Roadtrain: BQuad of 4 x 40foot containers

The round bit at the rear is a streamlined cowling that covers a turntable, so another trailer can be added. Still to do: container detailing, logos, lights, road and background, cabin doors & detailing, roo-bar.
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They are huuuuge :)
CYa!
Mako
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And it's sort of based on real road trains, like this one I photographed in the NT. 53m long, and that's my Camry.
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If you should be looking for more futuristic designs, have a look at the truck by Spitzer (designed by Colani) (http://www.lsi.upc.es/~lcmolina/hobby.htm#Spitzer). Here is another view (http://www.sata.com/artikel/Aktuell/detail053475.jsp?printview=1).
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You can find more of his designs on his homepage www.colani.ch
Click onto "English", on the following page click onto "Portal" and have a look at "Visions" and "Projects". No direct links, as his site hides the URLs.
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Thanks for the links, Marmoe!
I'd never heard of Luigi Colani before.
Wow! Very Interesting Designs!
Must look up more of his stuff. :)
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I don't know how they build roads there but here they mix a 2-foot deep layer of subsoil with gypsum, wet and compact it, then lay and compact heavy gravel layers each of which is sprayed with bitumen, then surfaced with compacted
fine gravel and a bitumen/rubber binding compound mix.
Anyway, a road's natural state is to be corrugated. Smooth road surfaces are unnatural.
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The roadtrains trash the dirt roads, but nearly everybody who regularly uses those roads has a 4WD, so it isn't too big an issue.
Occasionally you get weird compromise stuff: the Barkley Highway (http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v137/lostwanderfound/dodgyroad.jpg) (heading east into Queensland from just north of Tennant Creek) is a two-lane dirt road with one lane of bitumen down the middle of it. People drive on the bitumen when they've got it to themselves, and shift half a lane sideways (dropping one set of wheels into the dirt) whenever there's any oncoming traffic.
That's just when it's an equal match (car -v- car or roadtrain -v- roadtrain), of course; when it's roadtrain -v- car, the roadtrain stays on the bitumen and the car gets the hell out of the way.
I should also mention that this road has a great many blind crests in it, and no speed limit... :)
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