The Detroit entrepreneur STOUT SCARAB a car with twin-engines aircraft since 1935
The earliest thinking behind the MPV (multi-purpose vehicle or multi-passenger vehicle) format as we recognize today can be traced back to 1935 and William Bushnell Stout’s Scarab.
This Detroit entrepreneur and inventor took his inspiration from airplanes. With his experience of designing an all-metal twin- engines aircraft, he decided to adapt the fuselage into a vehicle intended to be an office-on-wheels.
To make maximum use of space “on board,” he placed the engine, a Ford V8, at the very back, and moved the driving position forward so the steering wheel was almost directly above the front wheels.
There was no “hood” to speak of.
The wheels were positioned at each corner and the streamlined profile had what car designers today call a “mono space” (or “one-box”) shape—with no visually separated engine or luggage compartments.
Although the driver’s seat was fixed into position, the rear bench seat had cushions that could be rearranged into a full-length bed, the front passenger seat could swivel round to face the rear, and a fold-down table was hinged on the left side of the interior for meetings. However, at a cost of $5,000 each, just nine were sold.
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