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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