Hi folks -- I never met the man, but play tennis at a park that is named for his father. His obituary in the Dayton Daily News yesterday was only 4 lines or so. Ho could I have missed looking up and talking to this Iconic racing figure from my generation, not the fastest driver but certainly a survivor of one of the most horrific crashes of the 1970s or for that matter any decade.It was said that addiction to pain killers dominated his life after 1973 until the recent past. It was said that he lived life on the edge, at least part of it. He drove the Dayton Steel Wheel special, a car owned by his father and made possible by the wealth accrued from the Dayton-Walther Corporation. He was a generational legacy of a Dayton that is no more -- a medium sized city filled with metalworking and foundry firms, a prosperous city that is now the shell of its once proud self.
I am sure the stories he could have told me would have been one great book, a reflection of one fast-burning life that took no hostages.
Monday, 31 December 2012
Thursday, 27 December 2012
More Donks Photos
The older I get, the more I like Donks! Actually, I need to get with friend Ed Garten and go down to Nashville to visit the Donks Bar & Grill! Seriously, these cars seem to me to be a silly waste of money. But the neat thing about contemporary car culture is that there are so many varieties of the hobby.
Wednesday, 26 December 2012
Merry Christmas -- A Becker Europa Radio for the Porsche!
And it works,as I bench tested it on Christmas Eve. Snow storm today, so I'll have to wait a while to install it. I have had several Becker radios that did not work, but this is the first that does.
Saturday, 22 December 2012
The Miller-Chapman Security Auto-Theft Signal System, Patent 1,343,709
As a few of you know, I am in the process of finishing a book entitled Stealing Cars: Technology and Society form the Model T to Gran Torino. Recently I purchased what is described below on Ebay. The 1920s were one high point in stolen car activity, and there were numerous devices that were sold to deter thieves. The table below lists related patented equipment, and illustrates just how complex any history of technology can be.
The creation of Earle E. Chapman of Los Angeles, the "Vehicle Shackle" was one of numerous types of wheel and tire locks that were patented during the 1910s and 1920s. Apparently there were 34 different sizes to accommodate a broad range of tire dimensions. The one I have is marked B1.
Patent # | Issue Date | Title | Inventor Name | Assignee |
1108156 | 1914-08-25 | Chock for vehicle wheels | H. D. Ells | Edward E. McKee |
1230799 | 1917-06-19 | Automobile lock | F. Scholly | |
1304785 | 1919-05-27 | Hobble for motor vehicles | J.J. McDade; F.P. Donnelly | |
1325307 | 1919-12-16 | Lock for automobiles | T.A. Reeder | |
1326688 | 1919-12-30 | Wheel chock | V.N. Perry | |
1337568 | 1920-04-20 | Automobile lock and traction device | Shannon S. Q.; Randall, Herman P. | Randall; Shannon |
1343709 | 1920-06-15 | Vehicle-shackle | Chapman, Earle E. | Chapman, Earle E. |
1347262 | 1920-07-20 | Automobile-lock | Eichorn, Frederick C. H. | James, Burke W.; Albert, Eichorn H. |
1348960 | 1920-08-10 | Automobile-lock for disk wheels | Saegesser, Albert W. | LIBERTY AUTO LOCK CO |
1351644 | 1920-08-31 | Wheel-lock | Ignaz, Hadinger | Ignaz, Hadinger |
1353117 | 1920-09-14 | Wheel-lock | Thompson, Charles E. | Thomas, Hill J. |
1353541 | 1920-09-21 | Automobile-chock | Fred, Retterer | Fred, Retterer |
1361108 | 1920-12-07 | Automobile-lock | Soleau, Charles J. | Soleau, Charles J. |
1362955 | 1920-12-21 | Safety-lock for vehicles | Miller, Arthur E. | Miller, Arthur E. |
1367086 | 1921-02-01 | Lock | Paddleford, Oliver M. | Paddleford, Oliver M. |
1371691 | 1921-03-15 | Automobile theft-signal | Lawrence, Klinker | Lawrence, Klinker |
1385461 | 1921-07-26 | Theft-warning automobile-lock | Mcdonald, John K. | THEFT WARNING AUTO LOCK CORP |
1388322 | 1921-08-23 | Wheel-lock | Michael, Branco | Michael, Branco |
1394219 | 1921-10-18 | Wheel-lock | Raddick, David J. | Graf, Siegfried |
1408133 | 1922-02-28 | Auto theft signal | Ochs, Ralph J.; Hodes, Carl E. | Ochs, Ralph J.; Hodes, Carl E. |
1411886 | 1922-04-04 | Automobile wheel attachment | Mackey, Huggins Claude; John, Cline Calvin | Mackey, Huggins Claude; John, Cline Calvin |
1415401 | 1922-05-09 | Vehicle lock | Wingate, Rollins; Seymour, Clinton K.; Sargent, John A. | Wingate, Rollins; Seymour, Clinton K.; Sargent, John A. |
1418534 | 1922-06-06 | Side chain shackle for automobile wheels | Chapman, Earle E. | MILLER CHAPMAN COMPANY |
1424106 | 1922-07-25 | Automobile theft signal | H.M. Lake; O.C. Betry | |
1444161 | 1923-02-06 | Vehicle lock | Arnold, Frederick A. | Arnold, Frederick A. |
1445750 | 1923-02-20 | Auto safety device | Carey, George F. | Carey, George F. |
1447053 | 1923-02-27 | Automobile wheel lock | Elmer, Trimm Leslie | Elmer, Trimm Leslie |
1453882 | 1923-05-01 | Auto lock | Mchugh, James N. | Mchugh, James N. |
