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The Henry Ford museum

About the Ford Museum, they had one of my company's very early 3D printers on display for quite a while. It was one of the first 3D printers, and I spent lots of time in Dearborn back then working with their engineers. Ultimately 3D printing was able to significantly speed up automotive design by quickly making prototypes and tools and fixtures. That 3D printer is still at the museum, but it is off in a warehouse and not on display.
Huh... very cool! I really hope they do put it back on display; it is an important part of history.

Glad to see another person who's been to the museum... for those who have been there, how is this thread matching your memories?
 
Part VI: Seriously, it took you this long to start talking about cars?

Yes, it is what Henry Ford is most known for...

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20250527-SDIM6296 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Part of it is that a large part of the collection was very familiar to me, so I skimmed through it. (Which is probably why I missed the Tucker Torpedo.) Even 1960s models older than me, like the Corvair above, I could see fairly often when doing my newspaper delivery route as a young teenager; heck, even the 1950s model in the background wasn't unknown.

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20250527-SDIM6299 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
Ersatz!

The Dodge Omni was notable to me mostly as a bad memory; a fairly obvious knockoff of the VW Rabbit, and as it later developed, a pretty bad knockoff.

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20250527-SDIM6297 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

And land whales like this were in their last throes of extinction.

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20250527-SDIM6295 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

The Mustang, everyone knew, and I also saw them fairly often growing up.

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20250527-SDIM6303 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

And I was never that interested in the very early automobiles.
 
They did have some cars that interested me, though...

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20250527-SDIM6277 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

This is about the era where I did start getting interested in older autos.

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20250527-SDIM6187 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

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20250527-SDIM6190 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

And this era, I absolutely love. (...was that the Tucker in the background? Augh!)

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20250527-SDIM6194 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

This Cord was notable for being owned by Amelia Earhart, something of a local connection as her hometown is about an hour's drive from me. According to a staffer there, I got lucky, as this was the last day it was on display before being swapped out for something else.

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20250527-SDIM6196 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

And now for something completely different... the Goldenrod set the land speed record for wheel-driven cars (as opposed to jet cars like Spirit of America or Art Arfons' Green Monster), which stood for more than 25 years.

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20250527-SDIM6185 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

And something else completely different: The Warrior, a concept car designed for cheap, reliable transportation in developing nations. The chassis and drivetrain were from the Renault 10; the body was a plastic composite designed to cross occasional waterways in rough backcountry.

Which leads in to the next bit...
 
Part VIa: Experiments in Power

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20250527-SDIM6279 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

The Chrysler Turbine always struck me as So Cool when I first read about it. Instead of the complicated machinery of a piston engine, the turbine was like a jet engine - conceptually simple, compact and smooth, capable of burning just about any fuel, from gasoline to peanut oil.

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20250527-SDIM6293 by Travis Butler, on Flickr
The styling leaned into the futuristic vibe.

Sadly, while conceptually simple, the turbine took a lot of expertise to produce, with high-quality alloys required for things like the turbine blades. Worse, power was somewhat lacking and fuel economy was poor. Chrysler ended the program in 1979.

Another technological dead end (well, mostly) was the Wankel Engine.

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20250527-SDIM6285 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

While not quite as conceptually simple as the turbine, Wankel (a.k.a. Rotary) Engines had fewer moving parts than a piston engine, and also promised compact power with smooth operation. They first appeared in cars in the mid-60s, and looked like a coming thing with several models released in the next decade. Unfortunately, they didn't work out (famously, the AMC Pacer was originally designed for a rotary engine); engine seals were an ongoing problem, and emissions/fuel economy never got up to spec. Mazda delightfully used them to power its RX line of sports cars, until emissions standards finally ended production in 2012.

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20250527-SDIM6280 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

GM's EV1 was another famous flop, introduced in 1996 and discontinued in 1999, with barely 1000 cars produced.

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20250527-SDIM6282 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

The ending is happier, though, as the EV1 pioneered the electric models we're seeing on the roads today.

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20250527-SDIM6265 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

We'll end the auto tour with a couple of classic models. (Keep an eye on the Holiday Inn sign...)
 
Such nice pictures Travis. Really enjoyed them. I saw some fisheyes, but which other lenses did you use?
If all goes as planned, I will travel with my son to Italy this Friday for a two week road trip. And on the 3rd stint we have planned a visit to the Ferrari Museum In Modena and Maranello.
 
Such nice pictures Travis. Really enjoyed them. I saw some fisheyes, but which other lenses did you use?
Whoops, sorry!

Aside from the fisheye, I used the OM Zuiko 24/2.8 and the Minolta MD 35-70/3.5 Macro. The OM was easier to frame, but I started noticing problems with flaring partway through; I switched over when I was in the aviation section (between pics 6127 and 6131 if you look at the Flickr album; the lens used is also tagged on Flickr).


There should be three or four more posts coming: car travel, history, civil rights, and a general review.

If all goes as planned, I will travel with my son to Italy this Friday for a two week road trip. And on the 3rd stint we have planned a visit to the Ferrari Museum In Modena and Maranello.
Sweet! Good luck and have fun.
 
Part VII: On the Road Again

When I was a kid, dad had to travel a lot for work, and our family often went with him. Road trip!

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20250527-SDIM6267 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

We got pretty familiar with the motel (motor hotel) style rooms at the rightmost end; doors opening to a walk along the outside, large glass windows, two beds for the parents and kids. The cinderblock walls weren't universal, but still fairly common.

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20250527-SDIM6271 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Camping was also an option. We had something in between these three choices - a 'pop-up' camper that traveled as a flat-top trailer that was then raised like a tent to provide living room.

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20250527-SDIM6275 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

Camper-buses like the VW were cool, but I shudder to think what it would have been like for a four-person family to try and use one. :)

So if you're on the road... where are you going to eat?

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20250527-SDIM6306 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

While diners were common at the start of the American road-trip experience...

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20250527-SDIM6305 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

They were overtaken by the fast-food chains. White Castle was arguably the first, but the golden arches of McDonalds soon dominated the roadways. Neon became the language of the highway. (If you've ever seen the Pixar movie Cars, the scenes in Radiator Springs brought back a lot of memories of our family's road trip days.)
 
Sidebar: Presidential Rides

Another one I'm not sure where to put; since the exhibit's right next to McDonalds, I'll put it here.

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20250527-SDIM6318 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

In 1963, JFK was riding through the streets of Dallas when shots rang out, killing him.

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20250527-SDIM6321 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

This is the car he was riding in.

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20250527-SDIM6322 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

It seems kind of stylized to my modern eyes, particularly when compared to its successor in the Reagan years:

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20250527-SDIM6324 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

But both of them look apart from most anything else on the roads. The current presidential limo is built even heavier, but isn't as long and doesn't fill the road in the same way.
 
Sidebar: Presidential Rides

Another one I'm not sure where to put; since the exhibit's right next to McDonalds, I'll put it here.

View attachment 13283
20250527-SDIM6318 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

In 1963, JFK was riding through the streets of Dallas when shots rang out, killing him.

View attachment 13284
20250527-SDIM6321 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

This is the car he was riding in.

View attachment 13285
20250527-SDIM6322 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

It seems kind of stylized to my modern eyes, particularly when compared to its successor in the Reagan years:

View attachment 13286
20250527-SDIM6324 by Travis Butler, on Flickr

But both of them look apart from most anything else on the roads. The current presidential limo is built even heavier, but isn't as long and doesn't fill the road in the same way.
But why does the jfk car looks different from the photograph behind the car? The grill and lights are at least.
 
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