A few good prototype manufacturing company images I found:
Sinsheim – Technikmuseum Sinsheim – DeLorean DMC-12 02
Image by Daniel Mennerich
The DeLorean DMC-12 (commonly referred to simply as The DeLorean as it was the only model ever made by the company) is a sports vehicle manufactured by John DeLorean’s DeLorean Motor Company for the American market in 1981–82. Featuring gull-wing doors with a fiberglass "underbody", to which non-structural brushed stainless steel panels are affixed, the auto became iconic for its look as a modified time machine in the Back to the Future film trilogy.
The 1st prototype appeared in October 1976, and production officially began in 1981 in Dunmurry, a suburb of south west Belfast, Northern Ireland (with the very first DMC-12 rolling off the production line on January 21). During its production, a number of characteristics of the auto had been changed, such as the hood style, wheels and interior. Around 9,000 DMC-12s have been created before production halted in early 1983.
The DMC-12 was the only model developed by the business, which would go into liquidation as the US vehicle marketplace went through its biggest slump because the 1930s. In 2007, about six,500 DeLorean Motor cars had been believed to still exist.
British entrepreneur Stephen Wynne primarily based in Texas started a separate firm in 1995 making use of the "DeLorean Motor Firm" name and shortly thereafter acquired the trademark on the stylized "DMC" logo as properly as the remaining components inventory of the original DeLorean Motor Firm. The organization, at its suburban Humble, Texas location, completes newly assembled automobiles from new old stock (NOS) parts, original gear manufacturer (OEM) and reproduction parts on a "made to order" basis utilizing existing Car Identification Quantity (VIN) plates.