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Automobile
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Automobile
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An automobile is a
wheeled vehicle that carries its own motor. Different types of
automobiles include cars, buses, trucks, vans, and motorcycles, with
cars being the most popular. The term is derived from Greek 'autos'
(self) and Latin 'movére' (move), referring to the fact that it 'moves
by itself'. Earlier terms for automobile include 'horseless carriage'
and 'motor car'. As of 2005 there are 600 million cars worldwide (0.074 per capita).
The automobile was hailed as an environmental improvement over horses when it
was first introduced. Before its introduction, in New York City, over 10,000
tons of manure had to be removed from the streets daily. However, in 2006 the
automobile is one of the primary sources of worldwide
air pollution and cause of substantial noise and health effects.
History
- Main article:
History of the automobile
The automobile powered by the Otto gasoline engine was invented in
Germany by Karl Benz in 1885. Even though Karl Benz is credited with the
invention of the modern automobile, several German engineers worked on building
automobiles at the same time. These inventors are: Karl Benz, who was granted a
patent dated January 29, 1886 in Mannheim for the automobile he built in 1885,
Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in Stuttgart in 1886 (also inventors of the
first motor bike), and in 1888/89 German-Austrian inventor Siegfried Marcus in
Vienna, although Marcus didn't go beyond the experimental stage.
Steam powered vehicles
Steam-powered self-propelled cars were devised in the late 18th century. The
first self-propelled car was built by Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot in 1769, it could
attain speeds of up to 6 km/h (3.7 mi/h). In 1771 he designed another
steam-driven car, which ran so fast that it rammed into a wall, producing the
world's first car accident.
Internal combustion engine powered vehicles
Animation of a 4-stroke internal combustion engine
In 1806
Fransois Isaac de Rivaz, a Swiss, designed the first internal combustion engine
(sometimes abbreviated "ICE" today). He subsequently used it to develop the
world's first vehicle to run on such an engine that used a mixture of hydrogen
and oxygen to generate energy. The design was not very successful, as was the
case with the British inventor, Samuel Brown, and the American inventor, Samuel
Morey, who produced vehicles powered by clumsy internal combustion engines
about 1826.
Etienne Lenoir produced the first successful stationary internal combustion
engine in 1860, and within a few years, about four hundred were in operation in
Paris. About
1863, Lenoir installed his engine in a vehicle. It seems to have been powered by
city lighting-gas in bottles, and was said by Lenoir to have "travelled more
slowly than a man could walk, with breakdowns being frequent." Lenoir, in
his patent of 1860, included the provision of a carburettor, so liquid fuel
could be substituted for gas, particularly for mobile purposes in vehicles.
Lenoir is said to have tested liquid fuel, such as alcohol, in his stationary
engines; but it doesn't appear that he used them in his own vehicle. If he did,
he most certainly didn't use gasoline, as this was not well-known and was
considered a waste product.
The next innovation occurred in the late 1860s, with
Siegfried Marcus, a German working in Vienna, Austria. He developed the idea of
using gasoline as a fuel in a two-stroke internal combustion engine. In 1870,
using a simple handcart, he built a crude vehicle with no seats, steering, or
brakes, but it was remarkable for one reason: it was the world's first
internal-combustion-engine-powered vehicle fueled by gasoline. It was tested in Vienna in September of 1870 and put aside. In
1888 or 1889, he built a second automobile, this one with seats, brakes, and
steering, and included a four-stroke engine of his own design. That design may
have been tested in 1890. Although he held patents for many inventions, he never
applied for patents for either design in this category.
The four-stroke engine already had been documented and a patent was applied
for in 1862 by the Frenchman
Beau de Rochas in a long-winded and rambling pamphlet. He printed about
three hundred copies of his pamphlet and they were distributed in Paris, but
nothing came of this, with the patent application expiring soon afterward—and
the pamphlet disappearing into total obscurity. In fact, its existence mostly
was unknown and Beau de Rochas never built a single engine.
Most historians agree that
Nikolaus Otto of Germany built the world's first four-stroke engine although
his patent was voided. He knew nothing of Beau de Rochas's patent or idea, and
came upon the idea entirely on his own. In fact, he began thinking about the
concept in 1861, but abandoned the concept until the mid-1870s.
There is some evidence, although not conclusive, that
Christian Reithmann, an Austrian living in Germany, had built a four-stroke
engine entirely on his own by 1873. Reithmann had been experimenting with
internal combustion engines as early as 1852.
