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Wooden apple car

Some dads might struggle with an Ikea flatpack, but this Vietnamese woodworker and content creator built his son an entire wooden Apple Car after the tech giant’s US$10 billion project flopped. Source: Supercar Blondie

Completely carved from timber in the perfect dimensions for his young son, it features light-up Apple logos and consoles.

In case you’re wondering – yes, it drives.

With no actual car to work from since the US$10 billion Apple Car project was abandoned, ND – Woodworking Art, aka Truong Van Dao, took design inspiration from Midjourney’s AI images.

He then builds and solders a metal chassis before attaching the electrified wheels and sorting the suspension.

As the car and its mechanics begin to take shape, he paints the frame black before getting to work on the wooden body.

Initially fitting together like a rudimentary jigsaw, the talented woodworker is then able to carve, sand, and refine everything down to the wheel trim, dash, and working steering wheel.

Even the centre console and two seats are hewn from timber.

Next come the light-up badges on the hood, wheels, and bumper before varnishing and adding light-up Apple-inspired screens to the cabin.

His son and daughter seem like they’re having the time of their lives as Dad drives them down the road in their new wooden Apple Car.

Fans are keen, too.

One even argued that this version might be better than the real thing.

Well, it never actually got made, so it’s definitely better than the real thing in that sense.

One even said that the artist should ‘put [his] own brand’ on the car instead, writing: “Much better than Apple.”

This isn’t the dedicated dad’s first time in the workshop, however.

In fact, Truong has built an entire fleet of wooden cars.

As well as a wooden Cybertruck that grabbed the attention of Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, he’s crafted a Ferrari GTO 250 and a Ford F-150 Raptor, Rolls-Royce 6×6, STRV TANK – the latter three of which were made within the same year-long period.

He doesn’t restrict himself to cars, either.

The Vietnamese dad previously built an incredible wooden train for the kids in his village.