1960 Flying Caduceus photo by Remarkable Cars taken at the National Automobile Museum, in Reno, Nevada.
You have our permission to download this picture for use on your website if you will include a link back to www.remarkablecars.com.
Los Angeles physician Dr. Nathan Ostich built the worldīs first "jet" propulsion land speed car, the Flying Caduceus, in 1960. He chose the carīs name from the medical professionīs "caduceus" symbol of staff with entwined snakes and added a pair of wings denoting speed.
He began construction by obtaining a Convair B-36 bomber General Electric J-47 turbojet engine, which became the determining factor in the dimensions of the car. The frame is made of 2" square steel tubing. The suspension components were derived from Chevrolet truck parts and was comprised of A-arms and torsion bars. Firestone machined the special wheels from solid forged aluminum. Firestone tires were of tubeless construction holding 200 pounds pressure. The driver sat ahead of the front wheels, in a multi-windowed proboscis.
When it was unveiled early in 1960, Ostich announced a goal of 500 mph and in August, he ran the Flying Caduceus at Bonneville Salt Flats. He encountered a few problems, the worst being a defective fuel pump, a loose steering system, and fiberglass air ducts that were too lightweight. Ostich returned to Bonneville in 1962 but directional instability was apparent when the car began to slide sideways.
When the Flying Caduceus tried again in 1963, it reached its best speed of 359.7 mph, but the tachometer showed the engine to be running at only 90 percent of rated rpm. Ostich was trying to beat Craig Breedloveīs record 407.45 mph, but since the Flying Caduceus just couldnīt summon that extra muscle, Ostich did not try again.
Built By: Dr. Nathan Ostich, Los Angeles, California
Engine: General Electric J-47-19 Turbo-Jet, 6930-hp, 5,200 ft/lbs
Keywords: speed record jet powered vehicle car auto automobile pic photo picture
Related Links
