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Flash Back Of The Day: 120th Birthday Of The Automobile
Posted on December 30, 2005 at 9:40 AM CST

102th Birthday of the Automobile

Believe it or not, it's been almost 120 years since the birth of the world's first automobile.

On January 29, 1886, Karl Benz applied for a patent for his motorized vehicle.  In November of the same year, Benz received Patent No. 37435a, and his three-wheeled invention has since been recognized as the world's first automobile.

Although other inventors of the day had thought to install an internal combustion engine on a coach body, what set Karl Benz's vehicle apart was his design, which extended to the entire vehicle. By adding not only an engine but also an electronic ignition, carburetor, water-cooled radiator, steering and a tubular frame, Karl's originality and foresight allowed him to implement features still found in modern vehicles.

For more info on the world's first automobile, you can check out photos and the full press release below.


OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE



The 120th Birthday Of The Automobile

Benz Patent Motor Car 1886 Birthday of the Car

Stuttgart, Dec 30, 2005

The automobile celebrates its 120th birthday on January 29. On this date in 1886 Karl Benz applied for a patent for his motorized vehicle. With the German Reich Patent No. 37435a, granted in November of the same year, his Patent Motor Car, as this three-wheeled vehicle has since been known, received official recognition as the world’s first automobile.

Advertisement of the Benz Patent Motor Car

It was the individualized technology that secured the Benz Patent Motor Car this status. Unlike other inventors, Benz did not merely install an internal combustion engine into an existing coach chassis, thereby making it capable of autonomous motion (Greek/latin: auto/mobil). His design extended to the entire vehicle: It was quite clear to him that a vehicle powered by an internal combustion engine was subject to engineering principles quite different from those applying to a horse-drawn carriage.

Benz Motor Car Patent 1886 120th Birthday of the Automobile

Benz created innovative technology with classic engineering methods: a small horizontal, single-cylinder four-stroke engine running on gasoline, electric ignition, carburetor, water-cooled radiator, steering and a tubular frame. With these features, the first motor car came into being in 1886.

It was the Benz Motor Car’s holistic design that made it worthy of a patent. The vehicle is thus an absolute original: all automobiles produced since that time stand in the tradition of the Patent Motor Car. Originality – a quality that constitutes the basis of the entire brand philosophy. This finds its unique and highly diversified expression in the New Mercedes-Benz Museum, to be opened in May 2006.


Bertha Benz and her sons Eugen and Richard during their long-distance journey in August 1888 with the Benz Patent Motor Car Contemporary portrayal of filling up at the pharmacy in Wiesloch the world’s first gas station

The further biography of the Patent Motor Car is history. Three vehicles were completed by 1888. One was secretly taken out by Bertha Benz, the inventor’s wife, who drove it with her sons 100 kilometers from Mannheim to Pforzheim; this journey earned the vehicle much publicity, and Benz sold a number of cars to customers as a result. A four-wheeled vehicle, the Benz “Victoria”, followed in 1893. This again incorporated numerous innovations, including double-pivot steering, which is still employed in today’s automobiles. And so it continues: with each new vehicle, the automobile improves just that much more – to this very day.

Copyright © 2005, DaimlerChrysler AG

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