In 1883,
Edouard Delamare-Deboutteville and Leon Malandin of France installed an internal combustion engine powered by a
tank of city gas on a tricycle. As they tested the vehicle, the tank hose came
loose, resulting in an explosion. In 1884, Delamare-Deboutteville and Malandin
built and patented a second vehicle. This one consisted of two four-stroke,
liquid-fueled engines mounted on an old four-wheeled horse cart. The patent, and
presumably the vehicle, contained many innovations, some of which wouldn't be
used for decades. However, during the vehicle's first test, the frame broke
apart, the vehicle literally "shaking itself to pieces," in Malandin's
own words. No more vehicles were built by the two men. Their venture went
completely unnoticed and their patent unexploited. Knowledge the vehicles and
their experiments was obscured until years later.
Supposedly in the late 1870s, an Italian named Murnigotti patented the idea
of installing an internal combustion engine on a vehicle, although there is no
evidence that one was built. In 1884, Enrico Bernardi, another Italian, installed an internal combustion engine on
his son's tricycle. Although merely a toy, it is said to have operated somewhat
successfully in one source, but another says the engine's power was too feeble
to make the vehicle move.
If all of the above experiments hadn't taken place, however, the development
of the automobile wouldn't have been retarded by so much as a moment, since they
were unknown experiments that never advanced beyond the testing stage. The
internal-combustion-engine automobile really can be said to have begun in
Germany with
Karl Benz in 1885, and Gottlieb Daimler in 1889, for their vehicles were
successful, they went into series-production, and they inspired others.
Karl Benz
Replica of the Benz Patent Motorwagen built in 1885
Karl Benz began to work on new engine patents in 1878. First, he concentrated
all his efforts on creating a reliable two-stroke gas engine, based on Nikolaus
Otto's design of the four-stroke engine. A patent on the design by Otto had been
declared void. Karl Benz finished his engine on New Year's Eve and was granted a
patent for it in 1879. Karl Benz built his first three-wheeled automobile in
1885 and it was granted a patent in Mannheim, dated January of 1886.
This was—the first automobile designed and built as such—rather than a
converted carriage, boat, or cart. Among other items Karl Benz invented for the
automobile are the
carburetor, the speed regulation system known also as an accelerator, ignition
using sparks from a battery, the spark plug, the clutch, the gear shift, and the
water radiator. He built improved versions in 1886 and 1887 and—went into
production in 1888—the world's first automobile put into production.
Approximately twenty-five 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, in general, more were built and sold in France through Roger,
than Benz sold initially from his own factory in
Germany.
Gottlieb Daimler, in 1886, fitted a horse carriage with his four-stroke engine
in Stuttgart. In 1889, he built two vehicles from scratch as automobiles, with
several innovations. From 1890 to 1895 about thirty vehicles were built by
Daimler and his innovative assistant, Wilhelm Maybach, either at the Daimler works or in the Hotel Hermann, where
they set up shop after having a falling out with their backers. These two
Germans, Benz and Daimler, seem to have been unaware of the early work of each
other and worked independently. Daimler died in 1900. During the First World
War, Benz suggested a co-operative effort between the companies the two founded,
but it was not until 1926 that the companies united under the name of
Daimler-Benz with a commitment to remain together under that name until the year
2000.
In 1890,
Emile Levassor and Armand Peugeot of France began
series-producing vehicles with Daimler engines, and so laid the foundation of
the motor industry in France. They were inspired by Daimler's Stahlradwagen of
1889, which was exhibited in Paris in 1889.
The first American automobile with gasoline-powered
internal combustion engines supposedly was designed in 1877 by George Baldwin
Selden of Rochester, New York, who applied for a patent on an automobile in
1879. Selden didn't build a single automobile until 1905, when he was forced to
do so, due to a lawsuit. Selden received his patent and later sued the Ford
Motor Company for infringing his patent. Henry Ford was notorious for opposing
the American patent system and Selden's case against Ford went all the way to
the Supreme Court, which ruled that Ford, and anyone else, was free to build
automobiles without paying royalties to Selden, since automobile technology had
improved significantly since Selden's patent and no one was building according
to his earlier designs.
Meanwhile, notable advances in steam power evolved in Birmingham, England by
the Lunar Society. It was here that the term horsepower was first used. It also
was in Birmingham that the first British four-wheel petrol-driven automobiles
were built in 1895 by Frederick William Lanchester. Lanchester also patented the
disc brake in that city.
Electric vehicles were produced by a small number of manufacturers.