1463387 | 1923-07-31 | Shackle for automobile wheels and spokes | Chapman, Earle E. | MILLER CHAPMAN COMPANY |
1469772 | 1923-10-09 | Auto-theft signal | Chapman, Erale E. | MILLER CHAPMAN COMPANY |
1470662 | 1923-10-16 | Automobile lock | William, Barnett | William, Barnett |
1472155 | 1923-10-30 | Wire-rope shackle for automobile wheels | Chapman, Earle E. | MILLER CHAPMAN COMPANY |
1476467 | 1923-12-04 | Lock for automobile wheels | Saegesser, Albert W. | Saegesser, Albert W. |
1481537 | 1924-01-22 | Vehicle lock | Carney, George A. | Carney, George A. |
1483687 | 1924-02-12 | Wheel lock | Shepard, John W. | Shepard, John W. |
1485595 | 1924-03-04 | Shackle for automobile wheels and spokes | Chapman, Earle E. | MILLER CHAPMAN COMPANY |
1500924 | 1924-07-08 | Theft warning signal or wheel lock for vehicles | Chadwick, William E.; Creighton, John A. | Gustavus, Edward Westberg |
1503210 | 05/25/1922 | Auto lock and traction device | S.Q. Shannon | Donald R. Morrison |
RE14956 | 1920-10-12 | Automobile theft signal | H.D. Ells | H.G. Miller |
RE15428 | 1922-08-08 | Locking device for automobile wheels | A.M. Cummings |
Friday, 21 December 2012
Review of Joe Corn's User Unfriendly: Consumer Struggles with Personal Technologies, from Clocks and Sewing Machines to Cars and Computers
Joseph J. Corn, User Unfriendly: Consumer Struggles with Personal Technologies, from Clocks and Sewing Machines to Cars and Computers. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 2011.
It seems the older we get the more we wrestle with the new technologies that we acquire. And particularly when it comes to digital technologies, including systems found on new car dashboards and consoles, the experience can turn us into technophobes. Personally, I can handle the tuning and synchronization of Weber carburetors and the setting of Porsche 944 cams, but just attempting to understand the controls of an Audi A5 results in high levels of frustration and defeat. Thus Joseph Corn�s easily read and sometimes amusing User Unfriendly struck a chord with this reader. And while this study covers a rather broad array of consumer technologies that includes clocks, sewing machines, appliances, and personal computers, at its heart is the automobile during its period of diffusion, namely to the 1930s. Historians have spent the past two decades examining the process of consumption in considerable detail. Yet, as Corn points out the consumption of technological devices is rather different, and beginning in the mid-19th century, posed difficulties to its owners. Learning about those technologies in historical context, then, is the subject of this book.
The introduction of the automobile proved to be a daunting challenge to its first generation of owners. First and foremost was the issue of what car to purchase, made especially difficult by not only the plethora of manufacturers and models but also the lack of knowledge on the part of consumers concerning the technologies associated with the automobile and the performance and quality of the various makes. On this topic the author is at his best, drawing on popular literature, trade magazines, manufacturers sales manuals directed towards the training of salesmen, and advertising. In the subsequent chapter �Running a Car,� however, little new is brought to the reader. Corn discusses the difficulties of hand cranking, fixing flats, steering, shifting gears, braking, and �supervising performance� once the vehicle was underway. Suffice it to say that driving automobiles before the 1930s was as much an intuitive art as a skill, and the process of making controls and instrumentation less idiosyncratic and more uniform took several decades to achieve. By the Great Depression, however, American automobiles were far more reliable and safer than the first generation of vehicles that hit the road. And of course the fact that roads became better changed the entire equation.
What follows are chapters centering on maintenance, repair, and operation. Drawing on a wide variety of sources including popular and scholarly literature, numerous owners� manuals, and archival material, Corn�s engaging narrative brings in the insights of a good number of historians of the automobile and technology without bogging down in esoteric academic prose. If you have worked with old cars and done restoration, these chapters will be familiar, but nevertheless freshly packaged. Perhaps what is missing in the author�s discussion centers on generational issues. Namely, young people have no difficulty in adapting to new technologies; however, as one gets older learning becomes increasingly difficult. Was that the case at the beginning of the automobile age as it was with the coming of personal computers? If so, what does that mean in terms of reexamining the early history of the automobile?
John Heitmann
University of Dayton
University of Dayton
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)