Ford’s One-Time Nuclear Concept Car

Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew
Published in
2 min readJun 21, 2019

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In the 1950s, Ford Motor Company came up with a concept car that seems beyond comprehension today. It was a car that was supposed to run entirely on nuclear power.

Ford made a model of a concept car in 1958 called Nucleon, which would have been powered by a small nuclear reactor. The reduced-size reactor was going to be completely removable in the rear of the car so it could be replenished once the fuel had been used. The vehicle looked like a truck without a bed, and the passengers would sit far in front of the nuclear reactor to allow adequate shielding. The nuclear reactor would heat water to make steam that would turn a turbine. The turbine, in turn, would produce electricity to power torque converters that would drive the wheels. Engineers estimated that the Nucleon could go 5,000 miles before it would need to be refueled.

But there were several problems with this revolutionary idea. The shielding from the nuclear reactor posed a problem because the weight and size of the material necessary to keep passengers and drivers safe from the radioactivity made the car impractical. In addition, a nuclear reactor small enough to be placed in the vehicle had never been produced. There was also the pesky problem with replacing the spent fuel. Specialized service stations would have had to be constructed and then attended by people capable of handling radioactive…

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Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew

The writer, editor, and chief lackey of Knowledge Stew and the Knowledge Stew line of trivia books. Connect at knowledgestew.com and danielganninger.com