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Zora Arkus-Duntov (December 25, 1909 – April 21, 1996) was a
Belgian-born American engineer. His work on the Chevrolet Corvette
earned him the nickname "Father of the Corvette."
Zora was born Zachary Arkus in Belgium on Denver 25, 1909. His
father was a Russian-born Jewish mining engineer, and his mother,
also Russian Jewish, was a medical student in Brussels.
After the family returned to their hometown of Leningrad, Zora's
parents divorced. His mother's new partner, Josef Duntov, another
mining engineer, had moved into the household. Even after the
divorce, Zora's father continued to live with the family, and out of
respect for both men, Zora and brother Yura took on the last name of
Arkus-Duntov.
In 1927, his family moved to Berlin. While his early boyhood
ambition was to become a streetcar driver, streetcars later gave way
to motorcycles and automobiles. His first motorized vehicle was a
350cc motorcycle, which he rode at nearby racetracks as well as
through the streets of Berlin. When his parents, fearing for his
safety, insisted he trade the cycle in for an automobile, Zora
bought a racecar. The car was a cycle fendered contraption called a
"Bob", from a short-lived manufacturer of the same name. The Bob was
set up for oval track racing. It had no front brakes and the rear
brakes were weak.
In 1934, Zora graduated from the Charlottenburg Technological
University (known today as the Technical University of Berlin). He
also began writing engineering papers in the German motor
publication Auto Motor und Sport. Later in Paris, he would meet Elfi
Wolff, a German native who danced with the Folies-Bergère.
When World War II began in 1939, Zora and Elfi were married, just as
Zora and his brother joined the French Air Force. When France
surrendered, Zora obtained exit visas from the Spanish consulate in
Marseilles, not only for Elfi and himself, but for his brother and
parents as well. Elfi, who was still living in Paris at the time,
made a dramatic dash to Bordeaux in her MG just ahead of the
advancing Nazi troops. In the meantime, Zora and Yura hid inside a
bordello. Five days later, Elfi met up with Zora and his family and
later they boarded a ship out of Portugal bound for New York.
Ardun
Settled in Manhattan, the two brothers set up Ardun (derived from
Arkus and Duntov) which supplied parts to the military and also
manufactured aluminum overhead valve heads for the Flathead Ford V8
engine. Although the original purpose of the design was to cure the
overheating tendencies of flathead designs under heavy load in truck
use (due to the long exhaust travel through the block), the new
heads enabled the Ford V8 to produce over 300 horsepower. Ardun grew
into a 300 employee engineering company with a name as revered as
Offenhauser, but the company later went out of business after some
questionable financial decisions by a partner that Zora and Yura had
taken on.
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