Project X Comes to PRI 2021

Click Here to Begin Slideshow Chevrolet Performance and MotorTrend brought their electric collaboration, Project X, to the 2021 Performance Racing Industry show in Indianapolis to give race and performance enthusiasts a taste of the future of engine swaps and rebuilds. With a two hour, press and donuts meet and great on Friday morning, it's clear that the canary hot rod is intended to bridge gaps and demonstrate proof of concept for the internal combustion loving crowd. Project X, a bright yellow 1957 Chevy, was a longtime testbed for MotorTrend's HOT ROD magazine and its ensuing video channels. Purchased in 1965 for $250, the Chevy sedan has tested new products, new tech and trends for decades. It's been rebuilt, reshaped and reimagined over the years with V-8, inline-sixes, and used carbs, fuel injection and supercharging, each of which represented the future of motorsports. Now, this variation of Project X, which debuted at SEMA 2021, is a showpiece for the electric crate engine. Chevrolet Performance, MotorTrend and Cagnazzi Racing came together to build a "hot rod" chevy that delivers an estimated 340 horsepower with an electric motor. “Project X has always served the car community by pushing the envelope with groundbreaking technologies,” said Douglas Glad, group content director, MotorTrend Group. “As the auto industry shifts rapidly toward electric vehicles, this Project X build is just the latest in its celebrated legacy of adapting hot rodding to the powerful technology of tomorrow.” Cagnazzi Racing paired the 340 horsepower and 330 lb-ft of torque electric engine powered by a 400-volt proof-of-concept lithium-ion battery which stores 30 kilowatt-hours of electricity, all with a quick-change differential to adjust for use. The engine required an electric brake booster and electrohydraulic power steering pump, all riding on the sixth-generation Corvette front suspension installed in 2007. The vehicle was then lowered by roughly 2 inches. Less weight under the hood and more weight over the rear axle meant installing softer front springs and stiffer rear springs. “We are racers and hot rodders, with deep roots in internal-combustion racing engines,” said Vic Cagnazzi, owner of Cagnazzi Racing. “But we see this next leap into EV performance propulsion as a natural evolution for hot rodding. Our goal with this conversion was to maintain the look and integrity of the classic hot rod, while modernizing the propulsion technology.” Bringing the vehicle to the Performance Racing Industry show allows Chevrolet Performance to demonstrate their commitment to the heart of their industry -- the race and performance enthusiast. Demonstrating to lovers of speed, power and torque -- particularly on the track -- that the eCrate engine can play with the big dogs is essential. And while there's still the rumbling and grumbling over the roar of the engine, the smell of gasoline, and the inevitability of change, it seems that enthusiasts are having actual conversations about the benefits and drawbacks of electric conversions, driven in part by cars like Project X. Click Here to Begin Slideshow

Project X Comes to PRI

Click Here to Begin Slideshow

Chevrolet Performance and MotorTrend brought their electric collaboration, Project X, to the 2021 Performance Racing Industry show in Indianapolis to give race and performance enthusiasts a taste of the future of engine swaps and rebuilds. With a two hour, press and donuts meet and great on Friday morning, it's clear that the canary hot rod is intended to bridge gaps and demonstrate proof of concept for the internal combustion loving crowd.

Project X, a bright yellow 1957 Chevy, was a longtime testbed for MotorTrend's HOT ROD magazine and its ensuing video channels. Purchased in 1965 for $250, the Chevy sedan has tested new products, new tech and trends for decades. It's been rebuilt, reshaped and reimagined over the years with V-8, inline-sixes, and used carbs, fuel injection and supercharging, each of which represented the future of motorsports. Now, this variation of Project X, which debuted at SEMA 2021, is a showpiece for the electric crate engine. Chevrolet Performance, MotorTrend and Cagnazzi Racing came together to build a "hot rod" chevy that delivers an estimated 340 horsepower with an electric motor.

“Project X has always served the car community by pushing the envelope with groundbreaking technologies,” said Douglas Glad, group content director, MotorTrend Group. “As the auto industry shifts rapidly toward electric vehicles, this Project X build is just the latest in its celebrated legacy of adapting hot rodding to the powerful technology of tomorrow.”

Cagnazzi Racing paired the 340 horsepower and 330 lb-ft of torque electric engine powered by a 400-volt proof-of-concept lithium-ion battery which stores 30 kilowatt-hours of electricity, all with a quick-change differential to adjust for use.

The engine required an electric brake booster and electrohydraulic power steering pump, all riding on the sixth-generation Corvette front suspension installed in 2007. The vehicle was then lowered by roughly 2 inches. Less weight under the hood and more weight over the rear axle meant installing softer front springs and stiffer rear springs.


“We are racers and hot rodders, with deep roots in internal-combustion racing engines,” said Vic Cagnazzi, owner of Cagnazzi Racing. “But we see this next leap into EV performance propulsion as a natural evolution for hot rodding. Our goal with this conversion was to maintain the look and integrity of the classic hot rod, while modernizing the propulsion technology.”

Bringing the vehicle to the Performance Racing Industry show allows Chevrolet Performance to demonstrate their commitment to the heart of their industry -- the race and performance enthusiast. Demonstrating to lovers of speed, power and torque -- particularly on the track -- that the eCrate engine can play with the big dogs is essential. And while there's still the rumbling and grumbling over the roar of the engine, the smell of gasoline, and the inevitability of change, it seems that enthusiasts are having actual conversations about the benefits and drawbacks of electric conversions, driven in part by cars like Project X.

Click Here to Begin Slideshow

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

IMG_7215-min

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

Project X Comes to PRI

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About Andreanna Ditton 366 Articles
Andreanna Ditton is the Editorial Director and Editor-in-Chief for the Internet Brands Automotive Classifieds Group, of which RacingJunk is the flagship site. She has worked in the automotive publishing industry since 2007, focusing on racing and performance issues.

7 Comments on Project X Comes to PRI 2021

  1. I thought I was going to look at a 1957 with a Chevy 283 engine not this electric car. The original Project X was a drag car

  2. John Shick aka “Hollywood”December 15, 2021 at 11:56 am
    If there was an 11th Commandment it would read; “THOU SHALL NOT ELECTRIFY PROJECT X”

    Please return your reader’s 57′ !!!!!!! Apparently, there is no fuel running through your veins, the sweet sounds, and vibrations from an engine or the smell of high test fuel.

    Hot Rods and Scooters Forever!

  3. I also think this is BS. Project X was something unequalled for a project car for all these decades. Long live the fossil fueled engines. This rendition does not do Project X Justine.

  4. I agree with you Steve 100%.. It’s a shame these so called car people sold out to Biden and the other Libals .. Putting an electric motor in a true American Icon. Car GODS please help us ALL. A real true car person would never have done that…..

  5. You want an electric car……go buy a freak’s golf cart. Maybe we should start a petition on change.org to have it restored to its glory days of Hollywood nights. Tony Danza, Robert Wuhl, and of coarse Tony Nancy

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