I have never seen a unicorn, but
Posted: Thu Feb 29, 2024 9:58 pm
I have seen a Fisker. At about 2:30pm, Feb 28, 2024, at the intersection of Delaware Rt 273 and Pulaski Hiway (old US40) Bear, DE, I was sitting at the light waiting for the green arrow so I could make at left turn onto 273. In front of me was a car I did not recognize. I crept forward to get a good look at the logo on the back. I got close enough to read ‘Fisker’ . It also had temporary paper license plate where I could read that it was a 2023 Fisker, purchased in January of 2024. I got a brief look at the passenger side. It seemed to be a medium sized SUV, typical boxy shape.
The emblem on the trunk lid looked just like the logo on the wiki entry for Fisker, Inc. I thought the Fisker was mostly vapor ware, soon to join automotive history bin along with the Tucker.
I never saw one of those, but I did see once the Davis from the same era as the Tucker, but it has no entry in wiki. The Davis was a very short wheel-base with a unique driver convenience. It had a very small turning circle. Where parking was not available, one could turn into a trucker alley, turn the wheel all the way in one direction, turn on the special ‘Park” controller which would prevent the wheel from turning, but leave the engine running, the standard 3-speed tranny engaged and the car running in a tight circle at about 2 miles per hour while the driver stepped out and went for a social engagement. And you thought driverless cars were something new.
snailgate
The emblem on the trunk lid looked just like the logo on the wiki entry for Fisker, Inc. I thought the Fisker was mostly vapor ware, soon to join automotive history bin along with the Tucker.
I never saw one of those, but I did see once the Davis from the same era as the Tucker, but it has no entry in wiki. The Davis was a very short wheel-base with a unique driver convenience. It had a very small turning circle. Where parking was not available, one could turn into a trucker alley, turn the wheel all the way in one direction, turn on the special ‘Park” controller which would prevent the wheel from turning, but leave the engine running, the standard 3-speed tranny engaged and the car running in a tight circle at about 2 miles per hour while the driver stepped out and went for a social engagement. And you thought driverless cars were something new.
snailgate