Home » Let’s Look At Some Car Cutaways Made With Saws, Not Pens

Let’s Look At Some Car Cutaways Made With Saws, Not Pens

Cs Cutaway Top
ADVERTISEMENT

Who doesn’t like car cutaways? Monsters, that’s who. Filthy, depraved monsters. And while we usually think of car cutaways as being the incredible product of a skilled illustrator’s hand, there’s another way to make them: for real. What I mean by this is not drawing a precision, beautifully-rendered cutaway, but actually taking a car and cutting it pretty much in half, then taking pictures! So let’s look at some of those.

Of course, in modern times, these sorts of things would be done with CGI and computers and math and punch cards and all of that sort of thing. But back in the day, these kinds of things took some incredible skill, even beyond the incredible skills needed to do normal car illustrations.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

I mean, look at some of these:

Ro80 Cutaway

Cs Gm Cutaway 83electra

ADVERTISEMENT

Cs Fiat600 Cutaway

They’re incredible! But what do you maybe do if you don’t have access to such an illustrator? Or maybe you want to have many views of a cutaway, or see it in true three dimensions? In that case, carmakers tried a different approach, one that took a very different set of skills, but significant skill nonetheless: just cutting the damn car in half.

Well, it wasn’t always strictly in half, there seem to have been a sort of spectrum of approaches, which I’ll try to show you here. Also, and I’m not really exactly sure why, but this approach seems to have been much more common among European carmakers? I know I’ve seen American cars cut in half as well, but they tended to get used for training schools and things like that more than showing up in ads. I have no idea why.

Anyway, let’s look at some of these. We’ll start with this Fiat 500:

Cs Cutaway Fiat500

ADVERTISEMENT

This 500 is sort of the baseline minimum of a physical car cutaway: remove a door/s, cut out any pillars, and if there’s a passenger area with seating, cut away the body there. This is the quickest approach, and is really only used to show the passenger accommodation, not the overall packaging of all a car’s systems.

Also, that lady looks kinda pissed to be stuck in a Fiat 500 with one whole side missing. And the dude sure looks focused on not-driving.

Then there’s a much more comprehensive version, as seen on this pre-’62 Volkswagen Beetle. I think it may be a ’59 or ’60:

Cs Beetlecutaway2

Here we have an entire side removed, but the car isn’t exactly halved; seen from the front, I’d think we’d have oh, 75% of the car’s width remaining? For example, note that the bumpers and corner of the rear fender remain intact. So, it’s still mostly there, just peeled open.

ADVERTISEMENT

Type3 Cutaway

VW seemed to like to make these, and would sometimes use them without shoving a colorful family in there first, as you can see in that Type 3 above.

Enough is cut away on these that from a side-on view, you can see the car’s full packaging: where the engine is, the size and location of the luggage compartments, all that. This gives a very clear view of the car’s full packaging.

Cs Cutaway Mini

We can go further, though! This Mini, from about the same era as the VW, is cut pretty much completely in half, right down the middle. You can, of course, see exactly how everything is packaged, and as a bonus, things like the rear seat and even those suitcases in the trunk are cut in half, too, and the drivetrain is very exposed, though the engine/transmission hasn’t been bisected.

ADVERTISEMENT

But we can go even further!

Cs Cuatawy 2cv

Now we’re getting even a bit beyond a cutaway and into a cut-off. Here we see a Citroën 2CV, with the body not just cut away, but entirely removed, and replaced with a bent pipe in the shape of the former body’s silhouette. You can definitely see how everything would be packaged here, including the 2CV’s gloriously weird shifter setup, which I once covered here in detail, if you’re curious.

Okay, there’s only one place to go from here:

Cs Cutaway R4

ADVERTISEMENT

Just to hell with the body completely! That’s what Renault did in this brochure for the Renault 4, just took the whole damn body off. You get a sense of the packaging this way, but without at least some kind of boundary of the body delineated, it’s a lot less useful.

Like, would that dog actually have enough headroom to perch on those suitcases with the body in place? Maybe?

Also, note the R4 uses a similar hand-through-the-dashboard sort of approach to the shifter as well, like the 2CV.

I’m all for cutaways, though, however they’re done. And if you get a chance to see one of the physical ones in person, oh boy, that’s a treat.

