By the early 1900s, gasoline
cars started to outsell all other types of motor vehicles.
The market was growing for economical automobiles and the need
for industrial production was pressing.
The first car
manufacturers in the world were French: Panhard & Levassor
(1889) and Peugeot (1891). By car manufacturer we mean
builders of entire motor vehicles for sale and not just engine
inventors who experimented with car design to test their
engines - Daimler
and Benz
began as the latter before becoming full car manufacturers and
made their early money by licensing their patents and selling
their engines to car manufacturers.
Rene Panhard and Emile
Levassor Rene Panhard and Emile Levassor were partners in a
woodworking machinery business, when they decided to become
car manufacturers. They built their first car in 1890 using a
Daimler engine. Edouard Sarazin, who held the license rights
to the Daimler patent for France, commissioned the team.
(Licensing a patent means that you pay a fee and then you have
the right to build and use someone's invention for profit - in
this case Sarazin had the right to build and sell Daimler
engines in France.) The partners not only manufactured cars,
they made improvements to the automotive body
design.
Panhard-Levassor made
vehicles with a pedal-operated clutch, a chain transmission
leading to a change-speed gearbox, and a front radiator.
Levassor was the first designer to move the engine to the
front of the car and use a rear-wheel drive layout. This
design was known as the Systeme Panhard and quickly became the
standard for all cars because it gave a better balance and
improved steering. Panhard and Levassor are also credited with
the invention of the modern transmission - installed in their
1895 Panhard.
Panhard and Levassor also
shared the licensing rights to Daimler motors with Armand
Peugot. A Peugot car went on to win the first car race held in
France, which gained Peugot publicity and boosted car sales.
Ironically, the "Paris to Marseille" race of 1897 resulted in
a fatal auto accident, killing Emile Levassor.
Early on, French
manufacturers did not standardize car models - each car was
different from the other. The first standardized car was the
1894, Benz Velo. One hundred and thirty four identical Velos
were manufactured in 1895.
Charles and Frank
Duryea America's first gasoline-powered commercial car
manufacturers were Charles and Frank Duryea. The brothers were
bicycle makers who became interested in gasoline engines and
automobiles and built their first motor vehicle in 1888, in
Springfield, Massachusetts. By 1896, the brothers had sold
thirteen cars - the "Stevens-Duryea," an expensive limousine,
which remained in production into the 1920s.
Ransome Eli Olds The first automobile to be mass
produced in the United States was the 1901, Curved Dash
Oldsmobile, built by the American car manufacturer Ransome Eli
Olds (1864-1950). Olds invented the basic concept of the
assembly line and started the Detroit area automobile
industry. He first began making steam and gasoline engines
with his father, Pliny Fisk Olds, in Lansing, Michigan in
1885. Olds designed his first steam-powered car in 1887. In
1899, with a growing experience of gasoline engines, Olds
moved to Detroit to start the Olds Motor Works, and produce
low-priced cars. He produced 425 "Curved Dash Olds" in 1901,
and was America's leading auto manufacturer from 1901 to
1904.
Henry Ford American car manufacturer, Henry
Ford (1863-1947) invented an improved assembly line and
installed the first conveyor belt-based assembly line in his
car factory in Ford's Highland Park, Michigan plant, around
1913-14. The assembly line reduced production costs for cars
by reducing assembly time. Ford's famous Model T was assembled
in ninety-three minutes. Ford made his first car, called the
"Quadricycle," in June, 1896. However, success came after he
formed the Ford Motor Company in 1903. This was the third car
manufacturing company formed to produce the cars he designed.
He introduced the Model T in 1908 and it was a success. After
installing the moving assembly lines in his factory in
1913, Ford became the world's biggest car manufacturer. By
1927, 15 million Model Ts had been manufactured.
Another victory won by
Henry Ford was patent
battle with George B. Selden. Selden, who had never built
an automobile, held a patent on a "road engine", on that basis
Selden was paid royalties by all American car manufacturers.
Ford overturned Selden's patent and opened the American car
market for the building of inexpensive cars.

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