Home » Some Genius Built An Electric Corvette By Gluing The Body Onto A BMW i3 Frame

Some Genius Built An Electric Corvette By Gluing The Body Onto A BMW i3 Frame

Corvette I3 Mashup Ts3
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Yesterday at the masterpiece that was the Galpin Car Show, someone brought in an electric vehicle conversion so brilliant I almost needed a paper bag to control my breathing. It was a first-gen Corvette that had been glued and also bolted to the frame of a BMW i3. While I don’t have a ton of details showing exactly how it was done, here’s just a quick look at this incredible machine.

The cool thing about the BMW i3 that many people don’t realize is that, unlike pretty much any modern small car, it’s technically a body-on-frame design. The body is a ridiculously lightweight carbon fiber “Life Module” that you and I could easily carry, the body panels are plastic pieces that just snap onto that carbon body, and underneath it all — holding the powertrain, suspension, and battery — is an aluminum “Drive Module” that includes some pretty sizable castings.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

It’s basically a “frame,” and it’s quite a masterpiece, as I’ve mentioned far, far too many times. Have a look:

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.06.09 Am

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.07.12 Am

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As for as EV conversions go, the BMW i3 platform is not one commonly used, and I’m not entirely sure why. I bet many folks think it’d be silly to use just the Drive Module when the real pièce de rĂ©sistance was the carbon fiber Life Module. But oftentimes i3s get into wrecks that crack the carbon fiber, totalling the vehicle — partly because BMW i3s have just become so cheap.

To find a totaled i3 on Copart is quite easy; and with a minty-fresh version of these cars selling for under $10 grand, you know the totaled cars are going for pennies:

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.17.49 Am Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.18.16 Am

So I’m surprised I don’t see more BMW i3s being used as donor cars for EV conversions. One great candidate, as I learned at the Galpin Car Show, is the gen 1 Chevy Corvette, which has a wheelbase less than an inch away from the i3’s.

Vette Wide

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One enterprising Californian, shown below pointing out all the stuff normally founder under the hood of the i3 (cooling system/HVAC components, as well as the 12-volt battery, brake system, power electronics, and on and on):

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.26.03 Am

In the rear, under the trunk lid is the electric motor and gasoline range extender:

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.25.06 Am

Here’s Huibert using his eyes to create a 3-D CAD model in his brain:

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Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.30.33 Am

Check out the skinny, stock tires:

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 9.19.29 Am

Vette Skinny Wheel

If you look closely at the wheels you’ll see a Chevy center cap:

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Vette Rear Vide

What I found most interesting was the cabin. This particular gen-1 Corvette looked to be some kind of race-inspired, aftermarket-bodied machine, with just space for a single driver. Remarkably, pretty much all cabin controls from the i3s were somehow shoved into that small space. You can see the small gauge cluster screen ahead of the steering wheel:

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.31.24 Am

The entire HVAC/radio unit is off to the right of the driver:

Vette Console

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Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.37.25 Am

And between the two is the shifter and the iDrive controller:

Screen Shot 2024 10 21 At 8.37.43 Am

It looks like an old Corvette on the outside, but it’s an i3 underneath, and — per the owner, who told me he basically glued the body onto the car using BMW’s own glue, which apparently cost an arm and a leg — the thing is quick. 

And with the range extender, I bet it’s quite practical, as the donor was a 2020 car, which normally goes about 150 miles on the battery and 75 miles on the gas generator.

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Vette Front Tight

It was easily a top-10 car for me at the Galpin Car Show, and that’s saying a lot, because the show was absolutely bonkers. More on it soon.

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Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
1 month ago

I think it’s a great idea, not sure on the execution of getting only a 1-seater with no storage from what was a 5-seater with hatch and frunk. I know stuff’s gotta go somewhere but that’s a fairly good sized front end, could’ve at least made it a 2 seater.

Scott Wangler
Scott Wangler
1 month ago

Your definition of genius must be different than mine.

Elhigh
Elhigh
1 month ago

I see this approach and ask myself, does he Revell in his brilliance?