 

ADVERTISEMENT
Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
43 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dodsworth
Dodsworth
1 month ago

I see a child with a very large forehead trying to mind control the driver of the Fiat. He’s thinking of…a brick wall!

Chronometric
Chronometric
1 month ago

Wankers. Real men have cutaway batteries. Right, Jason?

S boser
S boser
1 month ago

Have forgotten the cars they used in the 1960’s Gulf gasoline commercials….. No cars at all
https://youtu.be/Rtb5-axztrg?si=nNJSQaVDYMB417O8

Cars? I've owned a few
Cars? I've owned a few
1 month ago

The 2CV, with that sky, looks like Magritte was commissioned to do another take on The Treachery of Images. Ceci n’est pas une voiture.

John Gallup
John Gallup
1 month ago

The Porsche Museum in Stuttgart (which is unbelievably good in so many ways) has a cutaway 959.
Porsche 959 cutaway model – The Super Porsche – Porsche Museum Stuttgart

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
1 month ago

I read that there was one company specializing in the really difficult cutaways, just became really good at it.
The military museum on I-80 has an astounding set of rare cutaways.

Andrea Petersen
Andrea Petersen
1 month ago

Can I just point out that someone had to get those kids in the back of that Fiat…right next to a whole bunch of very sharp metal. I can see why mom’s body language reads as pissed, I wouldn’t really want my kid sitting next to pointy metal either.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

It’s amazing to look back and discover how many different cars Colin Chapman tuned. Sprinkling lightness everywhere!

Kleinlowe
Kleinlowe
1 month ago

The Fiat 500 family definitely is having trouble. Father is really focusing on the not-road and Mother’s body language is really closed off. The kids know something is wrong. This time next year the side of the car won’t be the only thing not in the picture.

Beetle family’s Mom made the ‘special’ brownies just for her and Dad. They haven’t even noticed the side of the car is missing. Little Brother is wondering why they’re not going anywhere, but Big Sister knows the score. She managed to grab one from the stash before the road trip started.

The 2cv isn’t advertising. The driver is artist Jean-Paul Avec-St.Boujlibase, and it’s part of his ‘shape of things’ series, where he examines the expectations of the modern individual in contemporary (for the time) society. In addition to the Citroen, there is a townhouse, a writing desk, a typewriter, a chair, and several other (in his words) ‘objects of domestic industry’. The woman is his model and ‘muse’; two of the children are hers and two are his.

The Renault chassis isn’t the main item of interest in the picture. Rather, the main subject is the precisely engineered Family of the Future, made up of lifelike fantastroids, solid-state `thinking mannequins’ capable of simulating a day in the life of a typical, average family. Using nearly 500 transistors each, they’re capable of expressing up to three emotions, and will help scientists at the Dow Chemical Company improve your daily life in the year 2000! The dog is named Fred and belongs to the photographer.

Last edited 1 month ago by Kleinlowe
Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
1 month ago

The Fiat driver has just spotted the aliens in the road.

The Mini is going through an experimental form of express luggage screening at the airport.

PRNDL
PRNDL
1 month ago

I’ve seen that MGB-GT cut-away at the British Motor Museum in Gaydon, England and it’s diabolical. Not just the uncanny detail but the color scheme they used is so unsettling. The red parts look like fresh butchery and the rest is a pastel turquoise. Gave me the creeps.

Last edited 1 month ago by PRNDL
Nic Periton
Nic Periton
1 month ago

The mini one was driven onto it stand at the Earls Court Motor show!

Lori Hille
Lori Hille
1 month ago

There is an MGB cutaway in England at a car museum: https://www.mgb-stuff.org.uk/cutaway/cutaway2.htm

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

“even those suitcases in the trunk are cut in half”
One wishes they’d left the contents in there, with shirts, knickers, jumpers, trousers, and a tube of toothpaste all cut in half. Plus, we’d get to see how many books the advertising brochure people thought people would pack for a trip.
As for the 2CV, the Lane Motor Museum in Nashville, TN has a 2CV sans corps, much like the one shown in the brochure picture albeit without the body’s outline, consisting of almost entirely new parts to showcase how many parts are still available today thanks to the enduring popularity of the 2CV & the extent of support out there.

