So you think the airscrew is strictly for planes? Guess again. Look at these mighty prop-driven machines created by some of the most talented engineers and designers the world 'round. Sure, they can't fly, but their twisted blades help them wade through water, ice, snow, mud, glide on rails, and rule the road.
Joseph Fawkes built this experimental monorail, the Aerial Swallow, in Burbank in 1910.
Photo: Westlake Publishing
1911: A motor car at Brooklands race track which has been fitted with a propeller for extra speed, and three random buddies for extra company.
Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
This motor sleigh driven by aeroplane propellers is the type that Irish explorer Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton used on his Antarctic explorations.
Photo: Topical Press Agency/Getty Images
The Aerowagon (or aeromotowagon) was an experimental high-speed railcar fitted with an aircraft engine and propeller traction invented by Russian engineer Valerian Abakovsky. The Aerowagon derailed at high speed its second time out, killing everyone?including Abakovsky himself?on board.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons/lord_k/Infodon
September 1922: Experimental 'hydro-glider' Oak Leaf II, which is basically a motorboat propelled by a type of aircraft propeller.
Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
The German experimental locomotive Schienenzeppelin (The Railway Zeppelin) was developed by the German aircraft engineer Franz Kruckenberg in 1929.
Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
This is the Eisb?r, Alfred Wegener's propeller-driven German snow scooter, around 1930.
Photo: Alfred-Wegener-Institut
The Bennie railplane?named for inventor George Bennie?being demonstrated at Glasgow, Scotland in the 1930s. It consists of self-propelled passenger cars driven by air screws, suspended from a steel girder.
Photo: Topical Press Agency/Getty Images
The 1932 Helicron in the Lane Motor Museum, Nashville, TN. It is currently equipped with a Citroen GS engine with the propeller coupled directly to the crankshaft. The Helicron passed the French safety inspection in 2000 and is approved for use on their roads.
Photo: Brent Moore
A blow-up motorized canoe, powered by an air-propeller, being tested by its inventor in 1935.
Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
The Argentinian Aerocar (powered by a Chevrolet six-cylinder engine) was considered for mass-production in California in 1955.
Photo: federico-kirbus.blogspot
Tupolev, the famous Soviet aircraft designer, built this all-metal snowmobile?the ANT-4 \?in 1924.
Photo: Russiane Engineering
Another Tupolev masterpiece, the A-3 airsleigh, a part boat, part sled, part ground-effect vehicle.
Photo: aerosanitupoleva.ru
Another awesome photo of the retrofuturistic Tupolev A-3.
Photo: polarpost.ru
Another remarkable Soviet snowmobile: the Sever-2, built upon Pobeda cars.
Photo: polarpost.ru
The NKL-26 was an armoured aerosan introduced by the Soviet Union during the Second World War.
Photo: siol.net
The 1938 Schl?rwagen was built on the chassis of the rear-engine Mercedes 170H. The Russians took the Schl?rwagen as war booty and conducted tests as a propeller-driven vehicle.
Photo: DLR
A Ka-30 snowmobile dashing through the snow in Soviet Russia.
Photo: polarpost.ru
The A?rotrain I80 was a hovertrain developed in France from 1965 to 1977. The lead engineer was Jean Bertin.
Photo: aerotrain.fr
The 300-ton, Super 4 BHC Hovercraft, 'The Princess Margaret' travelling near London Bridge on the 9th of May, 1979.
Photo: Colin Davey/Evening Standard/Getty Images
This Arctic Airboat PE350 is made by Arctic Airboats Ltd, Helsinki, Finland
Photo: Arctic Airboats/Facebook
The Arctic Ant hydrocopter can move on water, ice, snow and land. These kind of vehicles are very common in the coastal regions of Finland.
Photo: Arctic Ant
The Tupolev company created the AS-2 amphibious snowmobile too.
Photo: tupolev.ru
Patrol: an amphibious snowmobile-glider by Torex Ltd. in Saratov, Russia.
Photo: amfibia.ru
The Khivus-10 is a light amphibious air-cushion boat from Russia
Photo: Glazyrin Sergey/Wikimedia Commons
Lotus built this propeller-driven biofuel vehicle for the Moon Regan Trans Antarctic Expedition in 2008.
Photo: Moon Regan Trans Antarctic Expedition
A landing craft air cushion (LCAC) from Assault Craft Unit (ACU) 4 exits the well deck of the amphibious assault ship USS Kearsarge (LHD 3).
Photo: Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Abraham Essenmacher/U.S. Navy
Top animgif source: alaskafilmarchives
Any favorites that we missed? Post in the discussions below!
Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-dodos-we-made-26-propeller-driven-machines-that-ca-482414317
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