Picture of the day. (38 Viewers)

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B-17G 42-107091 9Z-D "FORBIDDEN FRUIT" of the 452nd Bomb Group, 728th BS at Rattlesden, May 20, 1944. A flak burst took off part of tail plane, but the aircraft limped home to land at Rattlesden US base, but with controls damaged ran on into a meadow, with no injuries; however it clipped a crash truck fatally injured a 447 member; Salvaged. The tail gunner was KIA.

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That's the Rytecraft midget car.

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the source:
[Oldies] Midget Cars. Part II





Thanks to all. I knew somebody out there would know.......hey wait....remember Dinah Shore singing "See the U.S.A. in your Chevrolet " ?..........how about Adele singing "Travel near and far, in your Rytecraft Car!"
 
Thanks to all. I knew somebody out there would know.......hey wait....remember Dinah Shore singing "See the U.S.A. in your Chevrolet " ?..........how about Adele singing "Travel near and far, in your Rytecraft Car!"

I'd never heard of Rytecraft....so, of course, I had to google it. This is what Wikipedia has to say:

The Rytecraft Scootacar was a British microcar built by the British Motorboat Manufacturing Company in London between 1934 and 1940. The company later changed its name to BMB Engineering. It is possible that some might have been assembled after 1945.

This very small car originated as a fairground Dodgem and was electrically powered. In 1934, the designer Jack Shillan changed the engine to a 98 cc Villiers Midget single-cylinder engine and sold it for road use. The transmission was single speed and operated by a single pedal which opened the throttle on being pressed down and applied the brake when released. The clutch was automatic. There were no springs. Drive was to one of the rear wheels and the single brake operated on the other. It was said to be capable of reaching 15 mph (25 km/h). The body was open and had a single seat.

Later cars from about 1939 had a larger 250 cc engine, a three speed gearbox and normal pedal controls. Top speed was 40 mph (65 km/h). Two seats were now fitted along with electric lights. A commercial version, the Scootatruck was also made and for publicity some were styled to look like Vauxhall and Chrysler models.

About 1000 were made. In the 1960s Jim Parkinson drove one 15,000 miles (24,000 km) around the world and it was a 98 cc model. Several survive and one is on display at the Brooklands museum



I'm lost for words at the prospect of driving around the world in a single-seat, open-top car that's only capable of doing 15 mph!!!
 

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