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History
of Automobile:
Some sources suggest Ferdinand Verbiest,
whilst a member of a Jesuit mission in China, may have built the
first steam powered car around 1672. François Isaac de Rivaz,
a Swiss inventor, designed the first internal combustion engine
which was fuelled by a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen and used it
to develop the world's first vehicle to run on such an engine. The
design was not very successful, as was the case with Samuel Brown,
Samuel Morey, and Etienne Lenoir who each produced vehicles powered
by clumsy internal combustion engines.
An automobile powered by an Otto gasoline
engine was built in Germany by Karl Benz in 1885 and granted a patent
in the following year. Although several other engineers (including
Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach and Siegfried Marcus) were working
on the problem at about the same time, Benz is generally credited
with the invention of the modern automobile.
Approximately 25 of Benz's vehicles
were built before 1893, when his first four-wheeler was introduced.
They were powered with four-stroke engines of his own design. Emile
Roger of France, already producing Benz engines under license, now
added the Benz automobile to his line of products. Because France
was more open to the early automobiles, more were built and sold
in France through Roger than Benz sold in Germany. From 1890 to
1895 about 30 vehicles were built by Daimler and his assistant,
Maybach, either at the Daimler works or in the Hotel Hermann, where
they set up shop after falling out with their backers.
In 1892, Rudolf Diesel got a patent
for a "New Rational Combustion Engine". In 1897 he built
the first Diesel Engine. In 1895, Selden was granted a United States
patent(U.S. Patent 549,160 ) for a two-stroke automobile engine,
which hinderd more than encouraged development of autos in the United
States. Steam, electric, and gasoline powered autos competed for
decades, with gasoline internal combustion engines achieving dominance
in the 1910s. |
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