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May 17, 2006 Each year at the North American International Auto Show (aka NAIAS or the Detroit Motor Show), the Michelin Challenge Design offers a global platform for students and designers to share their visions of design for automotive industries in the 21st Century. This year, 22 vehicles made…
Jörg
pixar Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die tomorrow. (James Dean)
Place two of these vehicles side-by-side and fix them together. With a pick-up platform between them, it would make a useful farm or building site utility vehicle with the advantage that steering would be simplified, as you could do it by adjusting the relative speeds of the engines. That would then allow a steel, rather than a rubber, pair of tracks to be used to make it into a truly all-terrain vehicle and you could add a bulldozer blade or shovel on the front. From there, you could clad the lot with armour-plating for a military people-carrier. Then the acme, add a rotating turret with an 80 mm Howitzer and you would have an ideal combat vehicle. It only requires a little imagination.
Yeah, well I'm gonna build my own lunar space lander! With blackjack aaaaannd Hookers! Actually, forget the space lander, and the blackjack. Ahhhh forget the whole thing!
Wow! That's impressive. If the technology could be applied to wheelchairs at a reasonable cost, think of how the mobility of handicapped people could be improved.
Where in hell was that thing when I was working a warehouse?
Shhhhheeeesssshhhh....
Brians right; that would be a good handicapper mobility design, but I like Toyota's I-Foot walking mech better. It can navigate stairs. I-Unit is the wheeled one.
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