00:00I've wanted to design and build my own car for my whole life, and we thought building
00:07it out of material like wood would present an interesting challenge.
00:11The world's only wooden supercar.
00:24Just a ton of work, a lot of blood, sweat and tears went into it.
00:27Obviously a lot of sandpaper as well.
00:31I'm Joe Harmon, I am the designer and builder of the world's only wooden supercar.
00:40I've wanted to design and build my own car for my whole life, and we thought building
00:45it out of material like wood would present an interesting challenge.
00:54Wood is our only naturally renewable, totally biodegradable building material.
00:59It has a better strength to weight ratio than steel and aluminum.
01:03And it's just a beautiful material that's a lot of fun to work with.
01:09I think there are roughly 20 different species of wood in the car.
01:12We try to stick to North American hardwoods.
01:14From an engineering standpoint, we all consider it to be interchangeable based on their density
01:18and strength.
01:20Walnut, cherry, maple, birch, hickory, ash.
01:25Most of the chassis is birch and maple.
01:30Wheels are walnut.
01:32The rest is a mixed bag.
01:36So interior-wise, all wood steering wheel.
01:38There's no metal in that steering wheel anywhere whatsoever.
01:41It's nothing but wooden glue.
01:44A shaft that you see coming through the middle is the gear shift.
01:48The transmission is behind the engine in this car, and the shift linkage goes over the top
01:51of the engine.
01:54The wheels were a ton of work.
01:55They're the most complicated part.
01:58Wood's very strong, but it's also soft, so when you come to these hard points of metal,
02:02you need to be able to spread that load out over a larger area.
02:10The Splinter was built over a nine-year period of time.
02:14When I was in graduate school, I was lucky enough to where my dad would pay for me to
02:17eat and go to school and live, so I didn't have any other responsibilities other than
02:21to work on this car.
02:22It's a ton of work.
02:24Pain, suffering, and sanding.
02:28As far as I can remember, the tires are the only completely off-the-shelf piece of this
02:32car.
02:34I knew it would be a ton of work.
02:35I get asked the, how many hours did this take question a lot.
02:39I tell people 20,000 hours.
02:41It was very slow, very time-intensive process.
02:44Thinking, how did I get myself into all this?
02:47It ends up pulling everybody that's close to you into a project like this.
02:51I lived through the 10 years of building it.
02:54That was quite an experience.
02:56It's still completely relevant today and looks totally different from anything else I've
03:01ever seen.
03:03It was a lot of blood, sweat, and tears, for sure.
03:06Mostly tears on my part.
03:12It has a seven-liter small block V8.
03:14We think it makes about 650 horsepower.
03:17It has a six-speed manual transmission.
03:18Airbag suspension at all four corners so we can adjust the height.
03:22It's a very, very low vehicle and we have to get it on and off of trailers a lot, so
03:25being able to pick it up and down helps.
03:29It's hot, noisy, uncomfortable.
03:35You can't see out of the back of it.
03:37You can barely see out of the front of it.
03:39You're in a really, really low driving position.
03:42That's kind of part of what makes it raw and makes it exciting.
03:45It's not exactly the most practical vehicle in the world.
03:49It's not very good as a grocery getter.
03:59The fastest I've been in the vehicle is probably 30 miles an hour.
04:03I'm sure it has a top speed.
04:04I have no idea what it is.
04:06With the weight and the aerodynamics and the power that it makes, you know, maybe the engine
04:13could push this thing to 200 miles an hour.
04:15I don't know.
04:17I feel fairly certain that it will never happen, but it's probably theoretically possible.
04:22The car was really built as a building and engineering exercise to show people that you
04:26could do it.
04:28Heat is a concern.
04:30What'll happen is if this car gets too hot, it'll start letting go and the panels will
04:33get droopy and they'll fall apart.
04:36Every vehicle can catch on fire fairly easily.
04:38Just so happens with this one, there'll be less left over at the end if it does catch on fire.
04:52When I look back on it, I think about all the good times I had.
04:55Coolest thing about the Splinter for me was getting to go through this process and realize
04:58that I've got the absolute best friends and family that anybody could ever ask for.
05:04How many Splinters did I actually get during the build?
05:06I lost track.
05:08I got my fair share for a lifetime's worth.
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