History of automobile industry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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History of automobile industry

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The history of the automobile industry. It all started exactly 125 years ago with a three-wheeled cart powered by a petrol engine. The history of the motor car in Germany is as varied as the makes and models that originated there. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of automobile industry


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Crown Auto and Fleet Services
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Crown Auto and Fleet Services
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HISTORY OF AUTOMOBILE
  • Ferdinand Vebiest, a member of a Jesuit mission
    in China, built the first steam-powered vehicle
    around 1672.
  • Although Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot is often credited
    with building the first self-propelled mechanical
    vehicle or automobile in about 1769.

Cugnots steam wagon
4
A photograph of the original Benz Patent
Motorwagen, first built in 1885
  • His first Motorwagen was built in 1885.
  • About 25 Benz vehicles were sold between 1888 and
    1893.
  • In 1896, Benz designed and patented the first
    internal-combustion flat engine, called a
    boxermotor in German.
  • During the last years of the nineteenth century,
    Benz was the largest automobile company in the
    world with 572 units produced.

BOXOR MOTOR
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HENRY FORD
  • Henry Ford was the American founder of the Ford
    Motor Company and father of modern assembly lines
    used in mass production.
  • His introduction of the Model T automobile
    revolutionized transportation and American
    industry.
  • The large-scale, production-line manufacturing of
    affordable automobiles was debuted by Ransom Olds
    at his Oldsmobile factory in 1902. This concept
    was greatly expanded by Henry Ford, beginning in
    1914.

HENRY FORD
RANSOM E. OLDS
6
FORD MODEL T
  • Introduced the moving assembly line and Model T
    in 1908-1909.
  • Cost of Model T declined from 7 months of a Ford
    assembly line workers wages in 1908 to less than
    3 months in 1916.
  • This brought millions of middle-class families
    into the market for autos.

7
FORD MODEL T, 1915
  • The car was very simple to drive, and easy and
    cheap to repair.
  • By 1920, half the cars in the world were Model T
    Fords!
  • Product diversity, options strictly limited by
    Ford to maximize standardization, production
    efficiency. (You can have any color car you
    want, so long as its black.)

FORD MASHTANG, 2009
8
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
  • Sales of automobiles collapsed 1930-32, rebounded
    slowly.
  • GM recovered, exceeded late 1920s sales levels by
    end of the 1930s Ford continued to languish under
    the increasingly erratic leadership of Henry
    Ford, who was quite unhinged by the end of the
    decade.
  • Ford would have gone bankrupt without WWII.

9
WORLD WAR II
  • Military procurement contracts increased demand.
  • Most of the auto industry in Europe, Japan
    effectively bombed out of existence.
  • Technological improvements made during the war
    were applied to postwar auto production.
  • Better automatic transmissions
  • Functional power steering and brakes
  • V-8 engines
  • Air conditioning

10
ENGINE TYPES
DIESEL ENGINE
  • Diesel-engined cars have long been popular in
    Europe with the first models being introduced as
    early as 1922 by Peugeot.
  • The main benefit of diesel engines is a 50 fuel
    burn efficiency compared with 27 in the best
    gasoline engines.
  • Many diesel-powered cars can run with little or
    no modifications on 100 biodiesel and
    combinations of other organic oils.

11
GASOLINE (PATROL) ENGINE
  • Gasoline engines have the advantage over diesel
    in being lighter and able to work at higher
    rotational speeds and they are the usual choice
    for fitting in high-performance sports cars.
  • Continuous development of gasoline engines for
    over a hundred years has produced improvements in
    efficiency and reduced pollution.
  • Most gasoline engine cars can also run on LPG
    with the addition of an LPG tank and carburetor
    modifications to add an LPG mixer.

12
ELECTRIC CAR
  • An electric car uses electric motors and motor
    controllers for propulsion, in place of more
    common propulsion methods such as the internal
    combustion engine.
  • Electric cars are commonly powered by on-board
    battery packs, and as such are battery electric
    vehicles (BEVs).

TESLA ELECTRIC POWER ROADSTER
13
HYBRID ELECTRIC PETROLEUM CARS
  • When the term hybrid vehicle is used, it most
    often refers to a Hybrid electric vehicle.
  • These encompass such vehicles as the
  • Toyota Prius
  • Toyota Camry Hybrid
  • Ford Escape Hybrid
  • Toyota Highlander Hybrid
  • Honda Insight
  • Honda Civic Hybrid

HONDA INSIGHT
TOYOTA PRIUS
14
BENEFITS OF AUTOMOBILES
  • Replacement of horse and carriage.
  • Economical, safer, smaller, faster (more
    consistent), more controllable/reliable.
  • More sanitary - dead horses and manure problems.
  • Development of mass production and assembly line.
  • Supply chain economic boom.
  • Independence.
  • Employment.

15
MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS
  • Air pollution.
  • Materials consumption.
  • Autos themselves and consumables.
  • One way cars create pollution is by contributing
    to the amount of ground-level ozone.
  • Cars also pollute by emitting lead from leaded
    gasoline.
  • Global warming.
  • Energy use.

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