Engineering:Ford Seattle-ite XXI

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Short description: 1962 concept car

The Ford Seattle-ite XXI was a 3/8 scale concept car designed by Alex Tremulis and displayed on 20 April 1962 on the Ford stand at the Seattle World's Fair.[1][2]

Description

The car contained novel ideas that have since become reality: interchangeable fuel cell power units; interchangeable bodies; interactive computer navigation, mapping, and auto information systems; and four driving and steering wheels.[3] The concept of some form of compact nuclear propulsion device was included as a possible power source on the assumption that radiation issues could be overcome without the need for prohibitively bulky shielding.[4][5]

The car had six wheels, with four steerable ones at the front and two fixed ones at the rear – similar to the later fictional six-wheel 1965 FAB1 and the real Tyrrell P34 racing car of the mid-1970s. The designers determined the six-wheel concept would enhance tracking, traction, and braking. It had an interchangeable front-powered section that enabled the car to be turned into either an economical city runabout or, when needed, a powerful transcontinental cruiser. All control mechanisms were through flexible couplings. Steering was by way of a fingertip-controlled dial.[6]

See also

References

  1. Lamm, Michael; Holls, Dave (1996). A century of automotive style: 100 years of American car design. Lamm-Morada Publishing Co. ISBN 0-932128-07-6. 
  2. The Motor. 121. Temple Press. 1962. p. 492. 
  3. "Six wheels - count 'em - six". Popular Mechanics (May): 119. 1968. https://books.google.com/books?id=FtQDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA119. 
  4. Janicki, Edward; Janicki, Gregory (1995). "Ford Seattle-ite XXI". Cars Detroit never built: fifty years of American experimental cars. Sterling Publications Company. p. 108. 
  5. Henry Bolles Lent (1971). "X Cars of the Future". The X cars: Detroit's one-of-a-kind autos. Putnam. p. 90. 
  6. Callahan, Joe (1966). "Automobiles". Boys' Life (Boy Scouts Association of America) (March): 5. https://books.google.com/books?id=naTGrGZ-MTsC&pg=PA6.