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Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car

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Amphibious cars are not just the dreams of moviemakers, although an amphibious car was featured in the movie Pontiac Moon. The concept Gibbs aquada Sports Cars, now a very real version of an amphibious car has been released in the UK. The Gibbs aquada high-speed amphibian (HSA) is capable of speeds up to 100mph (160kmh) on land and 30mph (48kmh) over water, taking just six seconds to transform from road going sportscar to a jet powered marine vessel.

Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car

The Aquada, developed by Alan Gibbs, and marketed by Gibbs Technologies, represents state of the art amphibious car design. Since 1968, numerous prototype amphibious cars have been made, but none gained market traction. Advances in technology in numerous fields have helped Alan Gibbs' Aquada become perhaps the most commercially viable amphibious car since the Amphicar.

Gibbs is marketing the Aquada as the 'ultimate leisure vehicle,” and it might be just that. It's as fast as a conventional car on macadam and it can pull a skier on water. The Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car is sleek, and jet-propelled, recalling the Stalwart, but boasting 60 new patents for its design. Computer systems retract the Aquada's wheels in the water, eliminating their drag.

Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car

The Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car is powered by using a 175hp, V6 engine with 4 speed automated transmission it truly is linked to the fully-enclosed jet propulsion device when on the water. Getting into the water is as easy as using down a boatramp or entering at once from shore and once the push-button transformation has taken vicinity, the accelerator becomes the throttle and the jet propulsion takes over.

The Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car is designed to meet European road and marine safety standards and is fully-legal for both water and land use in the UK according to the Gibbs Technologies site. To meet its lofty speed goals, the Aquada uses a carefully shaped outer body supported inside by a metal space frame. In this is conceptually similar to integrating a NASCAR racer's rollcage into a load-distributing unibody structure as used in a typical sedan.

Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car

Propulsion in the ten Aquada prototypes currently testing in Michigan is from a 2.5-liter 160-horsepower engine. Gibb's press materials are careful not to specify precisely which engine this may be, but we assume a turbocharged four cylinder would provide the necessary combination of power and weight (a 175-horsepower V6 is used in the euro-spec Aquada).

A take-off from the transmission powers a carefully designed water jet for marine propulsion; Gibbs says the compact jet produces nearly a ton of thrust at half the size and a quarter of the expected weight. It's enough for the Aquada to have set a 32.8 mph record speed run, and sufficiently reliable for Sir Richard Branson to break the amphibian speed record across the English Channel by four hours. More prosaically, Gibbs demonstration video shows the Aquada pulling a water skier.

Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car

While we have not piloted an Aquada, it is clear that its driving force-middle, 3-across seating, no doors and Bimini pinnacle may have practical issues, or at least provide numerous communique starters. On land we would assume the Aquada would deliver greater than desirable avenue handling and middling overall performance given the mild electricity and three,225 lbs. Weight.

"Our plans for North America are ambitious, competitive and plausible," Gibbs has stated, pointing out, "Aquada should generate annual sales volumes of one hundred,000 or extra inside five years." Perhaps we need to get our driving gloves and water skis prepared now.

Gibbs aquada Sports Cars Concept Real Amphibious Car

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