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    5 matches on "Automotive technology"
    Radar speed car photograph
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    Radar speed car photograph  Save
    Description: Photograph taken for the Columbus Citizen-Journal newspaper and identified on the reverse as a radar speed car in downtown Columbus, Ohio. Visible in the background of the photograph is a large parking lot and the Tracy-Wells Company Building. This Chevrolet automobile features a vehicle-mounted device used by law enforcement to measure the speed of surrounding objects and detect speeders in traffic. The technology, which uses Doppler radar, was developed during World War II, and by the late 1940s was being put into use by law enforcement and in traffic surveys around the country. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: P339_B03F05_10_01
    Subjects: Law enforcement; Automobiles; Automotive technology; Traffic;
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
    Charles F. Kettering photograph
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    Charles F. Kettering photograph  Save
    Description: Reproduction of a photograph depicting Charles F. Kettering with a Buick automobile, Dayton, Ohio, 1913. Kettering is credited with inventing the electric ignition and self-starter for the automobile. He was one of the founders of the Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company, which became the Delco Products Division of General Motors. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL01161
    Subjects: Inventors--Ohio; Automotive technology; Automobile industry; Ohio Economy--Science and Technology; Photography--Ohio
    Places: Dayton (Ohio)
     
    Rickenbacker Maxwell Engine #23 photograph
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    Rickenbacker Maxwell Engine #23 photograph  Save
    Description: Photograph of a new engine installed in a Rickenbacker Maxwell #23 race car just prior to the 1915 Indianapolis 500 race. Edward Rickenbacker was born on October 8, 1890 in Columbus, Ohio. Between 1909 and 1917, Eddie Rickenbacker was one of the top race car drivers in the country. He was a racer for the Maxwell Motor Company in 1915. Rickenbacker died in Switzerland, July 1973. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02925
    Subjects: Rickenbacker, Eddie, 1890-1973; Automotive technology; Automobile racing; Automobile racing drivers
    Places: Ohio
     
    Goodyear pneumatic cord tire advertisement
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    Goodyear pneumatic cord tire advertisement  Save
    Description: Poster advertisement for Goodyear Pneumatic Cord Tires for trucks. The poster features black-and-white photographs of trucks using the pneumatic cord tires while making an 8-day round trip between Akron, Ohio, and Boston, Massachusetts, in 1918. Pneumatic tires rely on a network of cords to provide their shape and enough tensile strength to maintain sufficient inflation. Frank Seiberling (1859-1955) founded the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in 1898. Located on the banks of the Little Cuyahoga River in Akron, the company operated in a converted strawboard factory with thirteen employees. Although its main product was tires, the company also made rubber poker chips, fire hoses, and horseshoe pads. By 1926 it had become the largest rubber company in the world. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: OVS7660
    Subjects: Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company; Tire industry; Rubber industry; Automotive technology; Transportation--Ohio;
    Places: Akron (Ohio); Summit County (Ohio)
     
    Perry Okey with Okey Auto #2
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    Perry Okey with Okey Auto #2  Save
    Description: Photograph of Perry Okey operating the "Okey Auto #2" in 1899 from the Columbus Citizen-Journal Photograph Collection. A typed caption on the back reads "Okey Auto #2, the first one Perry Okey operated on Columbus streets. Picture was taken in spring of 1899 at Long and Fourth by Geo. Smith who ran a dancing school there. Okey made only one of this model -- it had one-cylinder engine, would go 25 miles per hour. He drove it two years between East Side home and city elec plan on west bank of Scioto where he had workshop on 3rd floor. Note Okey's resemblance to the young FDR." Perry Okey (1873-1963) was a resident of Columbus, Ohio. After working for the Columbus Waterworks beginning in 1897, he went on to operate the Okey Auto Company and later the Okey Motor Car Company in the early 1900s. He was an active inventor whose patents included an automobile self-starter, a saw-cutting machine, a fluid-density meter, a computing device, an apparatus for feeding lines, a refrigerating system, a lens grinding machine, and more. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: P339_B11F03_05_01
    Subjects: Automobiles--Ohio--History; Automotive technology; Transportation; Inventors; Science and Technology;
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
      5 matches on "Automotive technology"
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