Collectors And Restorers of Model T Fords and other brass-era motorcars, horseless carriages Ford Model T
At the Frontenac Motor Company, we restore and collect antique Ford Model T cars. Henry Ford
called his Model T The Universal Car and he
firmly believed that there was no need for further
development in motorcars as he had perfected the
modern automobile. Henry Ford may have been
overstating the facts here, but his Model T and the Ford
Motor Company did change the world. Before the
end of the second decade of the twentieth century,
more than one half of all the cars in the entire world
were Model T Fords. At no other point in history has a
single car company, let alone a single model held so
much market share. Henry Ford put the world on wheels. This site is dedicated to the
profound artistry of the Ford Model T automobile and other brass-era motorcars.
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History of Ford of Canada, Pictures Model T Specifications Ford Model T Parts For Sale
Canada Ford Model T parts for sale sales parts Frontenac Model T Ford tin lizzie lizzy Brockville Atlas Briscoe restoration collection specification racing Fronty Ford vintage ford used car brass brass-era motorcar early auto Henry Ford The Universal Car roadster runabout tudor fordor hardtop classic 1913 1914 1911 1921 production figures pre war pre-war Model T racing speed speedster fast 1911 Canadian Touring flivver 1913 Runabout 1921 Touring 1921 Model T racer 1914 Ford pickup truck vintage automobile automotive antique chevrolet EMF Benz.
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Canadian Painter Artist Lisa Free Fine Art Paintings
Ford applied the moving assembly line concept to his production facility late in
1913. His staff constantly monitored productive and relentlessly analyzed the statistical
measures to optimize worker productivity.
Over the years, Model T Fords came in many different models, all built with the
essentially same engine and
chassis: the Model T roadster, coupe, coupelet, runabout, roadster torpedo,
town car, touring, and the fordor and tudor sedans.
Ford is often quoted as saying "I will build a motorcar for the great multitude".
At the time it was a revolutionary business model to lower a product's cost and
the company's profit margin in exchange for
increased sales volume.
Up until this point in time the automobile had been a status symbol
and cars were painstakingly built by hand for the wealthy. By the end of
1913 Ford's application of the moving assembly line had improved the speed of chassis assembly from
12 hours and eight minutes to one hour and 33 minutes. In 1914 Ford produced
308,162 cars, which was more than all 299 other auto manufacturers combined. By the time the
last Model T was built in 1927, the
company was producing an automobile every 24 seconds.
Studebaker, Oldsmobile, White, Cadillac, Ford, Chevrolet, Atlas, Briscoe, Maxwell, Atlas Automobiles.
The first production Model T Ford (1909 model year)
was assembled at the Piquette Avenue Plant in Detroit on October 1, 1908. Over the next
19 years relatively few changes were made to the basic design. By 1926 the design
was so antiquated that the cars could not compete with more modern designs from
companies like Chevrolet. 1927 was the last year for Henry's lady, the "Universal Car".
In 1906, Ford secretly set up a place to build his cars in a building
on Piquette Avenue in Detroit. Ford spent nearly two years
designing the Model T, building on knowledge gained from the production of
earlier cars, like his Ford Model N.
Henry Ford did not invent the automobile
or the assembly line. He did, however, change the world by using an assembly line
technique to produce cars which could be afforded by everyone. From 1909 to 1927,
the Ford Motor Company
built more than 15 million Model T cars. Without a doubt,
Henry Ford transformed the economic and social fabric of the 20th
century.
While Henry Ford and his team were planning for his new car, he attended a race in Florida where he
examined the wreckage of a French race car. He observed that it was made of a different kind of steel
and the car parts were lighter than those he had been previously seen. He learned that
this new steel was a vanadium alloy and that it had almost
three times the tensile strength of the alloys used by his contemporary
American auto makers. No one in America knew how to make vanadium steel so
Ford financed and set up a steel mill. As a result, the only cars in the world to
utilize vanadium steel over the next five years would be French luxury cars and the Ford
Model T. Ford's use of vanadium steel explains why so many Model T Fords have survived today.
Henry's car changed the world forever. In 1909, for $825, a Model T customer could buy a reliable
automobile that was fairly easy to drive. Ford sold over ten thousand Model T cars in
the first year of production, a new record
for any automobile model.
No one really knows if Henry Ford ever said
that the buying public could have Model T Fords "in any color,
so long as it's black", but it is commonly attributed to him. While this saying is
true for the model years after
1913, earlier cars were available in green, red, blue and grey. In fact, in the
first year, Model T Fords were not available in black at all. The switch to all
black cars was due to Ford's ongoing obsession with cost reduction, and not, as is commonly believed, to reduce
drying time and hence increase production.
Over 30 different types of black paint were used to paint various parts of the Model T. The different types of paint were formulated to satisfy the different means of applying the paint to the different parts, and had different drying times, depending on the paint and the drying method used for a particular part. Ford engineering documents suggest that the color black was chosen because it was cheap and it was durable.
In 1926 colors other
than black were once again offered, in an attempt to boost dwindling sales.