Innovation
Ford Model T, 1927
The first automobile
patent in the United States was granted to Oliver Evans in 1789 for his
"Amphibious Digger". It was a harbor dredge scow designed to be powered by a
steam engine and he built wheels to attach to the bow. In 1804 Evans
demonstrated his first successful self-propelled vehicle, which not only was the
first automobile in the US but was also the first amphibious vehicle, as his
steam-powered vehicle was able to travel on wheels on land as he domonstrated
once, and via a paddle wheel in the water. It was not successful and eventually was sold as spare
parts.
The Benz Motorwagen, built in 1885, was patented on January 29, 1886 by Karl
Benz as the first automobile powered by an internal combustion engine. In 1888,
a major breakthrough came with the historic drive of Bertha Benz. She drove an
automobile that her husband had built for a distance of more than 106 km or
fifty miles. This event demonstrated the practical usefulness of the automobile
and gained wide publicity, which was the promotion she thought was needed to
advance the invention. The Benz vehicle was the first automobile put into
production and sold commercially. Bertha Benz's historic drive is celebrated as
an annual holiday in Germany with
rallies of antique automobiles.
On 5 November 1895, George B. Selden was granted a United States patent for a
two-stroke automobile engine (U.S.
Patent 549160). This patent did more to hinder than encourage development of
autos in the USA. Steam, electric, and gasoline powered autos competed for
decades, with gasoline internal combustion engines achieving dominance in the
1910s.
Ransom E. Olds, the creator of the Assembly line
The large-scale,
production-line manufacturing of affordable automobiles was debuted by
Oldsmobile in 1902, then greatly expanded by Henry Ford in the 1910s.
Development of automotive technology was rapid, due in part to the hundreds of
small manufacturers competing to gain the world's attention. Key developments
included electric ignition and the electric self-starter (both by Charles
Kettering, for the Cadillac Motor Company in 1910-1911), independent suspension, and four-wheel
brakes.
Model changeover and design change
Cars are not merely continually perfected mechanical contrivances; since the
1920s nearly all have been mass-produced to meet a market, so marketing plans
and manufacture to meet them have often dominated automobile design. It was
Alfred P. Sloan who established the idea of different makes of cars produced by
one firm, so that buyers could "move up" as their fortunes improved. The makes
shared parts with one another so that the larger production volume resulted in
lower costs for each price range. For example, in the 1950s, Chevrolet shared
hood, doors, roof, and windows with Pontiac; the LaSalle of the 1930s, sold by
Cadillac,
used the cheaper mechanical parts made by the Oldsmobile division.
Alternative fuels and batteries
- Main article:
Alternative fuel cars
With heavy taxes on fuel, particularly in Europe and tightening environmental
laws, particularly in California, and the possibility of further restrictions on
greenhouse gas emissions, work on alternative power systems for vehicles
continues.
Diesel-powered cars can run with little or no modification on 100% pure
biodiesel, a fuel that can be made from vegetable oils but require modifications
if you drive in cold weather countries. The main plus of Diesel combustion
engines is its 50% fuel burn advantage over 23% in the best gasoline engines.
This makes Diesel engines capable of achieving an average of 17 kilometers per
liter fuel efficiency. Many cars that currently use gasoline can run on ethanol,
a fuel made from plant sugars. Most cars that are designed to run on gasoline
are capable of running with up to 15% ethanol mixed in. With a small amount of
redesign, gasoline-powered vehicles can run on ethanol concentrations as high as
85%. All petrol fuelled cars can run on LPG. There has been some concern that the ethanol-gasoline mixtures
prematurely wear down seals and gaskets. Theoretically, the lower energy content
of alcohol should lead to considerably reduced efficiency and range when
compared with gasoline. However, EPA testing has actually shown only a 20-30%
reduction in range. Therefore, if your vehicle is capable of doing 750
kilometers on a 50 liter tank (15 kilometers per liter), its range would be
reduced to approximately 600 kilometers (12 kilometers per liter). Of course,
certain measures are available to increase this efficiency, such as different
camshaft configurations, altering the timing/spark output of the ignition,
increasing compression, or simply using a larger fuel tank.
In the
United States, alcohol fuel was produced in corn-alcohol stills until
Prohibition criminalized the production of alcohol in 1919. Brazil is the
only country which produces pure ethanol powered cars, called Flex, since the
late 1970s.
