Page 1 of 1
The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 08:09
by airboatr
Anyone remember Ford building the concept nuclear powered car?
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/e ... ucleon.jpg

I guess the answer to that is ... someone thunked it up- sozz midaz well built it.
can you imagine? ya can't eeven get most to check their dipstick!
The next is a little more related to reality (and aircraft)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chrysler_027.jpg
The Chrysler gas turbine car. A little slow of the get go , like any under powered car ... or helicopter
now....after about fifty years - this is what we get
http://green.autoblog.com/2009/06/12/fo ... d-w-video/
Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 08:27
by FlyTexas

Yep, nuclear powered cars and robot maids never really materialized here in the US. But then again we never could have imagined back then that some day we could communicate with flightsim friends in the UK at an almost real-time speed. I love the now!
Brian
Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 09:13
by jonesey2k
How about an electric car that gets its power from a radioisotope thermoelectric generator?
Bring on the micro-fusion reactors!

Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 09:29
by Fodda
Or better yet, how about proper British engineering doing the job... Well sort of...
http://www.rover.org.nz/pages/jet/jet5.htm
JET 1 is exhibited at the Science Museum and is one of the most beautiful cars I've ever seen. I'd love to see and hear it going though. I wants one!
Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 12:16
by Molyned
Hm, remember seeing the Rover Jet 1 on a news item at the time. What sticks in the mind was the banshee scream from the engine (and that was at idle

) rising to an unholy shriek when throttled-up. The press were interested in the effect of the exhaust from the side-vents on lady passers by in the highstreets. Good try boys, but, no thanks.
Rover engines did go on to greater heights

Seen here in 1965 is their RTP 90 retro-fitted to an Auster J1 Autocrat . A one-off, it sported a massive 115 HP.
Cheers
Dave M(oly)
Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 12:39
by DaveB
I think a variation on the theme turned up as a pump for RN use (Rick would be able to verify). I'm sure the pump we had on one ship was a Rover (it was used for pumping water.. either way I guess.. that is, either in for fire or out to stop a flood) and it sounded like our helicopter had been wound up when it was started
ATB
DaveB

Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 13:11
by SkippyBing
The Rover Gas Turbine water pump is still going strong! The one time I've seen one run we were testing it on YORK's quarterdeck, the banshee wail is awesome, as is the effect if you don't quite secure the pipes properly....
Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 13:23
by DaveB
Hi Skip
Blimey yes.. I'd forgotten you'd know about them too.

When I first heard one run (can't remember if I was on Andromeda or Norfolk).. I was fire party while alongside and couldn't fathom why the helicopter was going. Then I twigged it was the Rover

One can only imagine how the cars must have sounded with one fitted
ATB
DaveB

Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 14:25
by airboatr
jonesey2k wrote:How about an electric car that gets its power from a radioisotope thermoelectric generator?
Bring on the micro-fusion reactors!

smashing idea

Re: The cars of the future past - revisited
Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 20:40
by markw
More recently Volvo made a slightly more practical gas turbine car using one of those micro gas turbine generators used on oil rigs to power electric motors and recharge batteries. Gets round the problem of mechanically linking a high speed jet engine and slow speed road wheels which bedevilled cars like Jet 1 or the subsequent P6 looky liky Rover built, but has the benefit of gas turbine technology which apparently will burn any old combustible liquid or liquified product. I seem to recall they also built a rather over styled bus and a truck using the same ideas. At the time they were pitching the car at Californian zero-emission regs which it didn't quite meet, plus the cost of the lithium batteries they used meant it wasn't possible to productionise the prototype, but now lithium batteries are more affordable, and hybrids more widely accepted, I'd love to see the technology developed further. I want a car which sounds like something from Thunderbirds before I die!
http://www.greencar.com/articles/volvo- ... pt-car.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volvo_ECC
Good news is that Jaguar has got a wedge of Government money to develop a similar concept this year, so I might not have to wait very long although I might need a lottery win to buy one...
http://www.green-car-guide.com/articles ... Page1.html
http://www.electricvehiclesresearch.com ... essionid=1