February 06, 2005
IT SEEMED LIKE A GOOD IDEA AT THE TIME:
Henry Smolinski and Hal Blake founded Advanced Vehicle Engineers in Van Nuys, California. Their gimmick: put flight instruments and controls in a 1971 Ford Pinto. Saw the cabin and front engine off a twin-boom Cessna Skymaster, and attach the rest of the aircraft to the rear of the Pinto with the wings over the roof and the pusher engine snugged up against the hatchback. Fly the Pinto to an airport near your destination, unlatch it from the wings, and drive it where you want to go. No need for rental cars...
It worked (though the aero-engine failed on the maiden flight, and the pilot had to *drive* back to the hangar). It got great publicity, as flying automobiles always do; see *Hot Rod* for August 1973, page 116. It got a distributor: Galpin Ford of Sepulveda, California.
Alas, sometime late in 1973, Smolinski and Blake climbed aboard the "Mizar" and rolled down the runway. During the takeoff, the peculiar marriage of wheels and wings divorced, and the Advanced Vehicle Engineers found themselves sailing through the California sky in a very un-advanced vehicle, a wingless Pinto.
With the death of the two principal developers, the Mizar project dissolved. The world is still waiting for production of a commercial roadable aircraft.
-- Doomed Engineers
Posted by Vanderleun at February 6, 2005 12:34 AM from American Digest
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