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BMW Wants to Delete the Instrument Cluster And It Might Change Cars Forever

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For more than a century, every car has followed the same basic idea: You sit behind a steering wheel. You look through it. And directly behind it lives a cluster of gauges. Speed. Range. RPM. Warnings. Information. That rectangle whether mechanical needles or digital screens became one of the most recognizable objects in automotive design. Subscribe Enjoying my DIY car content? Buy me a coffee and help support future tutorials and projects: CarGuruDIY on Buy Me a Coffee Every coffee is greatly appreciated! BMW is now asking a radical question: What if the instrument cluster simply disappeared? With the arrival of the Neue Klasse generation, BMW is replacing the traditional driver display with something that feels closer to science fiction than automotive evolution: a panoramic projection stretching across the base of the windshield, turning the glass itself into the primary interface...

Weirdest Cars Ever Made. Read more…

Weirdest Cars Ever Made You Won’t Believe

1) The Peel P50 (1960s Microcar)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/51/1964_Peel_P50_Blue.jpg

Tiny, three‑wheeled, and unable to go faster than about 38 mph (60 km/h), the Peel P50 is officially one of the smallest production cars ever made so narrow that rear‑view mirrors double as door handles! Designed for city travel, it’s more of a fun oddity than a practical car.


2) Tatra T87 (Czech Streamliner)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5c/Tatra_87_front_%28Foto_Hilarmont%29.JPG

From the 1930s, the Tatra T87 featured a rear‑mounted air‑cooled engine and a radically aerodynamic body long before wind tunnels were common in car design. It looked like a submarine on wheels and reportedly caused motion sickness in early drivers from its odd handling!


3) BMW Isetta (Bubble Car)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/93/BMW_Isetta_-_Flickr_-_mick_-_Lumix.jpg

With a front door that is the entire front of the car and a quirky, bubble‑like shape, the BMW Isetta became an icon of 1950s small‑car ingenuity. It’s as fun as it is strange think tiny egg on wheels.


4) Citroën DS (Futuristic French Classic)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f5/Bornholm_Rundt_2012_%282012-07-08%29%2C_by_Klugschnacker_modified.jpg

Not weird just for weird’s sake the Citroën DS was ahead of its time with hydropneumatic suspension, futuristic styling, and unmatched ride comfort. Its aerodynamic teardrop body still captivates car lovers.


5) Reliant Robin (Three‑Wheeled Icon)

https://www.carolenash.com/images/librariesprovider6/news-and-blogs/2018-01/classic-relient-robin-jpg.jpg?sfvrsn=c83b61dd_0

This British three‑wheeler became famous (or infamous) for being extremely easy to flip over a quirk that turned it into a meme and cult favorite. Small, light, and quirky, the Reliant Robin proves weird doesn’t always mean practical.


6) Amphicar Model 770 (Car + Boat)

The Amphicar: The Car That Could Drive… and Swim

Why choose between land and water? The Amphicar Model 770 didn’t it could drive into lakes and rivers like a boat. It wasn’t great at either, but it definitely looks like nothing else on the road!

More about Amphicar here: https://cargurudiy.wordpress.com/2026/01/03/the-car-that-could-drive-and-swim-read-more/


7) Messerschmitt KR200 (Bubble Trike)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c2/KR200_1959.jpg/1280px-KR200_1959.jpg

Built by airplane maker Messerschmitt after WWII, the KR200 looks more like a cockpit than a car. With tandem seating and a canopy top, this three‑wheeler is a flying‑car fantasy that stayed earthbound.


8) Honda N360 (Cute Kei Car)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fa/1969_Honda_N360_01.jpg

Japan’s kei car boom brought us the Honda N360 a tiny engine and boxy shape designed to zip through crowded cities. It may be small, but its energetic personality makes it memorable.


9) Veritas RS (Post‑War Sporty Oddball)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/28/Veritas_RS%2C_Bj._1948_%282008-06-28_Sp%29_ret.jpg

A rare German sports car from the late 1940s, the Veritas RS had graceful curves and serious performance ambitions, but only a handful were ever made making it a weird and wonderful footnote in automotive history.


Why These Cars Are So Weird

From tiny three‑wheelers and cars that double as boats, to designs that challenged norms decades ahead of their time, these automobiles show that engineers and designers sometimes let creativity take the wheel. Whether born from necessity, innovation, or pure experimentation, they all made an impression.

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