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Winston Craig, 3, (left) checks out the DeLorean ridden by Marty McFly, aka Langley's Lincoln Letourneau, 4, at the gathering for the Cloverdale Halloween Costume Parade at the Surrey Museum on Oct. 26. The Back to the Future car, built by Letourneau's mom Carley Woodward, will feature a Flux Capacitor powered by Glow-Sticks on Halloween Night.
BOAZ JOSEPH / THE LEADER
A Delorean decked out like the famous time machine from the Back to the Future film series takes centre stage at Adam and Natalie's wedding at Borde Hill, West Sussex in August 2014
Delorean taldearen kontzertu argazkiak, Ficobako Ikultur jaialdian...
Fotos de concierto del grupo Delorean, en el festival Ikultur de Ficoba...
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The DeLorean DMC-12 (commonly known as "the DeLorean", as it was the only model ever produced by the company) is a sports car manufactured by John DeLorean's DeLorean Motor Company for the American market from 1981 to 1983. The car features gull-wing doors and an innovative fibreglass body structure with a steel backbone chassis, along with external brushed stainless-steel body panels. It became widely known and iconic for its appearance, and a modified DMC-12 was immortalized as the time machine in the Back to the Future movie franchise.
The first prototype appeared in October 1976. Production officially began in 1981 in Dunmurry, a suburb of southwest Belfast, Northern Ireland, where the first DMC-12 rolled off the production line on 21 January. About 9000 DMC-12s were made before production halted in early 1983.
The company was later liquidated as the US car market went through its largest slump since the 1930s. In 2007, about 6500 DeLorean Motor cars were believed still to exist.
Stephen Wynne, a British entrepreneur from Liverpool, created a separate company in 1995 based in Texas using the "DeLorean Motor Company" name. Wynne acquired the trademark on the stylized "DMC" logo shortly thereafter, along with the remaining parts inventory of the original company. Wynne's company builds new cars at its suburban Humble, Texas location from new old stock (NOS) parts, original equipment manufacture (OEM), and reproduction parts on a "made to order" basis using existing vehicle identification number (VIN) plates.
On 27 January 2016, DMC in Texas announced that it planned to build about 300–325 replica 1982 DMC-12 cars, each projected to cost just under $100,000.
Source: Wilipedia