The nuclear craze after the end of World War II was more than a trope to be dissected by modern films and video games. At one point, starting nearly eight decades ago to the day, post-war America ...
In 1958, at the height of the atomic age, Ford unveiled one of the most ambitious concepts ever imagined - the Ford Nucleon, a car powered by a compact uranium reactor. Designed by Jim Powers, the ...
Concept cars communicate in physical form, the potential, the beliefs, and the dreams that car companies have about the future of not just their own vehicles, but the whole automotive industry in ...
Ford's Nucleon looks and sounds like a vehicle ripped straight outta "The Jetsons." Despite having only 24 episodes, the cartoon set in 2062 became an endearingly iconic piece of Americana. It ...
These seven Ford concept cars show the brand at its boldest, from the nuclear powered Nucleon and Mustang I to the ...
The late '50s and early '60s gave us some fascinating flights of design fancy in an era of unprecedented American optimism. Ford recent opened its Heritage Vault, full of nearly a century of archived ...
It was the late 1950s. GM's Motorama had the public mesmerized with jet-inspired fin-festooned and chrome-covered show cars. Ford needed something to match. Ultimately, they decided to go with the ...
The 20th-century automotive industry was truly a playground for bold and unconventional experiments. At a time when automotive design and technology pushed the boundaries of imagination, Ford took ...
In the 1950s and early 60s, the dawn of nuclear power was supposed to lead to a limitless consumer culture, a world of flying cars and autonomous kitchens all powered by clean energy. In Europe, it ...
The end of World War II marked humanity’s entry into the nuclear age. Having witnessed the huge destructive power of atomic weapons in two occasions before cessation of hostilities, humankind swore ...
Some things are better off forgotten. This would be one of them. Some things are better off forgotten. This would be one of them. It’s rather difficult today to understand how the horrific aftermath ...