The Wall Street Journal recently tested out a functioning replica of Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion car.
The results can be seen below…
From the WSJ:
The vehicle I drove last week is a museum-quality copy of Dymaxion #1, one of three vehicles designed by Fuller and built by the 4D Company in Bridgeport, Conn., in the early 1930s. Jeff Lane, founder of the Lane Motor Museum in Nashville and an aficionado of midcentury modern automobiles, commissioned the vehicle to fill out his menagerie of streamlined curiosities. The remaining original Dymaxion, #2, is in the National Auto Museum in Reno and is undrivable.
“I liked the early car,” said Mr. Lane. “It was the closest to Bucky’s original concept.”
Dymaxion # 1 is something of a fatalistic choice. It crashed at the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, killing the test driver and injuring two passengers in an accident that was splashed across front pages, scaring off investors. Later it was sold to Gulf Oil and was burned to the axles in a refueling incident.