First, though, have a look at the Cybertruck wiper:

Turns out it is one big arm, and two smaller, overlapping wiper blades underneath #CyberRodeo pic.twitter.com/mY9RfKarce — Drive Tesla ???????? (@DriveTeslaca) April 10, 2022 …and here’s a still, from here, annotated by me:

See that? Two wiper blades. Hopefully the kind you can get from any auto parts store or “borrow” from that F-150 parked in the back of that motel parking lot down the road. Really, my issues with the Cybertruck’s design choices aside, this seems like an entirely reasonable solution. Would one big, custom wiper blade be any better? I really doubt it. A big wiper with readily-available blades is also a better solution than any of the ridiculous pressurized air or even ridiculous laser-based wipers that Tesla fans have been speculating about — because, come on, get a grip, people. Wipers work fine, even without lasers. This dual-wiper idea, as I mentioned, isn’t one Tesla pulled out of nowhere; there have been other cars with unusually vast acreages of windshield that needed wiping. Among them are the Lamborghini Countach and the Ferrari Boxer, both hailing from the early 1970s. Yes, if you were to travel in time and teleport into any random 14 year-old boy’s room from 1980 to 1990, I bet you’d find a lot of disgusting things under the bed and a Countach poster on the wall.

The Countach is something of an automotive icon, of course, but in case you’ve recently had a full brain-wipe, I’ll remind you about it. Arriving in 1974, the Countach was one of the defining angular wedge-shaped cars that would become so influential throughout 1980s sports car aesthetics. The Bertone-designed mid-engined beast defined what a supercar was for years and years, with a longitudinally-mounted V12 behind the seats, and a strange layout with the transmission ahead, sending power via a shaft through the engine’s sump to the differential at the rear. The look got more complex and wild as the years went on, and by the 1980s had sprouted all kinds of dramatic wings and ducts and louvers, giving it a spaceship-like look. Anyway, if you go back into that hypothetical kid’s room and look carefully at that Lambo poster, you should see this:

  See that massive wiper arm? Not only does it have a pair of parallel bones, like your forearm, it also has two wiper blades, a big one and a little buddy, unlike your forearm. The basic idea is exactly the same as the Cybertruck: two shorter things together = the length of a longer thing. The size disparity in the two blades is very clear in diagrams of the setup:

For some reason, it’s hard to not anthropomorphize those wipers into big and little brothers or a mother and child, or something similar. Man, the human mind is weird, right?

The Ferrari Boxer had a similar wiper setup. Another ’80s era supercar icon, the Ferrari Berlinetta Boxer appeared one year before the Countach and was a clean, sleek Pininfarina design. Also mid-engined and equipped with 12 cylinders, the Ferrari used a flat engine instead of a V-design, hence the Boxer name. Interestingly, the engine isn’t really a boxer engine, which refers to a horizontally-opposed engine; it’s techincally a 180° V-engine, and as you know, a 180° V is just a straight line, hence flat. It looks like a real boxer, but unlike a boxer, a flat-V engine like this has its pistons sharing a crankpin (like some other V engines), but true horizontally-opposed engines have separate ones. Most people, of course, didn’t know that or really care, and just appreciated the sleek looks and speed of the Ferrari, which also found its way onto many bedroom posters, too. Personally, I like these cars because they have what may be the largest front indicators ever installed on a production vehicle. Look at the size of those things!

Back to the wipers, though: The Ferrari Boxer’s dual-blade solution is a little more nuanced than either the Countach or the Cybertruck’s in that the blades are at different angles, and don’t just team up to form an ersatz long blade; they’re actually sweeping slightly different arcs. The two-blade solution is one I can support, but don’t get too cocky, Tesla, because you’re wiping in the footsteps of giants here. (Photos: Bonham’s, Tesla, National Historic Vehicle Register, The Barn Miami, Ferrari, Lamborghini, DK Engineering) (Thanks to Hans, our Bishop of Automotive Ephemera) It also seems like a huge pain in the ass to scrape around the wiper when you’ve got freezing rain. Though trucks are a huge pain in the ass to scrape anyway. Could probably be solved with some defroster coils in the windshield, but that’s a bunch of expense and complexity for very little gain. The Boxer is the one that I always find easy to confuse with the Mondial, since they both have that odd “grill on the hood” look. I see a photo of a Boxer and my brain says “ewww, there’s a Mondial”, but then I realize the rest doesn’t look quite right and I remember that the Boxer exists. Maybe it is too good for Elan Musc ! Normally, this is bad, but on the Countach, it just adds to the crazy.

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