The Aston Martin Atom is a prototype automobile built by Aston Martin (AM). Construction of the car began in 1939 and was completed in 1940. The Atom is one of the first fully functional concept cars ever built. Aston Martin explored several new technologies with the Atom, and its chassis design was the basis for the platform used by AM's post-war models, beginning with the 1948 DB1 that evolved out of the Atom, well into the late 1950s.
History
Construction of the Atom was commissioned by R. Gordon Sutherland, AM's Managing Director and son of Arthur Sutherland, the company's owner. Chief engineer Claude Hill led the design effort.
The goal was to produce a small enclosed saloon that was comfortable and possessed good road manners. To meet that goal, emphasis was put on light weight and a rigid chassis. The car's name was chosen to be evocative of something small but powerful.
The Atom broke with traditional body-on-frame construction methods. Its chassis used square and rectangular cross-section steel tubing for both the main chassis and the support framework for the body. This was a continuation of Hill's earlier experiments with a prototype built on chassis J6.403.LS, registered as EML 132, and known informally at the works as Donald Duck.
The Atom was built on chassis G40/900. It was originally powered by the same type of engine used in the model 15/98.