Hemmings Motor News Blog Blog

Hemmings Motor News Blog

Hemmings Motor News has been around since 1954. We're proud of our heritage, but we're also more than the Hemmings full of classifieds that your father subscribed to. Aside from new editorial content every month in Hemmings, we have three monthly magazines: Hemmings Muscle Machines, Hemmings Classic Car and Hemmings Sports and Exotic Car.

While our editors traverse the country to find the best content for those magazines, we find other oddities related to the old-car hobby that we really had no place for - until now. With this blog, we're giving you a behind-the-scenes look at what we see and what we do during the course of putting out some of the finest automotive magazines you'll ever read.

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The First Car in Antarctica

Posted January 24, 2011 10:44 AM by dstrohl

While researching the Poulter-designed Snow Cruiser over the last couple of weeks, I came across mention of another car that would be worth posting this chilly chilly morning (-18 degrees Fahrenheit on my way into work this morning!). Polar explorer Ernest Shackleton – he of the ill-fated Endurance expedition – had in 1907 set sail for Antarctica on the Nimrod expedition with the very first motor vehicle to set tire on the Antarctic ice: an Arrol-Johnston, a product of Paisley, Dumfries, in Scotland.

The inclusion of the Arrol-Johnston came not solely due to its air-cooled engine and thus its ability to start and run in extremely cold temperatures. Rather, industrialist Sir William Beardmore (later Lord Invernairn), who financed Shackleton's Nimrod expedition, had recently purchased Arrol-Johnston and sent the car with Shackleton as a sort of publicity stunt. According to Beaulieu, it was a specially built car, featuring a four-cylinder 12-15hp Simms engine, a coalscuttle hood, and two sets of wheels – one that mounted wooden tires and another that mounted Dunlop pneumatics. (Other sources mention a third set of wheels fitted with solid rubber tires, cogged in the back.) Its exhaust pipe was routed to travel to the carburetor, under the floor to act as a footwarmer, then through a tank used for melting snow for cooking.

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Guru

Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: West Coxsackie, NY
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#1

Re: The First Car in Antarctica

01/24/2011 11:45 PM

All I can think on thi is BRRRRRRRRRrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

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Member

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#2

Re: The First Car in Antarctica

01/25/2011 9:43 AM

AND:

It's a convertible! Just what every sun-seeker wants while travelling around in the frosty white wild-ness of the great south.....

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Guru

Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 1985
#3
In reply to #2

Re: The First Car in Antarctica

01/25/2011 9:52 AM

keep in mind that sedans didn't become real popular until about 1910, three years after the Nimrod left for Antarctica.

dan

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Member

Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 8
#4
In reply to #3

Re: The First Car in Antarctica

01/25/2011 10:20 AM

I had forgotten that auto-mobiles didn't end up have a fixed roof until a few years after.... it did occur to me that having a fixed roof in a place that has temperatures that dip into the -90 Celsius range + windchill would have been a better idea....

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Power-User

Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: 1144 n meta okc,ok73107
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#5
In reply to #2

Re: The First Car in Antarctica

01/25/2011 12:50 PM

I dont think Farm Tractors had cabs at first,Maybe someone could build a

2011 model with a big tractor cab over it with heater vents attached to the

windows, blowing out Heat while keeping the windows defrosted.

instead of just the built in windshield Defroster wires.

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