"Pleasant Engineering Aesthetics"
"Pleasant Engineering Aesthetics"
Author
Discussion

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,565 posts

200 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
OK, an idea from another thread. Clue's in the title, here are a few to start:



America's Cup yacht



Empire Class flying boat



Bluebird CN7



The Hyundai Coupe.

(spot the deliberate mistake).

anonymous-user

70 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
The de havilland Comet.


anonymous-user

70 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
Riva Aquarama,


dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,565 posts

200 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
el stovey said:
Riva Aquarama,

Is that Murano in the background??

Eric Mc

123,953 posts

281 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
Another, earlier, De Havilland product - the DH91 Albatross



Lotus 25



Ferrari 250GTO



SS France



The V2 - the only rocket that ever looked like a rocket really should


anonymous-user

70 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
Although all Spitfire's were beautiful, my favourite is the prototype clean lined K5054 in supermarine blue.




Eric Mc

123,953 posts

281 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
I think the later Spitfires have a more aggressive, but still attractive look to them -

Mk 22


anonymous-user

70 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
The Lockheed 749 Constellations.



I'm not such a big fan of the longer nose 1049 super constellation though.



It's still a great looking aircraft.

Eric Mc

123,953 posts

281 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
Or the last of the line, the 1649 Starliner.


anonymous-user

70 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
I've always found something beautiful about Sputnik 1.

I'm probably on my own but It's something about the brutal Soviet simplicity of the design that I like.



It's at least iconic anyway.

IforB

9,840 posts

245 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all
Not a vehicle, but this looks "right" to me.



I'm biased as I have one of these, but they are just stunning.



I do not need to say anything about this.



Edited by IforB on Friday 11th September 23:53

Oily Nails

2,932 posts

216 months

Friday 11th September 2009
quotequote all


Jag D-Type lick



Handley-Page Victor lick


IforB

9,840 posts

245 months

Saturday 12th September 2009
quotequote all
I mustn't forget the world's most attractive aircraft.


RizzoTheRat

26,969 posts

208 months

Saturday 12th September 2009
quotequote all
White Knight and Space ship one, beautifull and outlandish




Earthrace



Edited by RizzoTheRat on Saturday 12th September 10:07

BonzoGuinness

1,554 posts

230 months

Saturday 12th September 2009
quotequote all
Always had a soft spot for these:


And these:


And these:


Ah hell these too hehe


Best stop before it turns into a fantasy shopping list...



Taffer

2,250 posts

213 months

Sunday 13th September 2009
quotequote all
M/Y Savarona:



P/S Waverley:




Both still around today - the Savarona is available for charter (US $385,000 per week), and the Waverley (the last sea-going paddle steamer) does day trips from Glasgow and usually goes to other UK locations during the Summer.

They don't build 'em like that anymore.

Zad

12,858 posts

252 months

Sunday 13th September 2009
quotequote all
Engineering aesthetics and no mention of Concorde? I must rectify that immediately.



Concorde just is the right shape. Even little babies and old grannies can tell that.

dilbert

7,741 posts

247 months

Sunday 13th September 2009
quotequote all
You could set a hundred product designers on the task, and you would still end up with something that looks like a Thunderbird. Nothing wrong Thunderbirds, but Concorde was nature feeding back into engineering, and I think it looks timeless as a result. Form should follow function.

Strangely enough I was marvelling at a small moth that had landed on my back door. Not only was it the shape of a Vulcan bomber, it even had the same camouflage.

spitfire-ian

3,983 posts

244 months

Tuesday 15th September 2009
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FourWheelDrift

91,018 posts

300 months

Tuesday 15th September 2009
quotequote all
I thought the Savarona is still owned by the Turkish Government and only leased to Kahraman Sadikoglu?


For me the older the ship the better the lines can be. Below is El Horriya (originally called Mahroussa) which was a Royal Yacht built for Isma'il Pasha, the Khedive of Egypt in 1865. It was built by the Samuda Brothers on the River Thames and designed along the same lines as HMY Victoria and Albert II, and remained in service with the Egyptian royal family until 1951 when it became a Navy training ship but since 2001 is back as a super yacht.

At 145m in length it is the 5th biggest super yacht around as well as being the oldest at 144 yrs.