Automobile designer Virgil Exner left
Studebaker to join Chrysler in 1949. Chrysler's previous designers favored conservative, upright bodystyles, but sales were declining. At Chrysler, one of his first challenges was to wrest final say over design away from the engineering department. Exner commissioned a range of concept cars that were built in Italy by
Carrozzeria Ghia. Among these were several sporty, open-top, two-seat cars, including three out of four of the cars in the
Dodge Firearrow series, and the
Chrysler Falcon. These studies were Chrysler's answer to the
Ford Thunderbird and
Chevrolet Corvette. The XNR went through several name changes during development. Some early drawings label it the "
Falcon". This was also the development name of the car that became the production Valiant, until Ford registered it for their own new compact. Later the car was called the
Asymmetrica, and later still renamed "
XNR", a
disemvoweled,
pseudo-acronym of the designer's own last name. The shape of the XNR was influenced by a Studebaker Indianapolis race car that Exner owned, as well as by the later asymmetrical
Watson Indy Roadster, and the
Jaguar D-Type. As originally built, the car reached a speed of on Chrysler's test track. Exner is said to have personally driven the car on the track at speeds up to . Later, after being fitted with a fiberglass nosecone fabricated by Dick Burke and receiving additional engine modifications, the car reached a top speed of . In May 1960, the XNR appeared on the covers of both
Road & Track and
Motor Trend magazines, then in May 1961 on the cover of Today's Motor Sports magazine. The car made its first public appearance at the 1960 New York Auto Show. Chrysler did not put the Plymouth XNR into production. Exner wanted to buy the car from Chrysler, but was unsuccessful. The XNR was shipped back to Ghia in Italy to prevent it from being destroyed. After being returned to Ghia, the XNR was purchased by a Swiss buyer, who later sold it to
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran. After that it was sold again, this time to Anwar al Mulla, a Kuwaiti car dealer. During Mulla's ownership the XNR appeared in a photo taken in Kuwait in the May 1969 issue of National Geographic. It was sold again in the early 1970s to a man in Lebanon who kept it in underground storage until Karim Edde found the car during the
Lebanese Civil War of 1975–1991 and recognized it. Edde acquired the car and kept moving it to various locations to protect it from damage during the fighting. After the war Edde sent the car to RM Restorations in Canada in 2008 for a full restoration. The restoration was completed in March 2011, after which the car was reintroduced at that year's Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance. In August of the same year the XNR won the Gran Turismo Trophy at the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. On 18 August 2012, the XNR sold for $935,000 at RM Sotheby's Monterey auction. ==Features==