Attempts at building viable
battery-powered electric vehicles continued throughout the 1990s (notably
General Motors with the EV1), but cost, speed and inadequate driving range made
them uneconomical. Battery powered cars have primarily used lead-acid batteries
and NiMH batteries. Lead-acid batteries' recharge capacity is considerably
reduced if they're discharged beyond 75% on a regular basis, making them a
less-than-ideal solution. NiMH batteries are a better choice, but are
considerably more expensive than lead-acid.
Toyota Prius, a hybrid vehicle. Museum of Toyota of Aichi Prefecture, Japan
Current research and development is centered on "hybrid"
vehicles that use both electric power and internal combustion. The first hybrid
vehicle available for sale in the USA was the
Honda
Insight. As of 2005, The car is still in production and achieves around 25.5
kilometers per liter.
Other R&D efforts in alternative forms of power focus on developing
fuel cells, alternative forms of combustion such as GDI and HCCI, and even the
stored energy of compressed air .
Accidents seem as old as automobile vehicles themselves. Joseph Cugnot
crashed his steam-powered "Fardier" against a wall in 1771. The first recorded
automobile fatality was Bridget Driscoll on 1896-08-17 in London and the first
in the United States was Henry Bliss on 1899-09-13 in New York City, NY.
Cars have two basic safety problems: They have human drivers who make
mistakes, and the wheels lose traction near a half gravity of deceleration.
Automated control has been seriously proposed and successfully prototyped.
Shoulder-belted passengers could tolerate a 32G
emergency stop (reducing the safe intervehicle gap 64-fold) if high-speed roads
incorporated a steel rail for emergency braking. Both safety modifications of
the roadway are thought to be too expensive by most funding authorities,
although these modifications could dramatically increase the number of vehicles
that could safely use a high-speed highway.
Early safety research focused on increasing the reliability of brakes and
reducing the flammability of fuel systems. For example, modern engine
compartments are open at the bottom so that fuel vapors, which are heavier than
air, vent to the open air. Brakes are hydraulic so that failures are slow leaks,
rather than abrupt cable breaks. Systematic research on crash safety started in
1958 at
Ford Motor Company. Since then, most research has focused on absorbing
external crash energy with crushable panels and reducing the motion of human
bodies in the passenger compartment.
There are standard tests for safety in new automobiles, like the
EuroNCAP and the US NCAP tests. There are also tests run by organizations such
as IIHS and backed by the insurance industry.
Despite technological advances, there is still significant loss of life from
car accidents: About 40,000 people die every year in the
U.S., with similar figures in Europe. This figure increases annually in step
with rising population and increasing travel if no measures are taken, but the
rate per capita and per mile travelled decreases steadily. The death toll is
expected to nearly double worldwide by 2020. A much higher number of accidents
result in injury or permanent disability. The highest accident figures are reported in China and India.
The European Union has a rigid program to cut the death toll in the EU in half
by 2010 and member states have started implementing measures.
Current Production
A 1993
Ford Escort
station wagon, a modern automobile.
In 2005 63 million cars and light trucks were produced worldwide. The world's
biggest car producer (including light trucks) is the European Union with 29% of
the world's production. In non-EU Eastern Europe another 4% are produced. The
second largest manufacturer is NAFTA with 25.8%, followed by Japan with 16.7%,
China with 8.1%, MERCOSUR
with 3.9%, India with 2.4% and the rest of the world with 10.1%. (vda-link)
Large free trade areas like EU, NAFTA and MERCOSUR attract manufacturers
worldwide to produce their products within them and without currency risks or
customs, additionally to being close to customers. Thus the production figures
do not show the technological ability or business skill of the areas. In fact
much if not most of the Third World car production is used western technology
and car models (and sometimes even complete obsolete western factories shipped
to the country), which is reflected in the patent statistic as well as the
locations of the r&d centers.
The automobile industry is dominated by relatively few large corporations
(not to be confused with the much more numerous brands), the biggest of which
(by numbers of produced cars) are currently
General Motors, Toyota and Ford Motor Company. It is expected, that Toyota will reach the No.1 position
in 2006. The most profitable per-unit car-maker of recent years has been Porsche
due to its premium price tag.
The automotive industry at large still suffers from high under-utilization of
its manufacturing potential.
Future of the car
In order to limit deaths, there has been a push for self-driving automobiles.
There have been many notable efforts funded by the
NHTSA, including the many efforts by the NavLab group at Carnegie Mellon
University. Recent efforts include the highly publicized DARPA Grand Challenge race.
