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Ah, it was a golden era of American sports cars in the 1950s and early ‘60s when people were putting Detroit power into dexterous European-styled roadsters. Think Carroll Shelby and his Cobras. Or Jim Kellison or Bob Devin and their cars. 

And then there was the Bocar, the creation of Bob Carnes, from Denver, Colorado, who raced and competed in hill climbs in his Porsche Spyder and a Jaguar XK120. 

To get more power out of his Jaguar, Carnes inserted a Cadillac V8 and called the result the “Jagillac,” and drove it to victory in the 1956 Buffalo Bill Hillclimb. 

But what Carnes really wanted was a car with the Jagillac’s power but the dynamic abilities of the Porsche. So he set out to create one, and in 1957 produced the first Bocar, the XP-1, built on a spaceframe chassis with Porsche/Volkswagen suspension and a Chevrolet V8 engine.

The Bocar name came from the first two letters of Carnes’ first name and the first three of his last name.

The Pick of the Day is a 1959 Bocar XP-5, being advertised on ClassicCcars.com by a dealership St. Louis, Missouri.

“While many of Bocar’s contemporaries were destined to be one-hit wonders, Bob Carnes persisted with evolving his design through several series,” the dealership notes in that advertisement. 

“The XP-1 through XP-4 were essentially development cars that served to drum up interest in the project. By the time he arrived at the XP-5, Bocar finally achieved a modicum of success and a limited production run. While exact figures aren’t known, most experts agree that about 15 XP-5s were built, and no two were exactly alike.”



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