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
1 month ago
Reply to  Elhigh

I see what you did there

Nicholas Bianski
Nicholas Bianski
1 month ago

I didn’t need this bad idea today, but now you’ve done it. Time to see which of my favorite cars are close to the same wheelbase and potentially build a new daily, seeing as I drive about 70 miles a week. This sounds like a future Nick problem that today Nick is about to create.

Torque
Torque
1 month ago

“But that is a problem for future Matt…”
is one of my favorite sayings of Matt from SuperfastMatt YouTube channel 🙂

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago

This is 6” too short of a wheelbase, but something like this?
https://dansperformanceparts.com/mgm-frp-manx-style-dune-buggy-long-body/

Totally not a robot
Totally not a robot
1 month ago

That PCB-inspired stripe is just so, so, so perfect.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago

Area man concedes that this is quite the genius idea.

That i3 skateboard looks like a lot of fun is the basis of a kit car.

Hmm,
https://www.slotforum.com/attachments/cl114_3-jpg.310689/

Drive By Commenter
Drive By Commenter
1 month ago

This looks awesome! I like how it’s just the i3 with a different body. Good reuse of a likely scrap car.

Harmanx
Harmanx
1 month ago

This is very cool, and it looks like the owner had a blast building it. I hope it inspires DT to do a project like this — maybe with a faux Jeep exterior.

Last edited 1 month ago by Harmanx
1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago

I am not sure anything about the car is a real Corvette. It looks like a kit car but built from parts from Manny Mow and Jack. Or that old catalogue. It looks like crap

SonOfLP500
SonOfLP500
1 month ago

The wobbly lines of the cutaway in the door and front fender in the header photo in the link caught my eye before I even clicked on it, so I was, um, somewhat surprised that David implied(?) it was a real Corvette.

Last edited 1 month ago by SonOfLP500
Karrock
Karrock
29 days ago
Reply to  SonOfLP500

Not implied at all?

This particular gen-1 Corvette looked to be some kind of race-inspired, aftermarket-bodied machine, with just space for a single driver.

SonOfLP500
SonOfLP500
27 days ago
Reply to  Karrock

Not implied at all. My apologies to David.

Uninformed Fucknugget
Uninformed Fucknugget
1 month ago

Quick question-
“150 miles on the battery and 75 miles on the gas generator.”

Is this 75 miles on the gas generator until it runs out of gas? If someone was to roadtrip an i3 could they just keep filling the generator gas tank up and driving or would the battery have to be recharged at some point?

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 month ago

I think DT said previously that the i3 doesn’t have full power on the rex alone. As in, it won’t travel at highway speeds

Harmanx
Harmanx
1 month ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

I think it does drive highway speeds with the rex — just with fairly reduced acceleration/power.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

I think it’ll be fine on the flats. Hills at freeway speeds with the A/C on may be tough.

Scone Muncher
Scone Muncher
1 month ago

i3 owner here – the Range Extender can’t *quite* keep up with freeway speeds in my experience. It will deplete the battery slowly, but only like 10-15% by the time you’ve used your “75 miles” (9 litres) of gas. So what you do for long trips is turn on the REx right away and plan your stops for gas and electricity accordingly.

Uninformed Fucknugget
Uninformed Fucknugget
1 month ago
Reply to  Scone Muncher

That’s awesome. So in theory on a long trip you could fill the Rex gas about 4-5 times before the battery would deplete enough that it would need to be charged?

Scone Muncher
Scone Muncher
1 month ago

Yup. I haven’t tried it, but the previous owner of my car did an 800km round trip a couple times a week with that strategy. I believe they were filling up twice and trickle charging at their destination.

Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
1 month ago

“he basically glued the body onto the car using BMW’s own glue, which apparently cost an arm and a leg”

Literally, if he gets in a collision.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago

Nice to know DT hasn’t gone totally Hollywood

Robot Turds
Robot Turds
1 month ago

This looks really jerry-rigged. Plus its using innards from an outdated car with a limited EV range and a useless “Range Extender”. Plus the accents with the electric crap looks really cheesy.

