approximately 9,000 cars were built. 

        DeLorean would be acquitted of charges two years later, but would never return to the car business. DeLorean would be forced to sell his nearly 500-acre New Jersey estate. Purchased by Donald Trump, it’s now a Trump National Golf Club. His wife divorced him, taking their children with her. DeLorean ended up living in a one-bedroom apartment in Bedminster with his fourth wife, Sally. He died on March 19, 1980, at age 80.

        Back to the Future - Doc Marty and DeLorean
        Back to the Future – the DeLorean DMC-12 with co-stars Christopher Lloyd and Michael J. Fox.

        The car that will not die

        Yet even as DeLorean’s star faded, his car didn’t. Director Roger Zemeckis’s 1985 film, “Back to the Future,” starring Michael J. Fox as a teenager who travels back in time using a using a plutonium-powered DeLorean, reignited interest in the car. This proved fortunate for the revived DeLorean Motor Co.

        Formed in Ohio from the remnants of the failed automaker, the firm sold leftover DeLoreans, and boasted a stockpile of 4 million original parts left from cars that were never built.

        More than a decade later, a Texas-based business run by Stephen Wynne, a Liverpool-born mechanic specializing in DeLoreans purchased the name’s rights as well as a sizable percentage of DMC’s spare parts and tooling in 1995 and began restoring DeLoreans. They also sold other branded goods. 

        The name of the business? DeLorean Motor Co. 

        Rendering of the DeLorean Model-JZD, scheduled to debut in a year from now.

        John DeLorean’s heirs sued, and after years of legal wrangling, came to an agreement this year, clearing the way for the car to return to production sometime in the future using an all-electric powertrain and dubbed the Alpha 5.

        But the feud is far from finished.

        Kat DeLorean, John DeLorean’s daughter, posted on her Instragram account that DeLorean Motor Co. is “not John DeLorean’s Company. DMC is not 40 years old, and not associated with the DeLorean Family, or my father’s ongoing legacy. Please stop lying and stop speaking about John now, he despised you.”

        This appears as DeLorean Next Generation Motors announced that “Kat DeLorean, daughter of legendary automotive engineer John DeLorean is following in her father’s footsteps by building a new sports car. This historic endeavor will be filled with some of the top automotive minds in the industry, alongside a portion of the original team that helped create the first iconic DeLorean more than 40 years ago.”

        Named the Model-JZD in honor of John Zachary DeLorean, is expected to be unveiled by the end of 2023 and will be buillt in Detroit.

        How to Care for Your Car

        Cheap Car Warranty

        Editor's Choice

        Best Extended Car Warranty

        Editor's Choice
        Recently Published
        Honda-Dealership

        Sales of New Vehicles Show Big Increase During May

        Today
        Lucid Air Grand Touring front grey

        Lucid Gets $3 Billion Lifeline, Mostly from Saudi Arabia

        Today
        FF 91 2.0 Futurist Alliance

        Faraday Future Reveals Launch Edition of the FF 91

        Today

        Leave a Reply Cancel reply

        Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

        Share this article:
        © The Detroit Bureau 2023
        • Guides
        • Privacy Policy
        • Terms of Use
        • Affiliate Disclosure
        • Contact Us
        • Sitemap
        Follow Us: