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AutoCult 1942 Schlörwagen mit TURBINE!

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Paul Rouffa
(@paul-rouffa)
Famed Member
Joined: 29 years ago
Posts: 1135
Topic starter  

Think of the wheelies you could do with this!

From AutoCult:

"During World War II Karl Schlör mounted an enormous propeller on his aerodynamic experimental car. Without the fitted propeller the car was powered by the standard Mercedes-Benz 170 H engine with a performance of 38 hp and reached a top speed of 135 km/h. Even today it is hard to imagine which speed the car would have reached or had reached with the additional 130 hp turbine.

"Probably Karl Schlör tested the additional power of the captured Russian engine at least once. But records have been lost to history. If a test drive took place, the performance of the additional engine would have stretched the aerodynamically designed car to its mechanical limits. If the car was still controllable at speeds over 160 km/h or even faster is anyone’s guess. Based on these considerations it remains vague what Karl Schlör wanted to achieve by adding the voluminous propeller.

"Engineer Karl Schlör von Westhofen-Dirmstein was born in 1911. The design of his aerodynamic experimental car was guided by the construction of aircraft wings. In the second half of the 1930s the blue-blooded nobleman built his aluminum car body on the chassis of a Mercedes-Benz 170 H. Although his teardrop shaped design proved to be on average 30 % more efficient in fuel consumption compared to a standard Mercedes-Benz 170 H, it did not find favor. The response, which the back than 28-year-old Engineer got, disappointed him. People described the car with the words “ugly” or “unattractive appearance”. Despite the fact that streamlined body design was already a subject of discussion due to several studies and the cars of Wundibald Kamm or Paul Jaray and therefore also open for the public, Karl Schlör was not able obtain acceptance with his unique car."

I do like me a blobby car with an enormous propeller.

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7C93A517 A3E4 4614 BD1C F049F45B6B36 1 105 c

And with an old relative?

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216172ED D72A 4986 A158 28EE62CB141F 1 105 c


   
John Kuvakas, David Green, Karl Schnelle and 5 people reacted
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Charles Rockett
(@charles-rockett)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 2381
 

 

I've always admired Herr Schlor's original design, without the propellor but I doubt he did this work for aesthetic reasons.  At the time, people were experimenting with this technology including mounting propellors onto trains.

image
image

Schienenzeppelin 1929

 



   
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(@karl)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 29 years ago
Posts: 2629
 

Hook those 2 together and you could have a real push me-pull you! 😉 

Rio 1921 Leyat

 



   
Paul Rouffa, John Kuvakas, Paul Rouffa and 1 people reacted
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(@karl)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 29 years ago
Posts: 2629
 
Posted by: @charles-rockett

 

image

Schienenzeppelin 1929

My Dad had this in his Marklin collection - my nephew has it now...

3077.1.1000.modellbahn.com

 source:  https://www.modellbahn.com/



   
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