WTF ?
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Will someone please tell me
is going on here
Yo-Yo MA! Ford's Mays To Unwrap Funk Shui Roadster Concept
In an unexpected move, Ford Motor Company Design Veep J Mays is to pull the sheet on a bizarre two seat eco-roadster concept at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles today. Strangely (yet appropriately) christened the MA, the roadster takes inspiration from the Asian discipline that concerns itself with "the space between." This philosophy, which according to Ford "refers to a kind of threshold where two concepts can exist in a mutually beneficial relationship," plays out in the construction of the concept, which works to occupy a niche between the emotional and rational, lurking somewhere in the gray area betwixt art and science.
If nothing else, Ford's latest concept amounts to a refreshing break from the tracing-paper school of design that has largely dictated Mays' recent efforts. Looking for all the world like an errant Lotus Seven that had a run-in with a bamboo patch (or perhaps an Ikea catalog), this minimalist two-seater isn't a clean-sheet design… it is a no sheet design. The MA graduated from proposal to reality without a designer so much as lifting a #2 pencil. Because it was designed entirely on a computer, the car was realized quickly, with no time necessary for the clay mockups or other work-intensive processes relied upon in traditional automotive design.
Taking the "space between" concept a bit further, this concept's success hinges as much on what it is, as what it isn't. Quite obviously, the MA isn't conventional. Constructed of aluminum, bamboo, and carbon fiber, the car is entirely weldless. Literally bolted together (courtesy of 364 titanium bits, thank you), the design makes use of no hydraulic fluids whatsoever, nor does it rely on the industrial adhesives that are commonly used in today's automobiles. Few pieces are painted. These curiosities work to pay huge environmental dividends, as the MA is claimed to be some 96 percent recyclable. This particular concept has been fitted with a low-speed electric motor, making it a zero-emissions vehicle with little ecological impact. Ford hastens to add that a small conventional gas engine could also be retrofitted, however.
Also reminiscent of the Lotus Seven, Ford sees the concept as being marketed in kit form. Rather than being assembled in a plant, the MA would be shipped as a 500+ piece kit. As a hobby car, Mays sees the design as being a perfect way to usher in a new generation of automotive enthusiasts to the Blue Oval: "This would be a great hobby vehicle… you could put it together in your garage at home with your son or daughter."
is going on here Yo-Yo MA! Ford's Mays To Unwrap Funk Shui Roadster Concept
In an unexpected move, Ford Motor Company Design Veep J Mays is to pull the sheet on a bizarre two seat eco-roadster concept at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles today. Strangely (yet appropriately) christened the MA, the roadster takes inspiration from the Asian discipline that concerns itself with "the space between." This philosophy, which according to Ford "refers to a kind of threshold where two concepts can exist in a mutually beneficial relationship," plays out in the construction of the concept, which works to occupy a niche between the emotional and rational, lurking somewhere in the gray area betwixt art and science.
If nothing else, Ford's latest concept amounts to a refreshing break from the tracing-paper school of design that has largely dictated Mays' recent efforts. Looking for all the world like an errant Lotus Seven that had a run-in with a bamboo patch (or perhaps an Ikea catalog), this minimalist two-seater isn't a clean-sheet design… it is a no sheet design. The MA graduated from proposal to reality without a designer so much as lifting a #2 pencil. Because it was designed entirely on a computer, the car was realized quickly, with no time necessary for the clay mockups or other work-intensive processes relied upon in traditional automotive design.
Taking the "space between" concept a bit further, this concept's success hinges as much on what it is, as what it isn't. Quite obviously, the MA isn't conventional. Constructed of aluminum, bamboo, and carbon fiber, the car is entirely weldless. Literally bolted together (courtesy of 364 titanium bits, thank you), the design makes use of no hydraulic fluids whatsoever, nor does it rely on the industrial adhesives that are commonly used in today's automobiles. Few pieces are painted. These curiosities work to pay huge environmental dividends, as the MA is claimed to be some 96 percent recyclable. This particular concept has been fitted with a low-speed electric motor, making it a zero-emissions vehicle with little ecological impact. Ford hastens to add that a small conventional gas engine could also be retrofitted, however.
Also reminiscent of the Lotus Seven, Ford sees the concept as being marketed in kit form. Rather than being assembled in a plant, the MA would be shipped as a 500+ piece kit. As a hobby car, Mays sees the design as being a perfect way to usher in a new generation of automotive enthusiasts to the Blue Oval: "This would be a great hobby vehicle… you could put it together in your garage at home with your son or daughter."
I was looking at that yesterday on Blue Oval News... and was thinking that maybe one of the engineers kids needed a soapbox derby racer built.. and when the boss saw him working on the plans for it, the guy passed it off as an actual concept vehicle so he wouldn't get his ass canned!!!
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The Iron(FE)-Works
My daddy always said, "When you want to hammer a nail, don't do anything fancy. Just get a hammer and pound the son of a bitch."
The Iron(FE)-Works
My daddy always said, "When you want to hammer a nail, don't do anything fancy. Just get a hammer and pound the son of a bitch."
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Originally posted by "mustang23"
Hey guys at Ford, hows about building a car or two that won't fucking break or be recalled within the first month of ownership before we look at the artsy bullshit
Hey guys at Ford, hows about building a car or two that won't fucking break or be recalled within the first month of ownership before we look at the artsy bullshit
But we are still better than any import !



