Tag: Vehicles

General category for cutaway drawings related to cars, trucks, and anything to do with land transport.

  • Arctic Wanigan Cutaway, 1950

    Arctic Wanigan Cutaway, 1950

    The “wanigan” was an 8 x 24 foot mobile caboose that was attached to the back of Arctic explorers’ tracked wagon trains.

    The wanigan had four bunks, refrigerator, coal stove, table, sink, and latrine.

    Click to Enlarge to 594 x 478 px:

    Arctic Wanigan Cutaway 1950

    Source:  Popular Mechanics May 1950

  • Pickup Truck Camper Cutaway, 1967

    Pickup Truck Camper Cutaway 1967

    This pickup truck camper was pretty state-of-the-art stuff for RVs in the late 1960s.

    It had a pass-through to the cab; 12v outlets; aircraft inclinometers to indicate when the camper was leveled off; stiff springs; and an over-the-cab bunk.

    Source:  Popular Mechanics May 1967

  • Futuristic Car Cutaway, 1940

    Futuristic Car Cutaway 1940

    In 1940, it was asked if we might be driving a car like this in only two years.

    The novel cutaway turned the notion of how to design a car on its head:  streamlined to look like “a giant aerial bomb on wheels,” with the engine in back, driver in the center, and rear passengers resting on upholstered seats in a spacious area as comfortable “as a small living room.”

    Futuristic Aerial Bomb Car 1940

    Source:  Popular Science June 1940

  • Cutaway of Admiral Byrd’s Antarctic Snow Cruiser, 1939

    Click Here For Large (1353 x 1200 Pixels)

     

    In an issue of LIFE magazine from October 30, 1939 that I have is a great cutaway drawing of Admiral Byrd’s snow cruiser.  Admiral Byrd was a naval officer who was the first person to reach the North and South Poles by air.

    At 55 feet 8 inches long and 16 feet high, Byrd’s Snow Cruiser was intended to ply the snowy wastes of Antarctica at 30 mph max.  Snow crevasses would be surmounted by retracting the massive Goodyear front tires, sliding the front over the crevasse as if the cruiser were a sled (back wheels pushing).  Once the front was fully across, the back tires would retract and the front tires would pull the cruiser ahead.

     

    Above, detail of cutaway of Byrd’s Snow Cruiser, showing operating room, engine room, and chart room.

    Above, mounting snow chains to the approximately 10 foot diameter Goodyear tires.

    Sources

     

     

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