Finally, a Respectable Use For a Smart Car

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Let’s face it: when it comes to modern cars, no model is as maligned as the diminutive two-seat Smart Fortwo. Well, maybe the Mitsubishi Mirage.

Measuring just 8-feet-10-inches in length, the rear-engined Smart looks less like a car than a rolling phone booth, or perhaps the bubble that would take Patrick McGoohan back to The Village in the TV show “ The Prisoner.”

Jokes and instances of car-tipping aside, the Smart harbors a secret ability that sets it apart from its larger peers — and it took an Ontario mechanic to find it.

A regular day will find Tod Anderson working on mainly European imports at Autobahn Tuning Inc. in a town just south of the Canadian capital of Ottawa. However, when free time allowed, Anderson spent the early part of this winter turning a 2006 Smart Fortwo into a snow-eating beast.

As it turns out, with a little elbow grease and imagination, you can convert a Fortwo into a snowmobile fairly easily at a cost of $7,000 Canadian (roughly $5,300 U.S.), plus the cost of the car itself.

“(The car) was something I’ve had my hands on for about six months,” said Anderson, who decided to convert it last November.

“It looked like something interesting to do. I’ve got buddies who put tracks on their trucks, and because the Smart is rear-engined and rear-wheel drive it seemed natural to try. There’s not many cars you can put tracks on, except a few Ferraris and Porsches.”

Anderson designed and laser cut the front skis from steel plate with the help of a former co-worker, now an engineer. To mount them, Anderson removed the wheels, brake discs and hubs and fixed them to the stub axle.

For grip, he mounted a pair of ATV tracks to the rear axle. Unfortunately, the tracks could only be bought in sets of four.

Once the work was complete, he had his very own Franco-Swiss-German diesel snow machine, complete with heater and climate control that can hit about 40 to 45 miles per hour running flat out.

“It hasn’t been radared, but looking out the window, I’d say it was hitting 70 kilometers an hour,” said Anderson. “We haven’t done calculations on the gear reduction and there’s a lot of top end loss.”

The Smart isn’t street legal when configured this way, but when you can be out on the frozen rivers and snowy fields, who needs traffic? This winter’s warm El Nino conditions led to a poor snow pack in the normally very snowy Ottawa Valley, so Anderson will have to wait until next year to get full use out of his creation.

Over the summer, the Smart will be stored with its wheels on.

Aside from the one-off Nissan Rogue Warrior shown earlier this year at the Montreal International Auto Show, adding treads to a wheeled vehicle is mainly the stuff of private enthusiasts.

Tracked passenger vehicles were used by the German military to blitzkrieg across the muddy fields of the low countries, but don’t get much traction in the modern automotive landscape.

However, they used to be a common sight in the northern U.S. and Canada.

As early as 1910, enterprising individuals were ripping the front wheels off of Ford Model T touring cars and trucks and replacing them with skis.

Mail carriers, deliverymen, ranchers and regular citizens who had some money lying around could purchase a conversion kit for the Model T, turning it into an unstoppable, if primitive, snowmobile.

Before Bombardier and Arctic Cat made the dedicated snowmobile commonplace, this was the only way to push through drifts that didn’t involve horses or your feet. Snow plowing was something reserved for streetcar lines in cities, not rural roadways.

The Model T conversion kits included front skis, cantilevered leaf springs, an anti-slip tread for the doubled-up rear axle, heavy duty wheels and a beefier driveline.

Given the inherent ruggedness of the Model T and the vast number produced between 1908 and 1927 (15 million), a good number of survivors remain. Thanks to this, the Model T Ford Snowmobile Club is able to hold national meets each year in New England.

[Images: Smart Fortwo (Autobahn Tuning Inc./Facebook); Model T ( Smithsonian Institution/Flickr)]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • SCE to AUX Over the last 15 years and half a dozen vehicles, my Hyundais and Kias have been pretty cheap to maintain and insure - gas, hybrid, and electric.I hate buying tires - whose cost goes by diameter - and I'm dreading the purchase of new 19s for the Santa Fe.I also have an 08 Rabbit in my fleet, which is not cheap to fix.But I do my own wrenching, so that's the biggest factor.
  • MaintenanceCosts '19 Chevy Bolt: Next to nothing. A 12v battery and a couple cabin air filters. $400 over five years.'16 Highlander Hybrid, bought in 2019: A new set of brakes at all four corners, a new PCV valve, several oil changes, and two new 12v batteries (to be fair, the second one wasn't the car's fault - I had the misfortune of leaving it for a month with both third-row interior lights stealthily turned on by my kid). Total costs around $2500 over five years. Coming due: tires.'11 BMW 335i, bought in late 2022: A new HID low beam bulb (requiring removal of the front fascia, which I paid to have done), a new set of spark plugs, replacements for several flaking soft-touch parts, and two oil changes. Total costs around $1600 over a year and a half. Coming due: front main seal (slow leak).'95 Acura Legend, bought in 2015: Almost complete steering and suspension overhauls, timing belt and water pump, new rear brakes, new wheels and tires, new radiator, new coolant hoses throughout, new valve cover gaskets, new PS hoses, new EGR valve assembly, new power antenna, professional paint correction, and quite a few oil changes. Total costs around $12k over nine years. Coming due: timing belt (again), front diff seal.
  • SCE to AUX Given this choice - I'd take the Honda Civic Sport Hatchback (CVT). I 'built' mine for $28777.To my eye, the Civic beats the Corolla on looks these days.But for the same money, I can get an Elantra N-Line with 7-speed DCT, 201 HP, and good fuel economy, so I'd rather go for that.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X '19 Frontier Pro 4X. Next to nothing. All oil changes are on schedule. Got new tires at 60000 miles. Still on original brakes at 79000 miles. Those are due soon. Brakes complete estimate $1000 all in.
  • Dr.Nick The cars seem really expensive with tight back seats and Cadillac was on the list of the highest price gouging dealers coming out of COVID. I don’t understand the combination, shouldn’t they be offering deals if they are not selling?
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