Here is something I mentioned earlier. It's a scale model of a 2000 Camaro I got as a birthday present. Or should I say, the gift card was and got spent on this. LOL.
Anyway, I basically threw the the car together, covered the important areas with modeling clay and am now using it for experimentation. This allows me to try one thing without having to spend hours and money only to find out it was a bad idea. That also means I can try some seemingly absurd ideas to see if they actually work, something that has served me well in the past and has come in very handy twice in this experiment. For example, actually raising the hood in the right areas actually helps solve the front engine problem, something I never would have guessed but tried anyway. Although I already suspected it, I learned for sure, today in fact (unfortunately after the pictures were taken) that lowering and stretching the back of the car actually makes it look MORE like a Lamborghini Aventador overall.
Using this solid model of a Camaro with the modeling clay body allows me to experiment with these wild ideas as well as obvious ones without spending tremendous amounts of time or money. Being able to try random things at an impulse without any sweat has proved critically valuable to this project and I am sure will continue to.
That said, the sclae model experimentation is far from over. On top of that, the model; at the time of the pictures had been handled allot and the only real focused sculpting was focused on the area between the windshield and front wheel wells. Other experiments had been done on other parts of the car but they were unprotected from handling and all bent up.
In any case, the most and perhaps only really valuable thing these pictures show is the solution to the "front engine look". There's more work to do but you can DEFINITELY see the improvement over what's been done so far with other cars.
BTW. My solution for the scissor doors is pretty simple. Reshape the lower back of the doors to a slant and buy and install a purpose built camaro door kit. I found one for $270 and has good reviews. These scissor doors open out a bit before lifting but how much they do is adjustable, so I'm going to adjust them so they just clear a blockage in the front of the door before lifting (about 6-7 inches out at the furthest point) using AR-15 recoil buffers and springs to launch the doors out automatically when opened. The extra advantage to this is that it's more or less a parts swap, skipping all the wiring and structural mods that usually accompany these changes. There are still mods but very minor ones in comparison.