Gerald Wiegert
Gerald Wiegert | |
---|---|
Wiegert with a mock-up prototype of the Vector WX-8 at the 2007 Greater Los Angeles Auto Show | |
Born |
Gerald Alden Wiegert 1945 (age 70–71) Dearborn, Michigan, USA |
Education | Transportation design, vehicle and product design[1] |
Alma mater |
Center for Creative Studies[1] Art Center College of Design[1] Northrop University[2] |
Occupation |
Entrepreneur Vehicle engineer and designer |
Years active | 1970 – present |
Gerald Alden "Jerry" Wiegert (born 1945) is an American automotive engineer and businessman. He is notable as the founder of two companies, Vector Motors and Aquajet, and designing the products marketed by those companies.
Wiegert initially became well known the late 1970s when he began development of The Vector, a high-performance sports car intended to be America's answer to European cars such as Ferrari, Lamborghini, and Porsche.[3] This concept would be further developed into the Vector W8 supercar, which was manufactured and sold between 1989 and 1993.
Life and career
During his youth, Wiegert developed an interest in automobiles and aerospace. During high school, he won a design contest that provided a full scholarship for University design courses and encouraged him to pursue engineering as a career. In 1970 he began his career in the automotive industry by working as a design consultant at Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors; in 1971 he formed Vehicle Design Force to develop an American supercar.[4] The first concept car,an inoperable design study, to be built by this company was called "The Vector." Wiegert announced that the Vector would use the Wankel rotary engine and that it would be priced at $100,000. The concept appeared on the cover of Motor Trend, and after evolving over a period of several years, first as the Vector W2, it entered the market as the Vector W8.
In the 1990s, Wiegert entered a fight with Megatech, who initiated a hostile takeover and eventually fired him from the company. At this time, Wiegert founded Aquajet, a personal watercraft company. Company literature markets Aquajet's Jetbike models as handling like "motorcycles for the water"; they also incorporate futuristic styling cues. The Jetbike has won many awards such as Boating Week's Innovation Award Winner 2000 and Winner of the National Marine Manufacturers Association's top product award. The Jetbike has been featured on Beyond 2000, The Extremists, Planet X, The Next Step, and on C-Net.
Wiegert, via the courts, eventually won back the assets, trademarks, and copyrights to Vector Motors, and in 2008, revived the Vector brand name and began development of a new supercar named the WX-8.
References
- 1 2 3 Griffin, Larry (December 1980). "Vector W2: This is Wiegert at War, and we wish him Godspeed.". Car and Driver.
- ↑ "Company Information: Biography of Gerald Wiegert". vectormotors.com. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
- ↑ Linde, Arvid (May 11, 2011). Preston Tucker and Others: Tales of Brilliant Automotive Innovators and Innovations. Veloce Publishing Ltd. pp. 77–81. ISBN 9781845844318.
- ↑ Kott, Douglas (April 1991). "Vector W8 Twin Turbo: First Drive". Road and Track.
Further reading
- Cheetham, Craig. Supercars: The World's Most Exotic Sports Cars (2003)
External links
- Vector Supercars
- Aquajet official site
- Vector Aeromotive Club