Harmanx
Harmanx
1 month ago
Reply to  Robot Turds

The range extender isn’t useless. The car isn’t ideally suited for long trips (ie it’s great for most driving) — but if driving farther than 150 miles, the extender is absolutely an asset.

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago

Way cool imo.

MP81
MP81
1 month ago

Meh.

Kindig did it better. For clearly a lot more money – but a lot nicer end result.

Sarah Blikre
Sarah Blikre
1 month ago

The skinny tires look right at home under a C1. Although after seeing your chronicles of potential failures in the i3 leading to it being mechanically totalled, I’m not surprised these don’t get used as donor platforms more often.

Last edited 1 month ago by Sarah Blikre
PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
1 month ago
Reply to  Sarah Blikre

I agree, but if a conversion like this could eliminate the need for odd-sized tires instead, it could pay for itself in a few years!

Spikersaurusrex
Spikersaurusrex
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

So a car with a (potentially) faulty compressor is “unstoppable” but a car with a timing belt is “unreliable” because you have to maintain it?

Just asking because I’m that kind of guy.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago

I have a 911 engine full of metal shavings. I can’t afford to fix it without having to sell the car that it’s in so the car just sits in a container.

Sarah Blikre
Sarah Blikre
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Yeah that’s the big one but I still don’t like the idea of having a $15k time bomb in the car, or whatever silly amount it costs to replace everything full of metal shavings. I will concede it’s pretty much unstoppable for a BMW. At least it’s not an E60.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  Sarah Blikre

or whatever silly amount it costs to replace everything full of metal shavings.

Earlier this year the A/C in my Gen7 Accord failed. I quickly determined it was not a fuse or relay but a loss of freon. Assuming the problem was a blown compressor as is being discussed here. I looked into what a DIY replacement would involve.

Turns out not that much. Yes you need to replace pretty much everything but on a Gen7 Accord you can buy all the parts you need on Amazon for under $500. You need to flush out the evaporator and the lines which for *REASONS* takes a special (expensive) fluid but its a simple task.

Labor looked quite approachable for a shade tree mechanic. All the A/C tools could be borrowed from my local Autozone. Basically a weekend for a first timer.

As it turned out the compressor was fine. The failure was the fill valve which cost $5 so with that and $20 of freon the A/C is working again.

I get this BMW parts are probably much more expensive BUT the labor may not be that bad, especially since it’s an electric compressor. It’s probably worth looking into whether that compressor is common to other cars and may be cheaper branded as a “VW” than a “BMW”.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

The problem with the i3 is that the metal shavings end up going into the battery pack cooling system where they cannot be retrieved.

It’s sort of like an oil pump coming apart, oil pumps are cheap. The rest of the engine, not so much.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

Ah that’s right That could be a bit of a problem.

I guess worst case the body can be removed and the frame used as a mobile battery pack.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago
Reply to  Sarah Blikre

Seem likes like there would be a possibility of retrofitting, some sort of a filter, or a heat exchanger unit. Especially if you were doing a rebody of the skateboard, you would have plenty of room.

Torque
Torque
30 days ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

Given the consequences if that pump fails, I agree, seems like a damn good reason to “make room” even of it means an unusual bump in the cabin of the i3, especially if keeping long term

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 month ago
Electric Truckaloo (formerly Stig’s Chamorro Cousin)
Electric Truckaloo (formerly Stig’s Chamorro Cousin)
1 month ago

My wife is about to upgrade from her ’15 i3. Now, instead of planning to use it as my commuter, I’m having dirty and stupid thoughts of mating up an XJ body.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago

“There’s a fine line between genius and insanity. I have erased this line.”
― Oscar Levant

Slower Louder
Slower Louder
1 month ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

“Such a fine line between stupid and clever.”
— Nigel Tufnel

Jason Rocker
Jason Rocker
1 month ago

I was all sorts of impressed until we got to the utter hack job that is the interior. Ugh. Nice idea though.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Thank you Maynard G Krebs.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
1 month ago
Reply to  Jason Rocker

This is the greatest kind of hack job there is. Reuse the parts, but move them around as necessary to make them fit.