Last edited 1 month ago by Collegiate Autodidact
Nlpnt
Nlpnt
1 month ago

I think Jason’s driven that car, unless the Lane has 2 or more drivable 2CV stripped chassis.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

Knowing the Lane, it wouldn’t be surprising if they do indeed have 2 or more.

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
1 month ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

Lane is a fantastic place!

Chartreuse Bison
Chartreuse Bison
1 month ago

Yeah torch linked the video in the shifter article of him driving it

Last edited 1 month ago by Chartreuse Bison
Trust Doesn't Rust
Trust Doesn't Rust
1 month ago

The husband in the 500 cutaway is thinking:
“One quick turn to the left. Just one quick turn to the left and my three biggest problems are gone.”

Wagen Volk
Wagen Volk
1 month ago

That’s mean.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 month ago

I somehow really like it when they cut through the tyres also!
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Rja3MP_tUuM/hq720.jpg

Ash78
Ash78
1 month ago

Reminds me of the old Dutch ad campaign where one guy says “It’s like I’m driving nothing at all…nothing at all….nothing at all…”

And then his arch-nemesis mumbles “Stupid sexy Flanders.” Probably some angry Walloon, jealous of his neighbor’s 2CV. Understandable levels of Dutch intolerance.

Thomas Benham
Thomas Benham
1 month ago

I’ve never been able to make such clean cuts.

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
1 month ago

That cutaway Mini was apparently made for the Continental Europe and US auto-show circuit. There was a matching one for the UK auto shows made from the right half, and both (partly) contained complete power units and were apparently drivable.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

One of my college pals had a Fiat 500 cutaway like the one pictured. His was done to cut out all the rust.

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Right, it’s just a sanitized vision of what your Fiat will become, whether you like it or not.

Ninefeet
Ninefeet
1 month ago

“Also, and I’m not really exactly sure why, but this approach seems to have been much more common among European carmakers?”
Why ? Because American carmakers didn’t feel the need to demonstrate that you can fit 4 (6?) normal sized adult into a rolling aircraft carrier !

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
1 month ago
Reply to  Ninefeet

Add in that said rolling aircraft carriers were a pretty standardized product in that era.

Ninefeet
Ninefeet
1 month ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

🙂

Comme çi, come alt
Comme çi, come alt
1 month ago

As this post illustrates, the pen is mightier than the sword, but a chainsaw cuts them both all to pieces. Just ask Tobe Hooper.

KYFire
KYFire
1 month ago

That cut away of the Fiat 500 seems like a double edged sword and a litteral sword as well.

Double edged in that by creating a view showing what CAN fit but maybe exposing too much of what you don’t get. Of course the point of the thing was to be cheap but this kind of exposure shows why that lady is pissed. They bought a car that barely fits adults in the front, utilizes a park bench for seats, and screams “any longer than a 30 minute ride is a trip to hell”.

Literal sword as in holy shit did the guy with the angle grinder not understand rounding a corner! The B pillar and rear window cuts are going to slice that little girl to pieces!

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago
Reply to  KYFire

Yeah, Dad is seriously hunched over the steering wheel.

Jmfecon
Jmfecon
1 month ago
Reply to  KYFire

I can imagine the discussion:

Lady: Why did you buy a car missing the entire side?
Dad: It was cheaper, honey…
Lady: But needs to be my side? And why is so small?
Dad: is not that small…
Lady: YOU CAN’T EVEN KEEP YOUR NECK STRAIGHT GIULIANO!
Kids: Dad, it is cold here…
Dad: I should have bought the entire car, catzo…

Tbird
Tbird
1 month ago
Reply to  KYFire

I like that there is a visible bottle jack to keep it from collapsing without the B pillar.

Masa
Masa
1 month ago
Reply to  KYFire

Exactly why the original 500 in 1957 was a terrible car. It was initially designed without a back seat, but a luggage shelf not intended to seat adults. The front seats were awful as well, and it remained in use until it was changed for the 500F. It wasn’t until 1965 after many improvements were made that it started to sell.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 month ago

I really want an R4 simply because of that shifter!

Robert Turner
Robert Turner
1 month ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

Can confirm it works beautifully. Not quite as clever as the one in the 2CV though.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 month ago
Reply to  Robert Turner

Yeah, but the R4 can almost keep up with US speeds. The 2CV is a bit too fragile for me.

43
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x