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J&J

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Posts posted by J&J

  1. The Horseless Age (10/16/07) reported that "The Motorcar Company, of Detroit, announces that the 1908 Cartercar will be identical with the 1907 design.  It is claimed that because of the great satisfaction given by the latter model in the hands of users and the lack of changes suggested the company does not feel that its previous product can be improved."

     

    While that was generally true, the lamps and front fender shields make it more likely to be a 1908 rather than a 1907.

  2. Really nice video.   It is really great how you took the time to show all of the mechanicals and provided explanation where needed.   It is really nice getting both the ride footage and the detailed chassis overview in the same video.   Some of us really want to see everything to understand it better and you provided that.  Looking forward to your next one.

  3. There are at least 50 Cartercars still around (not all in running condition though).   The three cars above are all really nice examples.    It must be a big year for Cartercars - at least 6 have already been sold this year and at least 2 others will be offered for sale/auction later this year.

  4. The friction drive patents are interesting.   In another example of how government works, the Patent Office issued a friction drive transmission patent to both Carter and Lambert on the same day in 1904: 

    https://patents.google.com/patent/US761384A/en

    https://patents.google.com/patent/US761146A/en

    Not surprisingly, lawsuits and counter suits ensued between Cartercar and Lambert.   The Lambert patent primarily focused on the friction disc and wheel surfaces, in particular the use of aluminum on the friction disc, while the Carter patent focused more on the complete drive setup.   My suspicion is that Lambert got the best of the aluminum argument because Cartercar switched to another alloy even though they made claims of using aluminum first.   You can see the alloy disc in a picture above. 

     

    I have found about 45 makes that used a friction drive transmission but I'm sure there are more to be found...

  5. The letter has this quote: "Therefore, the Museum cannot agree to allowing the Club to advertise its displays and attempt to divert customers away from the Museum. "   I really hope that there is no agreement in place that limits the real AACA from having its own museum if it wants to!   If the Museum wants to be the AACA's museum it should have merged back in instead of declaring its independence.

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