I’ve been doing some hard thinking about doing this to my factory-stock, pristine Honda Clarity, as the park/drive control buttons are mounted on huge space-hogging plastic “bridge” between the dashboard and the console box between the seats.

It’s gorgeous looking, but every time I look at it I lament the complete waste of space that goofy thing takes up.

I think everyone who has a modern Honda has thought the same.

Kleinlowe
Kleinlowe
1 month ago
Reply to  Jason Rocker

Some time with a 3d printer, some glue, some pleather and some veneer would clean it up pretty effectively.

Arrest-me Red
Arrest-me Red
1 month ago

I like the idea and would love to drive it. Though I need bit more room with a family of three. The concept is solid.

sentinelTk
sentinelTk
1 month ago

Next DT article…..”I’ve Decided Not To Sell My Redundant i3 (So I Can Make an Electric Jeepster)”

sentinelTk
sentinelTk
1 month ago
Reply to  sentinelTk

I can only assume the lack of a DT response is because he is too busy scrolling marketplace looking for the right donor Jeepster….

Musicman27
Musicman27
1 month ago

I’m kinda surprised David wasn’t more excited about it and already planning to convert his entire non-i3 fleet to i3 EV conversions.

10001010
10001010
1 month ago

So… which of your Jeep bodies will fit on that wheelbase?

Bob the Hobo
Bob the Hobo
1 month ago
Reply to  10001010

An XJ wheelbase is only .4 inches longer than the i3. I know he just downsized his fleet, but…

10001010
10001010
1 month ago
Reply to  Bob the Hobo

Moab is coming up in March, that gives him around *5 mos to get started!

*(Only 5 mos because he’s supposed to be living in that Aztek!!!)

Musicman27
Musicman27
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Duct tape is like the force it has a light side, a dark side and it binds the whole universe together”

Duct tape holds the universe together David. if it can do that it can hold your jeep onto a chassis.

Bob the Hobo
Bob the Hobo
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

nothing a cut-off wheel can’t fix

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

But, some of the unlicensed Chinese copies were body on frame, surely somebody would stuff one in a shipping container for the right money

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Would a Wrangler Unlimited be close?

GENERIC_NAME
GENERIC_NAME
1 month ago

Early CJ-6 and Jeepster are the closest, apparently.

https://www.cjponyparts.com/resources/jeep-wheelbase-chart

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

And you’re going to let a little thing like THAT stop you?

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

Now I’m getting Meyers Manx ideas …

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

This is my kind of crazy right here. I bet you could weld a Beetle floor pan right on to the BMW skateboard and just build out from there. This is the best idea

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

You can probably do it for way less than $100k they want charge for the new Manx 2.0 EV, too.

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

You can buy the whole kit directly from Meyers for under 7k. The cost of the seats, wheels I would imagine you could do the entire thing for the cost of a donor I3, 10k and lots of swearing

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

My first Meyers kit was around $600. Don’t know what that equals in today dollars, but $6500 probably isn’t too far off. Still a good deal if you’re willing to put in the time.

Balloondoggle
Balloondoggle
1 month ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

Darn, I’m fresh out of swears.

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
1 month ago
Reply to  Balloondoggle

That’s a shame, it’s a crucial part of working on cars. I’m on my fourth VW, I’ve been forced to invent a few of my own.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

Helps to learn a second language.

PlugInPA
PlugInPA
1 month ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

Can you just title it as the salvaged i3?

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
1 month ago
Reply to  PlugInPA

I think that’s a ‘depends on the state’ issue. Every state does it a little bit differently, and you’d likely have to get a salvage rebuilt title where I live, but you might be able to title it as a kit built somewhere else

I Heart Japanese Cars
I Heart Japanese Cars
1 month ago
Reply to  PlugInPA

I believe that would work in California. I’ve bought a salvaged and rebuilt vehicle before. If I recall correctly I had to have a regular inspection, along with a separate light and brake inspection. Then the California Highway Patrol inspected it making sure all numbers matched.

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