Toyota FCHV
(Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle). A fuel cell hybrid car which runs from the hydrogen
which Toyota Motor developed,. 2005
A current invention is
ESP by Bosch
that is claimed to reduce deaths by about 30% and is recommended by many
lawmakers and carmakers to be a standard feature in all cars sold in the EU. ESP
recognizes dangerous situations and corrects the drivers input for a short
moment to stabilize the car.
The biggest threat to automobiles is the declining supply of oil, which does
not completely stop car usage but makes it significantly more expensive.
Beginning of 2006 1 liter of gas costs approx. 1.6 US$ in Germany and other
European countries. If no cheap solution can be found in the relatively near
future individual mobility might suffer a major setback. Nevertheless,
individual mobility is highly prized in modern societies so the demand for
automobiles is inelastic. Alternative individual modes of transport, such as
Personal rapid transit, could make the automobile obsolete if they prove to
be cheaper and more energy efficient.
Hydrogen cars, driven either by a combination of
fuel cells and an electric motor, or alternatively, a conventional combustion engine, are
thought to replace fossil fuel powered cars in a few decades. The biggest
obstacle for a mass market of hydrogen cars is the cost of hydrogen production
by electrolysis, which is inefficient and requires a comparatively expensive
source of electrical energy. However Hydrogen produces 5 times as much energy
than 93 octane gasoline and promises to be cheaper with mass production and none
CO2, but steam H2O emissions as result of the combustion. BMW's engineering team
promises a high horsepower hydrogen fuel engine in it's 7-series sedan before
the next generation of the car makes it's debut.
Lexus LF-A concept car at the 2006 Greater Los Angeles Auto Show
The
electric car in general appears to be a way forward in principle;
electric motors are far more efficient than internal combustion engines and have
a much greater power to weight ratio. They also operate efficiently across the
full speed range of the vehicle and develop a lot of torque at zero
speed, so are ideal for cars. A complex drivetrain and transmission would not be
needed. However, despite this the electric car is held back by battery
technology - so far a cell with comparable energy density to a tank of liquid
fuel is a long way off, and there is no infrastructure in place to support it. A
more practical approach may be to use a smaller internal combustion engine to
drive a generator- this approach can be much more efficient since the IC engine
can be run at a single speed, use cheaper fuel such as diesel, and drop the
heavy, power wasting drivetrain. Such an approach has worked very well for
railway locomotives, but so far has not been scaled down for car use.
Recently the automobile industry has determined that the biggest potential
growth market (in terms of both revenue and profit), is software. Cars are now
equipped with a stunning array of software; from voice recognition and vehicle
navigation systems to in-vehicle distributed entertainment systems (DVD/Games),
to telematics systems such as GMs Onstar not to mention the control subsystems.
Software now accounts for 35% of a cars value, and this percentage is only going
to get larger. The theory behind this is that the mechanical systems of
automobiles are now essentially a commodity, and the real product
differentiation occurs in the software systems. Many cars are equipped with full
blown 32bit real-time memory protected operating systems such as QNX.
- engine
- carburetor or fuel injection
fuel pump
engine configuration: Wankel or reciprocating (V, inline, flat).
engine management systems
exhaust system
ignition system
self starter
emissions control devices
turbochargers and superchargers
front engine
rear engine
mid engine
Automobile ancillary power
-
Ancillary power — mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, vacuum, air
- drivetrain
-
transmission (gearbox)
- manual transmission
semi-automatic transmission
fully-automatic transmission
- Layout
- FF layout
FR layout
MR layout
MF layout
RR layout
- Drive Wheels
- Two-wheel drive
Four-wheel drive
Front-wheel drive
Rear-wheel drive
All-wheel drive
-
differential
- limited slip differential
locking differential
- axle
Live axle
- brakes
- disc brakes
drum brakes
anti-lock braking systems (ABS)
- wheels
and tires
- steering
- rack and pinion
Ackermann steering geometry
Caster angle
Camber angle
Kingpin
-
suspension
- MacPherson strut
wishbone
double wishbone
multi-link
torsion beam
semi-trailing arm
axle
- body
- crumple zones
monocoque (or unibody) construction
doors
headlight styling
spoiler
Japan Black (fore-runner of modern automotive finishes)
- interior equipment
-
passive safety
- seat belts
airbags
child safety locks
- dashboard
shifter for selecting gear ratios
ancillary equipment such as stereos, air conditioning, cruise control,
car phones, positioning systems, cup holders, etc.
- exterior equipment
- windows
- Power window
windshield
Daytime running lamps
External links
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