Front-end bra


A front-end bra is a type of vinyl that attaches to the front of a car or other vehicle to protect the bumper, hood, and sides of the fender from scratches. The inside of the bra is lined with a feltlike material.
Car bras are considered a 'fashion accessory' to vehicles as their utility is debated and some owners consider that they improve the look of their cars. Others use a car bra as a way to cover-up light front-end scrapes and damage to their vehicle.
It is argued that the vinyl attached can cause damage by retaining moisture, catch air, as well as cause scratches in paintwork, paint chipping, and other minor from rocks, gravel, and other road debris.

History

Bill Colgan, founder of Colgan Custom Manufacturing, Inc. successfully operated a trim and upholstery business in Burbank, California, for fifteen years prior to creating the car bra business.
The "Original Car Bra" was invented in 1961 when three German engineers from Lockheed walked into Bill's upholstery shop, asking Colgan if he could redesign a protective cover for their personal Porsches.
The very first pattern was for the Porsche 356. The first order for the protective covers for the cars’ front fascia was for 12 units. After that, he was asked to make 150. Yet, after the second order was given to the buyers, he stopped making car bras, in order to concentrate on the main business.
And only by the mid-1970s he realized that this business took over upholstery, and he concentrated on car bras production, having given this name to his invention. The pattern Colgan designed was the creation of the one-piece "Original Car Bra." The word 'bra' came from the woman's breast-support undergarment, the brassiere.
The peak years of popularity of the front-end car bra were the 1980s and 1990s in the United States.

Types

There are several types of car bras, including full, sport, and T-style. The 'sport' car bra covers less of the front of the vehicle than the 'full'. The 'T-style' car bra is generally intended for trucks, SUVs and similar. The car bra can also be carbon-based, ostensibly to absorb the microwaves used in police radar equipment and thus minimize the risk of detection when speeding. Car bras are most commonly black in color, but are available in other colors to match the color of the vehicle.
The 'clear' car bra is actually a stick-on, transparent, protective film that can extend from the front end over the entire car body.
Some automobile manufacturers use larger bras together with disguising panels, plastic and/or tape to cover an entire vehicle to conceal its design when developing and road-testing.