Today’s Zippy:
Unicar is a portmanteau of unicycle and (subcompact) car, and Zippy’s Unicar is a hybrid of a unicycle and a minicar — so far as I know, a vehicle from Zippy’s fantasy world, not the real one.
(Bonuses: the playful coining warmification and (in the title) a pun on the real world.)
On the car in question, from Wikipedia:
The Nash Metropolitan is a car that was sold, initially, only in the United States and Canada, from 1954–62.
It conforms to two classes of vehicle: economy car and subcompact car. In today’s terminology the Metropolitan is a “subcompact”, but this category had not yet come into use when the car was made.
It turns out that there has been a Unicar on the market, a very small car with a unitary (one-piece) body. From the Microcar Museum site:
1959 Opperman Unicar (model T): Opperman, a tractor manufacturer in England saw the success of the Bond Minicar and decided to build a new Microcar for the British market.
The first model from Opperman was the Model “T” Unicar.
It looked like a larger sedan in miniature and was the cheapest car shown at the 1956 London Motor Show.
There was no front hood or rear trunk lid in the fiberglas body.
The [2-cylinder] engine was positioned in the middle of what should be the rear seat and 2 small “jump” seats are on either side of the engine “hump”.
There was no differential for the rear wheels so they were placed closer together than the front wheels, in a manner similar to the Isetta, but not as extreme.
Unfortunately since it had 4 wheels, it was subject to a higher Road Tax in Britain as compared to a 3-wheeled vehicle.
(The Isetta was an Italian-designed three-wheeled single-cylinder microcar built in a number of countries.)
