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Aerodynamic Ruin: The Failure of the Dymaxion Car. Physics, Stability, and the Collapse of Buckminster Fuller's Visionary Transportation in Modern American History, 1933–1934
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- Nombre de pages170
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-34476-5
- EAN9783565344765
- Date de parution21/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille991 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Buckminster Fuller was a man ahead of his time, and the Dymaxion Car was his most ambitious attempt to revolutionize human mobility. It was a three-wheeled, aerodynamic marvel that looked like a grounded airplane and could transport eleven people at high speeds using minimal fuel. Yet, only three prototypes were ever built before the project crashed into oblivion.
This book investigates the lethal physics that doomed the design.
Behind its sleek silver exterior lay a fatal instability-rear-wheel steering that made the vehicle nearly impossible to control at high velocities. A tragic accident at the 1933 World's Fair sealed its fate in the public eye, branding it as a dangerous experiment. Explore the intersection of brilliant innovation and practical engineering failure. The author analyzes how marketing hubris ignored basic aerodynamic principles, leading to the collapse of what could have been the most efficient vehicle in history. Understand the "Fuller Effect" and learn why being right about the future doesn't guarantee success if you ignore the mechanics of the present.
Behind its sleek silver exterior lay a fatal instability-rear-wheel steering that made the vehicle nearly impossible to control at high velocities. A tragic accident at the 1933 World's Fair sealed its fate in the public eye, branding it as a dangerous experiment. Explore the intersection of brilliant innovation and practical engineering failure. The author analyzes how marketing hubris ignored basic aerodynamic principles, leading to the collapse of what could have been the most efficient vehicle in history. Understand the "Fuller Effect" and learn why being right about the future doesn't guarantee success if you ignore the mechanics of the present.



