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-   -   Sure, a cardboard boattail is cool... (https://ecomodder.com/forum/showthread.php/sure-cardboard-boattail-cool-12465.html)

thatguitarguy 02-28-2010 03:51 PM

Sure, a cardboard boattail is cool...
 
Sure, a cardboard boattail is cool, but why stop there? Why not make a cardboard race car?

Japanese Origami Super GT Pictures - GTcars – Car Forum for the Greater Toronto Area

gone-ot 02-28-2010 03:59 PM

...looks like the car "cutouts" that we used to get on sides of cereal boxes, etc.

...only BIGGER.

Piwoslaw 02-28-2010 04:32 PM

It's lightweight, for sure!
I don't know about crashtests, though...
And No Smoking!!

alohaspirit 02-28-2010 04:45 PM

... and its recyclable

Peter7307 02-28-2010 05:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thatguitarguy (Post 163483)
Sure, a cardboard boattail is cool, but why stop there? Why not make a cardboard race car?

Well, Toyota did in the 1960's and sent it to LeMans to race against Porsche etc.

Not all the car was papier mache but non structural parts like the rear wing and cover panels were.

The result was light weight and reasonably strong panels.

Speaking of which...Bentley (and other makers) raced in the 1920's and 1930's with cars having bodies made from canvas and other fabrics for the same reasons.
The fabrics were soaked in resins and allowed to dry on a frame to give them the correct shape and then attached to the car normally on a wooden frame.

Finally...horse drawn cabs in the 1800's had panels made from linen soaked in resin and dried in shaped molds. Some are still around today and they were light weight , water proof an fairly sturdy.

Pete.

gone-ot 02-28-2010 05:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter7307 (Post 163496)
...Bentley (and other makers) raced in the 1920's and 1930's with cars having bodies made from canvas and other fabrics for the same reasons. The fabrics were soaked in resins and allowed to dry on a frame to give them the correct shape and then attached to the car normally on a wooden frame.

...early aircraft technique: doped canvas for body and wing surfaces over wooden frames.

Rokeby 02-28-2010 06:43 PM

I'm not at all convinced the cardboard car is full size, 1:1 scale. :confused:

Many of us have long suspected that somewhere in the misty mountains of
Japan, Korea, and China there is a race of miniaturized humans. How else
can all the Aisian micro-electronics be assembled?

How else do they get the HID headlight bulbs installed in a Prius? :rolleyes:

Well, now we know. The picture shows a roughly 1:24 scale paper model
being assembled by up to now only mythical mini-race. :D

Is it any wonder that the Detroit 3 claim that they can't compete on a level
playing field?

bestclimb 02-28-2010 09:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Old Tele man (Post 163497)
...early aircraft technique: doped canvas for body and wing surfaces over wooden frames.

Still do it like that over aluminum and steel for a proper bush plane up here.

Frank Lee 02-28-2010 10:58 PM

I've got too much clap clap time on my hands...

TimG 03-04-2010 02:32 PM

I want one to put on my road bicycle. Get some RESPECT in traffic.;-) Well until the real cars figured out I can only do 10 mph in it...


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