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Post Info TOPIC: Got this in an email


Addicted!

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Got this in an email


Received an email about this bit of history.Anyone ever heard of it?

Galt  Motor Co.
The Galt was a hybrid  (gasoline-electric) car, produced in Galt  ON
(now Cambridge  , ON ) in 1914. The only known remaining  example resides at the Canadian Automotive  Museum in Oshawa  ON . The plaque with the vehicle in the  museum reads:
"1914 Galt Gas  Electric
Produced in Galt  , Ontario
Engine: 2 cylinder, two  cycle, 10 HP
Fuel: Gasoline /  kerosene mixture
Generator:  Westinghouse, 40 volt, 90 amp coupled directly to the gasoline engine.
Transmission: None, the  electric motor is connected directly to the differential.
A fine example of  Canadian ingenuity in the Automotive field, this car was one of the earliest  attempts at a high efficiency automobile. The Galt's gasoline engine turns a turbine (sic) which in turn powers the car electrically. Extra power produced  by the generator is stored in batteries found beneath the floor. The batteries could then be used to provide extra power at times of peak load or  to operate the car with the gasoline engine turned off.
While the chassis and  drive train are original, the body, installed in 1941, is its third. The car  was in daily operation from that point until 1946. It is the only Galt Gas Electric in existence. Galt  Motor Company
The Galt Gas Electric  was the second car to be produced in Galt Ontario  and to bear its name. The Galt Motor Co. was founded in 1909 when Moffat St.  Claire and Eddy Fleming bought the remaining inventory of Canadian Motors  Limited. From the collection St. Claire and Fleming assembled and sold ten  automobiles, using the proceeds to finance the development of their gas  electric automobile. In
1914, the Galt Gas Electric was unveiled. The car  with its unique means of propulsion was easy to operate, having no  transmission a single lever provided five speeds forward and three in  reverse. The car was highly efficient and was reportedly capable of  travelling over 70 miles on a single gallon of gasoline.
The car could also  travel a distance of fifteen to twenty miles on a single battery charge,  virtually eliminating the risk of being stranded due to a lack of gasoline.
Despite the ingenuity  of its designers, the Galt Gas Electric did not prove to be a success.  Marketing the car was difficult because of the failure of the first Galt automobile. The car's top speed of
30 miles per hour was another drawback as consumers increasingly showed their preference for more powerful gasoline  operated cars."
(end of material on plaque at Canadian  Automotive Museum  )
The small gasoline  engine actually turned a large generator (not a turbine) to produce electricity supplied to the motor/batteries. When the generator produced more  power than the motor needed, the excess would charge the batteries. When the  motor needed more power than the generator could supply, the shortfall was  met by discharging the batteries. This configuration is known as a series  hybrid. Actually, a top speed of 30 miles per hour was probably plenty  anywhere in North America in 1914; few  roads would permit safe travel at that speed for any distance at that time.


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Uber Guru

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It seems ridiculous that in close to 100 years we can't perfect the gas/electric hybrid doesn't it?
This Galt car got 70 mpg in 1914, what happened?

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Drifting offshore is a fine way to spend a day!!



Poncho Master!

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Posts: 1921
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oil companies got greedy and are too rich to let anybody mass produce a good idea such as this.

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1959 El Poncho!!
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