Arts & Crafts Magazine

It Seems Like Curtiss Wright Sold the Monstrosity of a Hovercraft Waste of R&D to Ford, Maybe

By Bertyc @bertyc
it seems like Curtiss Wright sold the monstrosity of a hovercraft waste of R&D to Ford, maybe
found on http://bangshift.com/blog/historic-video-1960s-army-testing-of-curtiss-wright-air-car-is-a-glimpse-of-a-future-that-never-was.html
it seems like Curtiss Wright sold the monstrosity of a hovercraft waste of R&D to Ford, maybe
the 1961 Ford Glide Air was the 1959-60 Curtiss Wright model 2500 http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2011/07/1959-curtiss-wright-model-2500.html
it seems like Curtiss Wright sold the monstrosity of a hovercraft waste of R&D to Ford, maybe
top two images found on http://www.thegentlemanracer.com/2013/04/1961-ford-glideair-hover-car.html
Feb 5th update, the Army tried it out

found on http://bangshift.com/blog/historic-video-1960s-army-testing-of-curtiss-wright-air-car-is-a-glimpse-of-a-future-that-never-was.html
Filmed in 1960, the brief clip shows military testing of a 1959 Curtiss-Wright Model 2500 Air Car. Powered by two 180 horsepower Lycoming engines that each provided lift via a four-blade fan, the Air Car was able to steer by redirecting this air through louvers set into either side of the body.
This weighed in at around 2500 pounds, was twenty-one feet long, eight feet wide, and claimed to reach speeds of “over fifty miles-per-hour”, all while carrying up to four passengers. It also drank aviation gas from two twenty-gallon tanks to give it a range of about two hours of run-time.

March 20th update, Road and Track did a feature on this as well, never mentioned the Ford vehicle http://www.roadandtrack.com/features/web-originals/curtiss-wright-air-cars

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