Thanks for the neat post on the Stout Scarab - at this point I think Tesla Motors may end up about the way the Stout Scarab did. Interesting concept but flawed execution as well as bad timing = the money supply went away. At least people are still trying to offer new approaches.
We got permission to use a photo of the silver one on the cover of an Eastwood catalog around '95. It generated so many calls that in seriously impacted customer orders. Since it was my idea, guess who caught all the grief from management? I've got one of the pressed tin toys somewhere in the vault. Should get it out an play with it.
Wow! Thanks for the lesson. On the HAMB you really do learn something new every day. Excellent detail pic's ProEnfo.
I think the one ProEnfo posted pics of is the one that was at Hershey about 10 years ago. It had a crowd ALL day and the owner was very friendly about questions.
If a potato bug could be a car it would be a Stout Scarab, while looking at it I wait for it to curl up in a ball! Very cool/artdeco, thanks 4 posting as I would have never known it existed! Lon
I love teardrop cars... There have been some great articles about them and I posted one of my favorite below about Stout and his cars. Hope you enjoy. Geoff
Not sure if I'm brilliant enough to post this correctly, but here goes: test drive on YouTube. <object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/qYRpzdjENWQ&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/qYRpzdjENWQ&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
Oh dear! That's an unfortunate similarity. But thanks guys for the pics and vid link. A truly fascinating car.
I had an opportunity to ride in a Stout Scarab a few years ago. It rode like a modern vehicle for the most part. This video is the result of that ride.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sm-J1N9iPRs
I've always found the Stout Scarab very cool and have only ever seen one in a museum. At the time, it was very advanced, like the Tatra cars from what is now the Czech Republic that we're its contemporaries.
Did anybody else notice the headliner in that car? It was woven like a basket. Pretty darn cool looking to me.
FWIW: The gentleman that owns the silver Stout Scarab posted in ProEnfo's post is Larry Smith, who owns the Autometric Collision shops here in Metro Detroit and is also the Chairman of the Meadowbrook Hall Concours D'Elegance. Mr. Smith ALSO owns this....built by Brothers Custom in Troy, Michigan I believe.