Corvega

The Corvega was a line of car models manufactured by Chryslus Motors in pre-War USA.

Overview
There were at least four models in this line produced by Chryslus Motors before the Great War. The exact year when the first Corvega was available is still unknown, but it was already available for purchase in 2056.

In the 2060s, soon after Canada was annexed, an original Corvega cost "only" $199,999.99. This further corroborates speculation of steady and reasonable (4.55% average from 1960s Corvair) inflation in the decades leading up to the Great War, since these vehicles are known to be commonly found throughout California, Nevada, Utah, Pittsburgh, the Columbia Commonwealth, and Massachusetts. Other products, such as Giddyup Buttercup and the Vault-Tec vaults themselves, carried similarly hefty price tags.

Models
Original
 * Two-door sports coupe
 * 800 horsepower engine, capable of 0 to 60 MPH in .5 seconds
 * Analog system, as opposed to electronic parts used in later models
 * First known model of Corvega manufactured

Corvega Atomic V8
 * Appears as both a coupe and sedan model
 * Nuclear engine
 * Coupe model appears in Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas
 * Sedan model appears in Fallout 4

Corvega Coupe
 * Corvega Coupe model
 * Appears in Fallout 4

Unnamed Four-Door
 * Unnamed sedan model
 * Nuclear engine
 * Popular in the areas pertaining to Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas

Bubble-Top
 * Unnamed two-door coupe with a hemispherical dome over the passenger cabin
 * Nuclear engine
 * Seen in Driving Paradise billboards in Fallout 3
 * Mentioned in terminal entry at Red Rocket Truck Stop: Monday, October 18 - 'Coolant leak in one of those new 2077 Corvega coupes. Bubble-top. They don't make them like they used to.'

Locations

 * Two stacked on a few cars around the Paradise Falls entrance.
 * A few Atomic V8 models are inside of the Corvega factory.
 * On display in the Chryslus Building lobby.
 * In Sanctuary Hills, parked on the Sole Survivor's driveway.
 * In the Corvega assembly plant, one is on display by the front desk.
 * One at Rayburn Point.
 * One at Kawaketak Station.

Behind the scenes

 * The symbol on the hood of the four-door Corvega is the same as the one that can be found on several Chevrolet vehicles from the 1950's, including the 1957 "Bel Air".
 * The name Corvega is a portmanteau of two notorious Chevrolet car models: the Corvair and the Vega.
 * Although the Corvega is meant to be a Chevrolet car the first model appears to resemble a General Motors Le Sabre.