I Think This 1967 Ford Brochure Predicted Pod Racing: Cold Start

Cs Fairlane Podrace
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I really adore this coarse-brushwork style of midcentury brochure illustration, and this 1967 Ford Fairlane brochure is a fantastic example of the genre. But this one has an interesting detail the likes of which I’m not sure I’ve seen in car brochures like this. In Syd Meade paintings of imagined, sleek, stylish futures, sure, but not really in brochures designed to sell mainstream cars. I think there are some kind of imaginary racing technology in this brochure! I’m not entirely sure what they are, but they seem like some kind of futuristic not-quite-aircraft racing machines. Like those pods in that Star Wars movie with Li’l Vader. See those machines up there that aren’t Fairlane? What are they?

Here, let’s look at the one on the right a bit closer:

Cs Fairlane Pd2

The one on the left looks like a jet fighter plane, except it seems to lack wings. This one up there, though, that’s no plane. It has those big dual exhausts coming out of the cowl there, suggesting some kind of combustion engine, and what looks like an open cockpit. There’s not really wings, but the whole shape looks like maybe it can generate some lift? Is this is a hovercraft of some kind?

I mean, minus the giant lightning-tethered jet engines, it reminds me a lot of those racing pods, down to the desert-like environment:

There’s another racing scene in the brochure, but that one features conventional and period-correct racing cars:

Cs Fairlane Race

There’s also a guy there dressed like either a Foot Locker employee or something a good bit more disturbing. And the rest of the brochure is pretty conventional, without any sort of other unknown retro-future tech, just vivid colors suggesting thick vegetation:

Cs Fairlane

So what do we think those things are? Decommissioned fighter planes adapted into ground-effect racers? That’d be pretty cool. An alternative 1967 where football-sized atomic reactors powered all sorts of fun stuff, and yet we still bought Fairlanes? I’m not sure we’ll ever know.

UPDATE: Our social fella Peter says they’re hydro racing boats, and they do seem to resemble those! The color choice of the environment feels so dirt/desert-like that I didn’t even think about them in terms of watercraft. I suppose that could be it! Those were pretty amazing things! Though I still like the racing hovercraft idea.

31 thoughts on “I Think This 1967 Ford Brochure Predicted Pod Racing: Cold Start

  1. Today I learned that once upon a time there were people called “Fairlaners” who drove “a Trim Car that Handles Like a Sports Car.”

    I looked up “Fairlaners” in my thesaurus and it said “see also: delusional.”

  2. For those that say it looks like a desert landscape I guess you would have to see what Genesee Park looks like today, after the crowds, trucks, and trailers have trampled the grass into oblivion. Thankfully we had a little rain this weekend so it didn’t become a total dust bowl.

  3. “Decommissioned fighter planes adapted into ground-effect racers? That’d be pretty cool.”

    These are not the ekranoplans you are looking for.

  4. Speaking of Syd Mead, Mercedes had a comment in her HHR SS Panel Van article yesterday wishing that more automakers would revisit retro designs. Got me thinking that I would much rather see something similar, but different. I would love to see someone make an EV with Syd Mead styling, big long super-sleek. Cadillac should redesign the Celestiq with some Syd influence. Would make an order of magnitude improvement in it’s looks.

    https://www.carbodydesign.com/2020/01/remembering-syd-mead-1933-2019/

  5. Today’s race is brought to you by…
    Ford: Official sponsor of Area 51
    Goodyear Double Eagle Tires: When there’s no man around
    And
    JC Whitney: All the parts you don’t need

  6. The seat with the helmet on it looks like a mildew farming experiment. Maybe the artist also imagined a future in which this car was a coveted barn find.

  7. Peter nailed it – in the first pic (with the helmet), you can see the designation on the side that begins with “U”…that’s a hydroplane racing number. Unlimited class.

    I believe the numbers even stay with the boats themselves their whole lives as they pass from team to team/owner to owner. How cool is that?!

    1. The numbers don’t stay with the boat, at least not always, for example the original Pride of Pay N Pak was first the U-25 and when it was sold to Bernie Little it became the Miss Budweiser and wore U-12 for 3 years.

  8. Looks like a airplane without the wing section attached. Post war GIs messing around with wartime surplus in the desert doing – most likely – awesome (dangerous) fun stuff!

  9. GI Gen guys who missed the thrills they got during the war did crazy shit in the 50’s, and it wouldn’t surprise me if some of them repurposed surplus military equipment to go stupid fast across a dry lake bed. That’s sooo wizard Annie.

    1. [Putting on my Captain Pedantic hat]
      Hydroplane, not hydrofoil.

      Hydrofoils are those boats with “wings” under the boat, connected by struts, that lift the hull completely out of the water. Like Largo’s yacht in “Thunderball.”

      Hydroplanes don’t lift completely out of the water, but instead just barely skim the surface, causing quite the spectacle when a little wave pops the front of the boat up just enough to air under the hull, launching the boat into a spectacular, although sometimes fatal, flip over the water.

        1. Yes, SeaFair. Crowds aren’t too bad, this year seemed pretty much back to normal as far as the number of people in attendance. To be fair I’m mainly there for set up, tear down and manning of a booth.

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