к1 - словацкая сборка
The K-1 Attack is one Slovakian's vision of a hunkered down, slash-cut, sexed-up, air-scooped atomic-bombed crustacean, and you either buy it or you don't. We do. The K-1 Attack has got it all going on, but at a stiff price.
The Slovak in question, Dick Kvetnansky, started K-1 Styling & Tuning (now called K-1 Engineering) in the suburbs of Bratislava around 1990 to produce fiberglass faux-exotic body kits for the GM F-body Chevy Camaro/Pontiac Firebird. The kits included the Turborossa (Ferrari quickly sued), the K-25 Anniversary (a Countach knockoff), and the Evoluzione, which perhaps avoided legal trouble because it blended Ferrari themes with those of other cars, including the C4 Corvette and Huggy Bear's pimpmobile.
After all that, the Attack was K-1's next project, and a great leap forward it was. Styled by Kvetnansky's pal Juraj Mitro, the Attack is a two-seat roadster—there's no top—built on its own steel-tube space frame and clad in a stiletto-shaped fiberglass body with Lamborghini-style scissors doors (motorization is an option) and a carbon-fiber belly pan. Except for a few Grand Canyon-sized panel gaps, the whole car has the highly teased styling and factory-finished polish of an auto-show concept car.
Car&Driver
Привет satori. 