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Showing posts from April, 2023

Revolution of car

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Ford plant in the 1930   By the mid-1920s the American automobile had won the revolution Ford had begun. The country was on wheels, and the manufacture and sale of automobiles had become an important component in the American economy. The closed car was no longer exclusively a rich man’s possession. In 1920 most cars had been open models, the occupants protected from the weather by canvas-and-isinglass side curtains. The Essex coach, a no-frills two-door sedan introduced in 1922 by the Hudson Motor Car Company, reduced the cost of sheltered motoring to that of a touring car. Ten years later, Detroit manufacturers were producing closed models almost exclusively. The 1920s saw the emergence of the great European producers—Austin, Morris, and Singer in England, Fiat in Italy, and  Citroën  in France. Universal motor  transportation  was a long way off, but the concept of the small car that found expression in the Austin Seven and the Fiat Topolino, two of the descendants of  Ettore Bugatt