![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Miloch wrote in
: https://jalopnik.com/google-billiona...by-this-gorgeo us-65-1840211205 It is probably fair to say that the Taylor Aerocar was not a particularly good car, nor was it a particularly good plane. Only five were ever made, one of which being a prototype. But that’s still more than Larry Page’s now-delayed Kitty Hawk project, and you can even buy an Aerocar. That is, you can buy one of the Aerocars. This one is going up for sale at Barrett-Jackson at Scottsdale 2020, held in early January. https://www.barrett-jackson.com/Even...-TAYLOR-AEROCA R-236076 https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeremyb...side-larry-pag es-kitty-hawk-returned-deposits-battery-fires-boeing-cora/#6363858b58ab Price is just “no reserve” but someone appears to have listed a Taylor Aerocar for about $1 million (600,000 pounds) a few years back, as the New York Daily News reported at the time. How it drove was a bit funky, as the Hemmings noted in a 2013 profile: Still primitive by automobile standards of the day, the Aerocar featured an air-cooled Lycoming flat-four engine, positioned over the rear wheels. A three-speed manual transmission provided drive to the front wheels, and this road transmission was simply placed into neutral when the Aerocar was in flight mode. Part of the conversion process from automobile to airplane involved the fitting of a tail cone and propeller assembly, which was driven by a power take-off located behind the rear license plate. And while the market for the car never took off, with its limited top speed on the road (60 miles per hour) and complications being a plane (everything folded away, which was not exactly a one-person job of re-installation) the Taylor Aerocar remains the only thing that approaches being an actual flying car. I mean, it’s more of a road-legal plane, but how can you be mad at it? Look at this little thing! It’s adorable. Some of us remember the old Bob Cummings Show. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Mitchell Holman
says... Miloch wrote in : https://jalopnik.com/google-billiona...by-this-gorgeo us-65-1840211205 It is probably fair to say that the Taylor Aerocar was not a particularly good car, nor was it a particularly good plane. Only five were ever made, one of which being a prototype. But that’s still more than Larry Page’s now-delayed Kitty Hawk project, and you can even buy an Aerocar. That is, you can buy one of the Aerocars. This one is going up for sale at Barrett-Jackson at Scottsdale 2020, held in early January. https://www.barrett-jackson.com/Even...-TAYLOR-AEROCA R-236076 https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeremyb...side-larry-pag es-kitty-hawk-returned-deposits-battery-fires-boeing-cora/#6363858b58ab Price is just “no reserve” but someone appears to have listed a Taylor Aerocar for about $1 million (600,000 pounds) a few years back, as the New York Daily News reported at the time. How it drove was a bit funky, as the Hemmings noted in a 2013 profile: Still primitive by automobile standards of the day, the Aerocar featured an air-cooled Lycoming flat-four engine, positioned over the rear wheels. A three-speed manual transmission provided drive to the front wheels, and this road transmission was simply placed into neutral when the Aerocar was in flight mode. Part of the conversion process from automobile to airplane involved the fitting of a tail cone and propeller assembly, which was driven by a power take-off located behind the rear license plate. And while the market for the car never took off, with its limited top speed on the road (60 miles per hour) and complications being a plane (everything folded away, which was not exactly a one-person job of re-installation) the Taylor Aerocar remains the only thing that approaches being an actual flying car. I mean, it’s more of a road-legal plane, but how can you be mad at it? Look at this little thing! It’s adorable. Some of us remember the old Bob Cummings Show. I have snippets of memory of watching him on a B/W TV Here's something I didn't know.... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Cummings "Drug addiction "Despite his interest in health, Cummings was a methamphetamine addict from the mid-1950s until the end of his life. In 1954, while in New York to star in the Westinghouse Studio One production of Twelve Angry Men, Cummings began receiving injections from Max Jacobson, the notorious "Dr. Feelgood". His friends Rosemary Clooney and José Ferrer recommended the doctor to Cummings, who was complaining of a lack of energy. While Jacobson insisted that his injections contained only "vitamins, sheep sperm, and monkey gonads", they actually contained a substantial dose of methamphetamine. "Cummings continued to use a mixture provided by Jacobson, eventually becoming a patient of Jacobson's son Thomas, who was based in Los Angeles, and later injecting himself. The changes in Cummings' personality caused by the euphoria of the drug and subsequent depression damaged his career and led to an intervention by his friend, television host Art Linkletter. The intervention was not successful, and Cummings' drug abuse and subsequent career collapse were factors in his divorces from his third wife, Mary, and fourth wife, Gina Fong. "After Jacobson was forced out of business in the 1970s, Cummings developed his own drug connections based in the Bahamas. Suffering from Parkinson's disease, he was forced to move into homes for indigent older actors in Hollywood. * |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Google Billionaire Beaten To Market By This Gorgeous 65-Year-Old Flying Car [7/8] - Taylor Aerocar 6.jpg (1/1) | Miloch | Aviation Photos | 0 | December 5th 19 02:11 AM |
Google Billionaire Beaten To Market By This Gorgeous 65-Year-Old Flying Car [6/8] - Taylor Aerocar 4.jpg (2/2) | Miloch | Aviation Photos | 0 | December 5th 19 02:11 AM |
Google Billionaire Beaten To Market By This Gorgeous 65-Year-Old Flying Car [5/8] - Taylor Aerocar 2.jpg (1/1) | Miloch | Aviation Photos | 0 | December 5th 19 02:11 AM |
Google Billionaire Beaten To Market By This Gorgeous 65-Year-Old Flying Car [4/8] - Taylor Aerocar.jpg (1/1) | Miloch | Aviation Photos | 0 | December 5th 19 02:11 AM |
Google Billionaire Beaten To Market By This Gorgeous 65-Year-Old Flying Car [3/8] - Taylor Aerocar 7.jpg (1/1) | Miloch | Aviation Photos | 0 | December 5th 19 02:11 AM |