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#1 |
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Location: Huntsville, AL
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Interesting Historical Automotive Facts
So I was flipping channels last night and got stuck again watching the program on the History Channel where they show how J.P. Morgan, Rockefeller, and Carnegie built our country. At the end they show the piece on Henry Ford and while watching this time I was reading the facts that were popping up on the bottom of the screen.
It stated that Henry Fords' first company was the Henry Ford Company that became Cadillac. I thought this was very interesting and figured that there has to be a fair number of other facts like this too in the automotive history that most people don't know about. You guys or gals know of any other interesting historical automotive facts? ![]() Reference to the Henry Ford Company: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Ford_Company |
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General Motors Aficionado
Drives: 2023 GMC Canyon, 2023 Expedition Join Date: Aug 2008
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GM came super close to buying Ford around 1910.
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#3 |
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im glad they didn't or their might have been no mustang or Camaro.
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#4 |
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A number of automobiles, some even more aptly described as "carts with engines on board" built in the previous century, as far back as the 1920s, had drag coefficients far superior to the 5th gen Camaro. While not flattering to know that our Camaro's drag coefficient is also eclipsed by some models of the Dodge Durango, the AMC Pacer, the Ford Falcon, and the Nissan Leaf, at least we beat the Ferrari F50, Lamborghini Countach, the Dodge Viper, and the Jaguar XJS. However, my point is that even in the early part of the 20th century, automotive engineers understood the importance of drag, and were able to design some rebarkably slippery shapes... even WAY back in the day!
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#5 |
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Okay, here's a more trivial "interesting" historical fact: REO Speed Wagon was a vehicle, long before it was a rock band. Some of y'all might be too young to remember the REO Motor Company (yes, I am too young for that!), and many may be too young to remember REO Speedwagon, the band, but... the band was named after the vehicle, and not the other way around!
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I know windshield wipers were an invention invented by a woman haha oh and the most expensive car to be sold is like a 1931 Bugatti Royale sold for $8,700,000.
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#7 | |
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Buick 455 Fan
Drives: 1970 Buick, 2012 1SS LS3 Join Date: Jun 2010
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Quote:
Well, yes and no. Ford's company became defunct and from that plant and its equipment a new company was formed. Ford's former backers brought in a guy named Henry Leland to do an appraisal en route to selling everything off, instead they organized the shambles into Caddy, using an engine that Leland, conveniently, had developed. Sounds to me like ol' Hank had a conflict of interest...but it's not like they took Ford's company, re-named it, and kept on keeping on building the same cars with a new name ![]() This part may qualify as an interesting fact: GM's history is strange. They owe it all to a guy who patented a way to get ceramic to stick to iron, a good inventor and bad businessman, a Scot named David Dunbar Buick, who sold the works to Billy Durant, who in turn used Buick as the financial backing to found GM.
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#8 |
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General Motors Aficionado
Drives: 2023 GMC Canyon, 2023 Expedition Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Florida
Posts: 37,375
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Who lost the company, founded Chevrolet, and got his old company back through Chevrolet.
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2023 GMC Canyon Elevation 2023 Ford Expedition SSV (State-Issued) |
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#9 |
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Buick 455 Fan
Drives: 1970 Buick, 2012 1SS LS3 Join Date: Jun 2010
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The Buick Century was so named because it could do "the Century", or 100 mph
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#10 | |
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I always thought the history of the LT5 engine was interesting, being built by a boat engine company. Though I'm not sure if this is normal practice to outsource the engine work to other companies, but I do remember Harley going to Porsche to help build one of their engines.
From wiki: Quote:
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#11 | |
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Quote:
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#12 |
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Chevrolert built an air-cooled porcupine engine in the '20's. They badly overheated most were replaced. At least one engine survives.
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#13 |
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What does "porcupine" insinuate?
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#14 |
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