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Henry Ford’s design of the
Model T automobile between 1906 and 1908 was an
extraordinary achievement. The industry was, at the
time, still in an experimental phase and yet this
design lasted without major change for nearly two
decades. More than 15 million Model Ts were
built: performance and price gave the car an edge. In
this sense they were ‘popular’, yet owners were
apologetic about owning one. Mr Ford had the
audacity to provide the car people needed, not the car
they wanted. The reasons for the car’s
success can be found in the details of the mechanical
design. There is a vast technical literature available
for the expert or the enthusiast and there are 20,000
Model Ts still on the road. This book provides a
concise and fresh look at the design one hundred
years later. It is not an engineering treatise or an
owner’s manual; the aim is to get inside the mind of
Henry Ford and to explain the design features that
accounted for the car’s success and to do so in a way
that will appeal to anyone who would like to know why
it has generated so much enthusiasm. The story is
as much about people as it is about nuts and bolts.
The character of the engineer and his design are
interwoven to a surprising degree, and the singular
personality of Mr Ford is shown to be reflected in his
car. A Exisle Publishing
Australia Publication Published March 2008
Hard Cover 21 x 27 cm. 128 pages, ISBN:
978-1-877427-15-1 Book
No: 427151 $29.95 inc.
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COLOUR - SO LONG AS IT'S BLACK by
John Duncan
Designing the Model T
Ford
1906 - 1908