|
commentary by
Michael L. Bromley |
Bromleyisms
... of Automobiles
... and Politics
...and of history, of society, and a whole lot more.
| he, he... |
Early autos in early films!
See Edison Co. and American
Mutoscope Co. films
of automobiles and New York City streets
|
Pages: Jun 4/06: Early autos in early films! 12/09/05: Green is good, or too much green? 11/25/05: Reports From the Roads (Automotive Thanksgivings) 09/09/05: Back in Gas! Freakin' over the price of gasoline. 3/29/05: More Detroit Layoffs. 3/18/05: Collin Powell a speeder -- and what a road he chose to speed upon! 3/14/05: "24" Wrong on the Chauffeur 3/11/05: Leftlaness... just get out of the way, you stuck up hybrid driver 3/10/05 Headlight theft (con't) 2/22/05b: Baron Munchausen Syndrome: Maryland SUV surcharge (con't) 2/22/05: Baron Munchausen Syndrome: Maryland SUV surcharge 2/8/05: Toll roads & Texas highways (article link) 2/5/05: Too many horses (Easterbrook con't) 1/28/05: Too many horses: Easterbrook theories put to test 1/19/05: Too many horses: or so says Gregg Easterbrook 1/13/05: Roads, dead deer, insurance, & State Socialism (aka, who's gonna pay?) 1/6/05: You are what you drive (Porsche Drivers For Bush!) 12/28/04: Taxes and autos: one up, the other down 12/27/04: Santa Claus Car (Kit Foster explains) 12/25/04: Santa Claus Car: Merry Christmas! 12/19/04: Taxes and autos: parking fees in DC |
... of Automobiles Jun 5/06: Why the world needs automotive historians Here's a great, if sad, example for it:
This is, btw, a fabulous article with insight not to be denied but for a fool: peak oil ain't, and, besides, technology will resolve shortages, just let oil be oil and its prices be its prices:
A most simple problem: just depends on the price of extracted oil: So with little argument with the author's conclusions, I still gotta scream about his automotive history. Back to where we began:
Ok, so the market of 1900 was "split equally among steam, electricity and petrol" -- see this Edison film of an 1899 NYC automobile parade that featured these competing technologies -- except there were so few automobiles that none of it mattered. "Market"? There was no market. A few hundred automobiles did not a market make. That's like saying that 1972 was a great year in personal computers. It existed, but it weren't no market. Worse is this, that the Model T "ran equally on both grain-alcohol and petrol." Exqueeze me, but that ain't and weren't so. Gasoline, also known as "naptha," was a little used by-product derivative of the distillation of heating oil from petroleum. Until the stationary and mobile small-unit petroleum engines proved themselves reliable and powerful, naptha was used mostly as a solvent (for such uses as dry cleaning, for example). Other petroleum derivatives, such as kerosene, was used for lanterns and steam engines. The more stable gasoline proved the better tool for the internal combustion engine, which proved the more useful for moving carriages and carts. Alcohol was never a factor, not even in a 1906 craze that was endorsed -- to no avail -- by the President of the United States. The early 20th century, as its latter partner, was not ready to run on corn or cane. It was a simple problem to which gasoline proved the best answer: stability, compactibility, power, octane, reliability, and efficiency. Gasoline had it, and it has it still. So what good does the historical correction do for this article? That gasoline was the inevitable winner of the early 1900s ought signal that it should not be so easily denied but a hundred years later. There was no real competition in 1900 between the technologies. Steam, electricity, and alcohol had their chance against the new boy, naptha, and they were kicked out of the rnig. All those had distinct advantages over gasoline (for example, steamers were banned from hill climbs and races because they won the races with no mercy). But the general advantage fell to gasoline, and it shall remain so. Sorry folks, gasoline aint' going away. Not even here: Read and weep. And put some money into Agribusiness. Here for previous entry |
|||