plymouthcranbrook Posted December 7, 2021 Share Posted December 7, 2021 This is supposedly a 1921 picture of a leaping car fitted with what the French inventor said was a "propellant suspension". Seemed pretty funny to me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
f.f.jones Posted December 7, 2021 Share Posted December 7, 2021 I'm waiting to see the third picture... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
f.f.jones Posted December 7, 2021 Share Posted December 7, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gary_Ash Posted December 7, 2021 Share Posted December 7, 2021 You can do it in a Studebaker Weasel, as well. Here is a photo from the 1943 test program, Lt. J. W. Andeen at the controls. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim Bollman Posted December 7, 2021 Share Posted December 7, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
f.f.jones Posted December 8, 2021 Share Posted December 8, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
28 Chrysler Posted December 11, 2021 Share Posted December 11, 2021 Not leaping but an early flying car. Notice the curve in the road ahead and the driver has no worries. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.H.Boland Posted December 12, 2021 Share Posted December 12, 2021 (edited) Funny how the military loved to "fly" their vehicles. Here's an early Canadian Military Pattern (CMP) 15cwt testing its' springs ca.1940. Hard to tell if it's a Ford or a Chevy. They used the same sheet metal. Edited December 12, 2021 by J.H.Boland (see edit history) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arcticbuicks Posted February 3, 2022 Share Posted February 3, 2022 (edited) My good friend wanted to knock down the old sheds on the farm……young and dumb kids got it done Edited February 3, 2022 by arcticbuicks (see edit history) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hddennis Posted February 10, 2022 Share Posted February 10, 2022 I couldn't resist showing this, especially since a search turned up pictures I've never seen. Howard Dennis Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rocketraider Posted February 10, 2022 Share Posted February 10, 2022 Heh. High school years. The neighbor's son, a year older than me, got his driver's license which meant we had some freedom. They had a 68 Bonneville 4DHT which Joe had use of for Friday nights, and he and I would often meet our krewe at the local bowling alley. My dad used to say nothing that family had knew how to idle, and to say Joe had a lead foot was an understatement. Between him and his dad the 428 in that Bonneville couldn't possibly have had any carbon buildup. On the way home there was a long river bottom with a bridge that emptied onto a long hill going into Milton village. The road dropped again after cresting the hill. We probably crested that hill at 70 mph and the Bonneville went airborne; we're talking full suspension droop airborne. When that car landed, amazingly he kept control of it and didn't lose so much as a hubcap. Next morning I saw Joe and his dad out in the yard and I could hear Mr F saying how in the hell did you bust all four shocks on the car at one time? and Joe saying daddy I don't know! Mr F saw me and said you were with him, what happened? and I said Mr F I don't know!😬 I don't know if he ever found out what really happened...😊 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SC38dls Posted February 10, 2022 Share Posted February 10, 2022 He knows now! Watch your back! dave s 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gary_Ash Posted February 11, 2022 Share Posted February 11, 2022 Back about 1990, a bunch of us from the company we worked for in Massachusetts would go out to the San Francisco area for the big Semicon West conference in San Mateo for a week of booth duty daytimes and fine dining in San Francisco in the evenings. We developed a “tradition” of taking our rental cars to the hills in downtown SF after dinner and flying them off the hills on Filbert or Lombard St. Downhill at speed, across the level intersection, and into the air as the hill fell away. Think of the scenes in Bullitt. I took the wheel one night with four passengers in the Lincoln town car while a fifth passenger got out as witness. He swore all four wheels got off the ground, no damage on landing. One of our multicar group left an exhaust system on a hill due to too much exuberance, so we decided to end the tradition while we all still lived. Too bad we didn’t have cell phones in those days to record the flights. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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