Are mainstream carmakers still working on really bonkers stuff, or are they all just trying to find new ways to get people to have to pay a subscription to use an armrest? I’m not entirely certain of the answer, but it does seem that we enjoyed a greater concentration of bonkers ideas in the past. Ideas like this one from late 1950s/early 1960s Ford that sought to free humanity from the tyranny of the wheel, replacing those problematic dinguses with pure, unspoiled cushions of air.
I suppose the “car” I’m talking about is really a hovercraft, called the Levacar. Ford’s VP of Engineering and Research, Andrew Kucher, had come up with a hovercar concept back in the 1930s, and began to investigate it for Ford in the late 1950s, initially with mass-transit concepts that used “levapads” – the round perforated discs that expel air at pressures between 15 and 100 pounds per square inch, and a simple rail system
These concepts Kucher claimed could be used to transport 30 to 60 people at speeds of up to 300 mph or even 500 mph or so, though this wasn’t exactly proven.

They did do the math, though and found that
In experiments, air was supplied at 50 to 60lb per square inch to a 450lb Levacar that required 15hp for levitation and 2.5hp to propel it at 20mph. The Engineer recorded that in the case of a larger vehicle, 25hp would be required per 1,000lb of gross vehicle weight “so that a 40-passenger model with an estimated gross weight of 28,000lb would require 700hp for levitation.”

Building these huge 60-passenger versions wasn’t really likely at first, so a small, single seat Levacar, called the Mach I, was built instead, and was publicized a fair amount in the early 1960s.

The Levacar Mach I was designed in part by Gale Halderman, who would go on to design what would become the design for the first production Mustang. The Levacar Mach I was a funny little pod, with a big clear dome and white leather upholstery, so no eating chili dogs in there.
The Mach I was claimed to be able to hit 500 mph as well, but it was still basically a one-passenger city/commuter car, so I’m not really sure 500 mph would have made a whole lot of sense, because while 3-second commuting times may sound good, turning and stopping seem like they could have been, um, tricky.
There’s also noise; a contemporary report from The Engineer stated that
“…the noise level of a Levacar would be comparable to that of an express train at 80mph”
Is that all? A whisper-quiet express train? I bet babies could sleep right through that.

A prototype of the Mach I was built and displayed on a 34-foot diameter circular track at Ford’s Rotunda in Dearborn, Michigan. While basically a carnival ride in this form, it at least was actually hovering on a cushion of air, supplied by a central compressor and fed to the car via a support pipe mounted into the side.
You can see some stock footage of the Levacar Mach I tootling around the track here:
Exciting!
So far, air-cushion vehicles haven’t really caught on for personal transportation, but they never stopped being cool.









The guy inside the Mach 1 looks visibly uneasy and anxious…
“I didn’t think it was physically possible, but this both sucks and blows.” – Bart Simpson
YARN | I didn’t think it was physically possible, but this both sucks and blows. | The Simpsons (1989) – S10E15 Comedy | Video clips by quotes | 143ec7eb | 紗
AMT made a 1:20 model kit 1959 Ford Levacar Mach 1. Came with a hose that could be attached to a fitting on the back of the model and blown through to “levitate” the car. Had one as a kid- remember terrorizing the family cat with it.
Wincardium Levacarso!
Hellcat hoverbus anyone?
Back in the 1960’s when everyone smoked like a chimney being in that tiny glass bubble would be a death sentence. Add in one sunny day or a singular fart and people would be selling them back.
The Levacar Mach 1. It’s certainly a unique Float Over Road Design.
Physics may blow, but it’s also relentless. Gravity doesn’t quit. Overcoming gravity uses energy. This is why electric planes are so difficult.
It’s really a question of how much static energy usage you require (mass vs gravity, friction), versus the energy density of your source (battery, gasoline, nuclear?)
For a car, it turns out that overcoming rolling resistance is much much easier than overcoming gravity, especially at the mass/energy output levels of gasoline.
I love the ambition and optimism of the 1960s though!!
Surely with a car-scale nuclear reactor, then our energy density output would be high enough so that the static energy usage for lift would be insignificant! Let’s do it!
Jason. Talk to me about those tail lights!
Meet George Jetson, Jane his wife
They need to dig this concept up for Jim Carrey’s upcoming live-action reboot.
The remake we’ve all been asking for! And be “we” I mean “no one”!
Stop this crazy thing!
This thing blows.
That is technically correct, which is the best kind of correct.
“Physics doesn’t suck, it blows” – Mr B. 10th grade physics teacher
From the company that brought you the Nucleon.
Looks like the sort of thing you would use to kill your unappreciative guests in Rollercoaster Tycoon.
Crash protection seems like it wasn’t in the design scope.
Hey, it seems like he has a seatbelt on! That seems like plenty for 500mph.
The lead image is somehow slightly reminiscent of those photos of John Stapp, Eli Beeding, & others in rocket sleds (like the one used in the old Guinness Book of World Records for Beeding who enured the highest g-forces (voluntarily) which was about 82 g for some fraction of a second.)
https://www.aahs-online.org/images/journals/v51n3/v51n3_image7.jpg
If one’s wondering, the *involuntary* record is 214 g for Indycar driver Kenny Bräck when he crashed at 220 mph: https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/67617-highest-g-force-endured-non-voluntary
Stopping is easy, just cut the air.
Hopefully the sparks won’t start fires.
Titanium sliders. Make it a show.
Hmm – they had these on Tattooine a long time ago…
Earth 742 Professor X seems to prefer it over his wheelchair.
So your saying no Jetsons “beep,beep,beep” noise? Color me shocked.
I enjoy how the badge typeface largely made it to the eventual actual Mach 1.
Reminds me that I’d love to see a piece about the Ford Mach 2, a car from an alternate universe 60s where Ford went full Euro. Feels like a Mercedes assignment!
A small scale hover craft
This would be great as a personal shuttle to and from the monorail station.
Can it outrun the Flash?
That’s how they did it in Ogdenville and North Haverbrook. I don’t know why it wouldn’t work here in Springfield.
It really put them on the map!