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Submersible car.

Started by Charger_Fan, February 15, 2008, 03:44:14 PM

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Charger_Fan

Let me know if Strat beat me to this story. :nana:

http://www.sltrib.com//ci_8267125?IADID=Search-www.sltrib.com-www.sltrib.com

GENEVA - OK, so the Swiss have invented a car that runs on land and underwater. But did they really have to make it look like a convertible?
    It's called the ''sQuba,'' and conjures up memories of James Bond's amphibious Lotus Esprit from ''The Spy Who Loved Me.'' That fictional vehicle traveled on land and, when chased by bad guys in a helicopter, plunged into the water and became an airtight submarine - complete with ''torpedoes'' and ''depth charges.''
    But ''Q'' isn't responsible for this one.
    The concept car - which unlike Bond's is not armed - was developed by Swiss designer Rinspeed Inc. and is set to make a splash at the Geneva Auto Show next month.
    Company CEO Frank Rinderknecht, a self-professed Bond fan, said he has been waiting 30 years to re-create the car he saw Roger Moore use to drive off of a dock.
    The sQuba can plow through the water at a depth of 30 feet and has electrical motors to turn the underwater screw.
    You'll have to break out the wetsuit, however.
    The car has an open top, meaning that the two passengers are exposed to the elements.
    ''For safety reasons, we have built the vehicle as an open car so that the occupants can get out quickly in an emergency,'' said Rinderknecht, 52.
    Passengers will be able to keep breathing underwater through an integrated tank of compressed air similar to what is used in scuba diving.
    The sQuba's top speed on land is about 77 mph, but it slows down to 3 mph on the surface of the water, and 1.8 mph underwater.
    Working with engineering specialists, Rinspeed removed the combustion engine from a sports car and replaced it with several electrical motors. Three are located in the rear - er, aft - with one providing propulsion on land and the other two driving the screw for underwater driving.
    ''We always want to do cars that are outrageous, which nobody has done before. So we thought, 'Let's make a car dive,' " Rinderknecht, whose innovative company has made transparent, flying and voice-activated cars in previous displays at the Geneva Auto Show.
    The company calls the sQuba the first real submersible car. Unlike military amphibious vehicles, which can only be driven slowly on a lakebed, the sQuba travels like a submarine - either on the surface or submerged.
    The interior is resistant to salt water, allowing the skipper to drive into a lake or the sea.
    ''Many concept cars introduce important new technology,'' said John Cabaniss at the Association of International Automobile Manufacturers in Washington. ''Anything to improve the efficiency of a vehicle, streamlining or reducing the weight of materials, while maintaining strength . . . is put into concept cars first.''
    Cabaniss said the lithium-ion batteries in Rinspeed's car were ''state-of-the-art,'' adding the car industry in general would be looking for more ways to make things work electronically. But he was skeptical of the overriding idea.
    Rinderknecht said it cost more than $1.5 million to make the sole sQuba in existence, and that it was difficult to make a car watertight and pressure-resistant enough to be maneuverable underwater.
    ''The real challenge, however, was to create a submersible car that moves like a fish in water,'' he added. The price? ''It would be cheaper than a Rolls-Royce,'' he said.



The Aquamax...yes, this bike spent 2 nights underwater one weekend. (Not my doing), but it gained the name, and has since become pseudo-famous. :)

bull

So they can make everything water tight but the driver's area? :rotz: You'd think at a cost of $1.5 million they'd come up with a way to provide a means of escape other than leaving the roof off. :lol:

If I'm going to have to put on a wet suit and wear a scuba mask I'd rather have one of these for $1,400: http://www.nauticalniche.com/sea/underwater-propulsion.htm


(BTW, all cars are submersible but not all of them can submerge and then continue to travel under their own power) :D