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Showing posts with label wheels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wheels. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 August 2011

Resilient wheels / Ackerman wheels with resilient spring steel spokes ( I learn something new constantly!)


  The above are from David's great vintage car site Old Motor http://theoldmotor.com/?p=20051
below I've posted before, and show them here in context to demonstrate some other odd spring focused rims... to read about their history http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2010/10/19/earlier-and-resilienter/

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Saturday, 13 August 2011

the "Pedrail" system by Diplock in 1904, pages 90-94 and 113-117 of the Automotor Journal

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Sunday, 10 July 2011

Best hidden spare tire I've come across, a Pierce Arrow Silver Arrow


found on http://www.cardesign.ru/forum/diskussii/obschenie/1352

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Saturday, 7 May 2011

the oldest wheels in California, a look at how the first wheels were designed

Above is design, below is what remains of a round piece of wood 205 years after it was installed on an ox cart, consider that the log it was cut from may have been 100 years old to get this big around and it's possible that the wood is over 300 years old.





In the stagecoach museum in Old Town San Diego

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Sunday, 24 April 2011

Innovative and inventive rear wheel design for broadsliding

Via: http://thenewcaferacersociety.blogspot.com

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Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Diplock's Pedrail. What a name! Somebody should call their band this name.


If it had caught on, we'd still know about it, but it is a interesting idea for rough terrain, maybe rocky terrain. Reminds me immediately of these other two unusual ideas in rim/wheel design http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2011/03/justacargal-found-most-unusual.html

Found on http://steampunkvehicles.tumblr.com/

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Sunday, 6 March 2011

Justacargal found a most unusual prototype rim and tire replacement made of springs


and reminded me of the next photo that I've never learned exactly what is was originally.. .but they look similar

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Monday, 27 December 2010

Real unusual things from trailer washers, motorized wheels, to tank track Rolls Royces

Never seen one before, and something about the age of a black and white photo tells me that these are obsolete

I have no idea at all what this is

Ok, but why take it out if you have to add skis?

Really early car phone

Odd stuff on this tow truck

1890's and I was told it's a velocipede
Lenin's 1922 Rolls Royce Silver Ghost snow machine. Most expensive snow machine conversion? or strangest use for a Rolls Royce?

I've never seen a photo of a tractor involved in a car crash

no idea what the motorbike in front is

Never seen a train engine like this... must be for moving train cars around in a train yard

For packing dirt roads?

Early Daytona Beach racers with superchardged Auburns, before NASCAR took over racing on Daytona Beach

Click for full size to read the story

Two of the rare Jeeps the (1959) FC 59, but the below is even more rare


Model T tank

Love the motor wheels... I'd so love to ride one! This one was investigated by Hemmings Blog and you can read more about it: http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2010/11/22/m-goventosas-one-wheel-to-obscurity/ it went 93mph... I doubt that anyone did that more than once given the conditions of roads in Italy in 1931 to 1933, that's when the above photo was taken, 1931


Puegeot in 1934, great designed car, looks like the top is coming down

Wipers on the inside and outside... and that might be Ron Howard... like Tere commented, it sure looks like him during the Andy Griffith show

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Tuesday, 5 October 2010

These look cool, if you appreciate wheels, rims, and hubcaps like I do








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