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5 Most Absurd Looking Sports Cars Ever Made! We'll explore five wild, bizarre, and unforgettable machines — cars that pushed the boundaries of design, engineering, and imagination. These aren’t your average performance cars; each one is unique, weird, and sure to spark your curiosity. First, we dive into the 1951 GM Le Sabre, a jet-age concept car that looked like it came from the future. It featured swooping fins, a wraparound windshield, and a supercharged engine. It was more idea than production car—but it influenced many cars that followed. Next on our list is the Citroën Karin, introduced in 1980. This car is shaped like a pyramid. The roof is tiny and almost glass-like, and the doors open like wings. It’s a design study rather than a working car, and it’s one of the boldest experiments in automotive styling. Then we have the Panther Six (1977). This car had six wheels — yes, six! It tried to go even further by combining outrageous looks with a huge twin-turbo Cadillac V8 engine. Only a couple were ever built, making it a rare oddball. The Kurtis Sport Car comes next. Built in the late 1940s, it was one of America’s earliest postwar sports cars. It had a lightweight aluminum body and sharp looks. But compared to most sports cars, it’s strange because it was a small company doing big dreams. Finally, we take a look at the OSI Silver Fox (1967). It’s probably the weirdest of all. This car has a twin-hull or catamaran layout. One hull holds the driver; the other carries the engine. The two hulls are balanced to cancel each other out, and aerodynamics play a huge role. All five cars show how far designers and engineers were willing to go when they said “Let’s try something new.” Sometimes they succeeded, sometimes they failed spectacularly — but they left us with unforgettable ideas we still talk about today. ____ We do not own the footages/images compiled in this video. It belongs to individual creators or organizations that deserve respect. By creatively transforming the footages from other videos, this work qualifies as fair use and complies with U.S. copyright law without causing any harm to the original work's market value. COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER: Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. _____