Home | Subscribe | Contact | Syndicate
    Latest News | Aircondition.Com | Cool Profit$
Search



HTSN 
 
 In Distress
 
 Latest News
 Mobile HVAC
 Engine Cooling
 Environmental
 Vehicular - Innovation
 Racing-Custom-Antiques
 Association-Tradeshow
 Auto Service - General
 Broadcast - Webcast
 Training - Testing
 Corporate-Personnel
 Tools, Equipment & Chemicals
 Auto Parts
 Fuel Economy-Efficiency
 In Memory
 Political
 Cool Profit$ - goHTSN.com
 
 Employment - For Sale
 
 Shop News
 
 Real Estate-Business
 
 Strong Opinions
 
 Rumor Room
 
 Featured Articles
 
 New Products
 
 goHTSN Sponsors
 
 Archives
 
 Shop Survey

Links 
 
 
 Aircondition.Com
 
 Cool Profit$ Magazine
 

Latest News : Racing-Custom-Antiques Last Updated: Jun 25th, 2008 - 18:34:45


Driving Ford's Model T Isn't as Easy as It Looks
By Ford E-News
Jun 25, 2008, 18:22

Email this article
  Print  this  article

Dearborn, MI — June 25, 2008 — More than one Model T owner has joked that he;s not too worried about somebody stealing his historic car.

"If you don't own one, you probably wouldn't be able to drive one," said Mike Skinner, a Model T owner and board member of the group restoring the car's birthplace, the old Piquette Plant in Detroit.

He wasn't kidding. For such a simple car, it's pretty complicated to drive.

While the Model T does have three pedals on the floor, none of them is an accelerator. From left to right, they're the clutch (for the two forward gears), a pedal for reverse gear and the brake.

The accelerator is that little lever on the right side of the steering column, where the turn signals are on a modern car. It's right across from that left-side lever, which is the spark advance.

Then there's that whole business about cranking the Model T "literally" to start it, using an actual crank that sticks out below the radiator.

There's a right way to do that, too. Crank it incorrectly – with a thumb wrapped around the crank instead of under it and the crank can break a thumb or worse.

Of course, if one hasn't set the long, floor-mounted hand brake on the left side of the driver's seat, the car can run over the operator as it's cranked and a sore thumb will be the least of his or her problems.

You get the idea.
That's why Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Mich., is offering daily demos on four special 1914 Model Ts. They were hand-built by Ford Motor Company for its 2003 centennial, using old blueprints and methods and new parts.

"It's such an exact copy it even leaks oil in the same place as an original one," says operator and driving instructor Paul Labadie.

Alhough rudimentary, the Village's 1914-2003 centennial touring model does have style, from its gleaming brass radiator and headlights to its flat, cherry wood firewall and its folding windshield (the pre-World War I version of air conditioning).

Stepping up onto the right-hand running board (there is no door on the driver's side), one slides across the front bench seat to the steering wheel. The seat is not adjustable, meaning a six-foot driver may find the position a bit cramped behind the wood-and-iron steering wheel.

Releasing the hand brake and pushing the clutch pedal all the way to the floor engages low gear. (There's no gear shift lever since the Model T has a planetary transmission.)

Staying in low gear means keeping one's foot down on the clutch pedal as long as the car is in that gear, a position that Labadie said can create leg cramps during long and slow-moving parades.

On the open road, shifting into high gear meant letting the clutch pedal all the way out.

Braking is another matter. That involves finding the middle or neutral position between low and high gear so the right-hand brake pedal can be depressed without stalling the car. Done properly, this brings the T to a leisurely halt.

Trying to concentrate on all of this means ignoring much of what a modern driver knows about cars. And that usually means stalling the vehicle.

Fortunately, Labadie revealed that the Village's demonstration Model Ts are equipped with a discreet button connected to an electric starter system, which wasn't available on the original until 1919.

Labadie said that starter button is a boon, since the Model Ts chug around the Village up to eight hours a day, seven days a week, hauling visitors. It's a real test of endurance for cars originally designed during the presidency of Teddy Roosevelt, but they've come through with flying colors.

Keeping them running is Bruce Phillips, one of two antique vehicle specialists employed by Greenfield Village. He knows his way around quirky cars, having spent 30 years restoring old Austin-Healeys and Triumphs.

Phillips said the Model Ts are very basic, but because of their simplicity, they can be harder to work on since they don't have modern bushings, gaskets and things like distributors. One particularly complicated repair even requires heating up the entire engine block.

Even so, Phillips enjoys working on Greenfield Village's Model Ts. "I love them. They're great fun," he said.

That's easy to say for someone who knows how to start and drive one.

Ford Motor Company
Ford Motor Company, a global automotive industry leader based in Dearborn, Mich., manufactures or distributes automobiles in 200 markets across six continents. With about 228,000 employees and about 90 plants worldwide, the company's core and affiliated automotive brands include Ford, Lincoln, Mercury, Volvo and Mazda. The company provides financial services through Ford Motor Credit Company. For more in


Copyright © 2008 HTSN

Top of Page

Email this article            Printer friendly page



Our Sponsors
1-800-RadTank
A-Better Radiator Supply
A&I Products
Accu-Tech Epoxy
Active Radiator Supply
Airsept
All Radiator Supply
Arctic Auto Air Inc.
Auto-Core
Classic Air Auto Air Manufacturing
ColdAir
Dewitts
Doc's Blocks
Ecar Inc
Factory Air Conditioning Corp
Gano Filter
Global Heat Transfer
Gravois Auto Radiator
Heatex Radiator Inc.
ICE32
Johnson Manufacturing Co.
Koyo Cooling Systems
Maine Auto Radiator
PlasTank
Rad Cap Products - DD&E
Reach Cooling
Reco Heat Exchange
Refrigerant Inc
Taalman Engineered Products
Tanks A Lot
Tanks N Tabs
Technology Transfer Systems
Therm Processes Inc.
TYC/Genera Corporation
Universal Carnegie