Fri, May 17, 11:08 AM CDT

FORD T SNOWMOBILE

3D Modeling Historical posted on Jan 09, 2015
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Description


When I saw a blue Snowmobile Ford T in Silverton ( Colorado ) in 2010, I thought that it was a unique truckl. I was making a lot of photos to create a 3D model when a very nice old man came and told me the story of this Ford ( see below ) This is an ancient Vue model revisited for Poser, with ERC Dials ( the 2 doors and the tailgate can be open and the steering wheel controls both front skis like in reality. Render in Poser. Background : a shot of the countryside around my home...4 years ago. THE SNOWMOBILE SAGA: In 1917 Virgil D. White received a patent for an attachment designed to convert a Model T into a 'Snowmobile' a name coined and copyrighted by White.   He put it on the market during the winter of 1922 after perfecting it in every detail, selling the attachments exclusively through Ford dealers.  The Snowmobile attachment consisted of the complete package necessary to convert a Ford into a reliable snow machine. The “Ford on Snowshoes," was offered in three different gauges:  - For those living where automobiles were standard 56 inch gauge was recommended.  - A narrower 44-inch gauge allowed driving the Ford in the tracks of horse-drawn bobsleds. - Thirty-eight inch gauge was offered for Ford owners where narrower sleigh tracks were standard, such as in parts of Canada.  The Snowmobile became an indispensable convenience for the person requiring rapid, dependable transport in all kinds of weather.  Country doctors and rural mail carriers were the largest users of this type of vehicle.  Other customers of the manufactured Snowmobile included public utility companies, lumber companies, traveling salesmen, fire departments, school bus and taxi drivers, undertakers, grocers, milkmen,truckers and cranberry growers.  When the father of President Calvin Coolidge died on March 18, 1926, a Model T Snowmobile led the Coolidge funeral procession over the snow-covered hills of Vermont. Makers of the attachment claimed the ability to travel over two and a half feet of unbroken snow at an average speed of 18 miles per hour.  Those who had a Snowmobile certainly used it with great satisfaction.  The conversion kits were quite expensive. The attachment in 44 inch or 38 inch gauge for mounting on a roadster, or the 56 inch gauge for all body styles prior to 1926, listed at $395.00 F.O.B., West Ossipee, New Hampshire.  A 56-inch gauge attachment for the one ton truck was less expensive at $250.00 because no special driveline and suspension were needed. Heavy duty 30 x 30-1/2-inch - wheels were still provided to mount on the rear axle, however. With skis removed and front wheels installed; the Snowmobile became a Sandmobile, useful for transport through deep mud and heavy sand.  A number of units sold as Sandmobiles were used in South Africa, Algeria, Egypt, and the Florida Everglades. In 1923, White produced only about 70 units.  By 1925, manufacturing rights to produce snow automobile attachments were sold to Farm Specialty Manufacturing Company of New Holstein, Wisconsin, which began to market its version of the product in 1926. Farm Specialty Manufacturing Company later bought the patents of the Snowmobile Company and sent its managers to run the factory in West Ossipee.  From 1924 to 1929, the Snowmobile Company manufactured about 3,300 units per year in its plant at West Ossipee and had a branch warehouse at St. Paul, Minnesota.  The Snowmobile Company closed in 1929, and the factory mysteriously burned down shortly thereafter.

Comments (11)


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Cyve

9:34AM | Fri, 09 January 2015

Superbe !!! J'aime beaucoup !

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Domi48

9:43AM | Fri, 09 January 2015

Je connaissais ton modèle. Je trouve l'intégration dans la photo vachement bien foutue.

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DocMikeB

9:51AM | Fri, 09 January 2015

Very interesting and beautiful historical vehicle!

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e-brink

1:44PM | Fri, 09 January 2015

An excellent model - nicely presented! JE SUIS CHARLIE!

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AliceFromLake

8:32PM | Fri, 09 January 2015

A curious vehicle. :-) Well made.

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Maxidyne

12:08PM | Sun, 11 January 2015

Nice update. Any chance you'll be updating your Citroen DS. Maybe give it the early 'Frogeye' front.

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Dreamdesigner

7:42PM | Sun, 11 January 2015

Well,I exactly need this vehicle around my hometown,especially in winter season!! Haha! :-D Alain, you made an another great classic again from the automotive history! thanks to you for the historical info my friend:-))))))))Also That poser render is magnificent!you really use that beautiful BG picture with a great success!Superb labor as usual Congrats again my friend:-))))))

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P-LACALMONTIE

12:23PM | Tue, 27 January 2015

Fantastique modèle ! Originale et jamais vu pour ma part. Excellente intégration sur ton fond photo.

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gaius

2:38AM | Sat, 28 February 2015

Là, tel que tu me vois (?), je suis littéralement sur le cul devant une telle qualité...le modèle est superbe et l'intégration dans la photo aux petits oignons...du grand art. même que je me les gèle dans la neige !!!

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arlivre

1:02PM | Thu, 12 March 2015

When I looked first time it seemed a real photo.. Super model and fantastic integration in the scenery. Congratulations ! ! Joao

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pchef

6:07AM | Sun, 22 March 2015

superbe modèle. Excellent mix avec le décor.


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