Monday, January 9, 2023

The Origins and Early History of the Internal Combustion Engine (ICE), and Its Automotive Applications


From my The Automobile and American Life, 2nd edition.

Compact Power:  The Internal Combustion Engine (ICE)

            Along with the development of the bicycle, the internal combustion engine was most critical to developments in early automobile history. Credit for the ICE is normally given to Belgian inventor Etienne Lenoir (1822-1900), although his efforts followed a long succession of pioneering experiments going back to the 17th century, when Christian Huygens used gunpowder to drive pumps that supplied Versailles gardens with water.  Others who tried to harness the explosion of gas in a cylinder were British inventors Robert Street, Samuel Brown, Lemuel Wellman Wright, and William Barnett. In France Phillippe Lebon, and in Italy Eugenio Barsanti and Felice Mattecucci worked on the same problem between 1853 and 1857.

Three-horsepower internal-combustion engine fueled by coal gas and air, illustration, 1896. Library of Congress.


                                                            Ettienne  Lenoir (1822-1900)

        

            Living in France, Lenoir patented a two-stroke engine in 1860 that used illuminating gas (gas derived from heating coal in large retorts) that was ignited by a spark generated by a battery and coil. Lenoir’s engine was noisy and inefficient, and it tended to overheat. Used in stationary applications to power pumps and machines, some 250 were sold by 1865. And while the editor of Scientific American proclaimed in 1860 that with the coming of the Lenoir engine the Age of Steam was coming to an end, it took more than four decades before the ICE would eclipse the steam engine.16

            In 1876, Nicholas Otto (1832-1891) developed a four-cycle “Silent Otto” engine (intake, compression, power, and exhaust), and Lenoir came up with a similar design during 1883 and 1884. Two engineers who had once worked for Otto at the Deutz Gas motor Factory, Gottleib Daimler (1834-1900) and Wilhelm Maybach (1846-1929), designed a 1.5 horsepower, 110 pound, 600 rpm “high speed engine” in 1885, and built several experimental vehicles between 1885 and 1889. Maybach, one of the most important engineer-inventors of this early period, designed the modern carburetor for mixing air and gasoline in 1893.17


The Otto/Langen atmospheric engine of 1867  


An 1880s era American Otto engine for stationary use


 In the meantime, Karl Benz (1844-1929) designed a two-stroke engine in 1881 in his small shop located in Mannheim, Germany and began selling them in 1883. Because Deutz Co. patents had been invalidated in the courts in 1884 and 1886, Benz could design his own 4 cycle engine, and in placed that engine on a tricycle between 1885 and 1886. This 2/3 horse power vehicle with its unreliable ignition took wife Bertha Benz on the road trip from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back in 1886, and was the basis a model placed on sale in 1888. Benz exhibited a design at the 1889 Paris Exhibition.

Daimler, Maybach, and the “Grandfather Clock” Engine, 1885


 By 1893 he had constructed an improved four-wheel car with a three-horsepower engine that sold well and was fairly reliable. More than 100 Benz vehicles were sold by 1898. An early leader, Benz was soon passed technologically, especially by French manufacturers.



Daimler Reitwagen,1885, in the Mercedes Benz Museum in Stuttgart            


James Laux, in his book First Gear, characterizes in detail the French automobile industry before 1914.18According to Laux,  Emile Constant Levassor was the key French inventor-engineer of the late nineteenth century European automobile industry. Levassor took  Gottleib Daimler’s engine and placed it in the front of the vehicle where for the most part it has stayed to this day. Before Levassor’s untimely death, he proved the merits of his design as practical in the 1895 Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race. 


1895 Panhard-Levassor Paris to Bordeaux Vehicle


At first, and for only a relatively short time, Paris was the center of the nascent global automobile industry. Perhaps this was due to excellent French roads or social, economic, or political factors that remain to be explicated and are currently discounted. James Flink has argued that the importance of Paris was accidental rather than a crystallization of a complex network of relationships that included German, French, and Belgian inventors and businessmen.19

            The importance of the early French auto industry is reflected in the following chart20:

Year

Total Vehicles in Use

1899

1,672

1900

2,897

1901

5,386

1902

9,207

1903

12,984

1904

17,107

1905

21,543

1906

26,262

1907

31,286

1908

37,586

1908

46,000

 

            While a number of entrepreneurs in England, America, and Germany were only beginning to catch up to the French by the end of the nineteenth century, there was a concurrent Darwinian-like competition among three rival technologies in terms of power–the ICE already mentioned, steam, and electricity. In the end the most economically efficient technology would prevail, but that was by no means clear to those living in 1900.

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