Duesenberg Model A (1 G.) `1921 - Легковой автомобиль (США) | |
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Duesenberg Model A
Duesenberg Model A
Overview
Manufacturer - Duesenberg
Also called - Duesenberg Straight Eight
Production - 1921-1926
Assembly - Indianapolis, IN US
Designer - Fred and August Duesenberg
Body and chassis
Class - Luxury car
Body style - by arrangement with coachbuilder
Layout - FR
Related - Duesenberg Model X
Powertrain
Engine - 4.3 L (260 cu in) OHC straight-eight engine
Transmission - 3 speed manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase - standard: 3,403.6 mm (134 in) / long: 3,581.4 mm (141 in)
Chronology
Successor - Duesenberg Model X / Duesenberg Straight 8
Overview
Manufacturer - Duesenberg
Production - 1921-1926
Layout
Configuration - straight-eight engine
Displacement - 4.3 L (260 cu in)
Cylinder bore - 73.0 mm (2.875 in)
Piston stroke - 127.0 mm (5.0 in)
Cylinder block material - cast iron, 3 bearings
Cylinder head material - cast iron, detachable
Valvetrain - Shaft-driven SOHC, 2 valves/cyl.
Compression ratio - 5:1
Combustion
Fuel system - Single updraft Schebler 1+1⁄2 in carburetor
Management - Delco coil and points, distributor mounted at end of starter/generator
unit
Fuel type - Gasoline
Oil system - Wet sump, full pressure lubrication
Cooling system - water cooled
Output
Power output - 88 bhp (66 kW) @ 3600 rpm
Torque output - 170 lb⋅ft (230 N⋅m) at 1500 rpm
Chronology
Successor - Duesenberg Model X
The Duesenberg Model A was the first automobile in series production to have
hydraulic brakes and the first automobile in series production in the United
States with a straight-eight engine. Officially known as the Duesenberg Straight
Eight, the Model A was first shown in late 1920 in New York City. Production was
delayed by substantial changes to the design of the car, including a change in
the engine valvetrain from horizontal overhead valves to an overhead camshaft;
also during this time, the company had moved its headquarters and factory from
New Jersey to Indiana. The Model A was manufactured in Indianapolis, Indiana,
from 1921 to 1925 by the Duesenberg Automobiles and Motors Company and from 1925
to 1926 at the same factory by the restructured Duesenberg Motor Company. The
successors to the company began referring to the car as the Model A when the
Model J was introduced. With a top speed of 71mph.
Background
Fred and August Duesenberg built aircraft and marine engines during World War I
and used this expertise to design and build racing engines and to design a car.
The Duesenberg Automobiles and Motors Company was incorporated in Delaware and
founded to manufacture and market the production car while Duesenberg Brothers,
a separate organization, built racing cars and engines.
Introduction and delay
The Duesenberg Straight Eight was introduced in late 1920 at the Commodore Hotel
in New York City, but production of the Straight Eight did not begin until late
1921. The main reason for the delay was Fred Duesenberg's decision to redesign
several aspects of the car, including the valvetrain. The headquarters and
manufacturing facilities of the Duesenberg Automobiles and Motors Company were
relocated from Newark, New Jersey, to Indianapolis, Indiana during this time.
The move was completed in May 1921, but the redesign was not.
Design and engineering
Drivetrain
The Straight Eight was the first car in series production in the United States
with a straight-eight engine. The engine had a cast iron block, a detachable
cast iron cylinder head, and an aluminum lower crankcase and oil pan. The
crankshaft ran in three main bearings. While the prototype Straight Eight shown
at the model's introduction had horizontal valves of the type used in earlier
Duesenberg-designed marine and racing engines, the model that entered production
had a shaft-driven single overhead camshaft which used rockers to operate two
valves per cylinder in a hemispheric combustion chamber.
The engine used a single updraft carburetor; early versions used a Stromberg
unit, which was replaced by a Schebler unit. The carburetor was on the right
side of the engine, the mixture went into a passage through the engine block to
the intake manifold on the left side of the engine. Ignition was by Delco coil
and breaker points, with the distributor at the end of the generator/starter
unit.
With a 2.875 in (73.0 mm) bore and a 5 in (127.0 mm) stroke, the engine had a
displacement of 260 cu in (4.3 L). The standard compression ratio of five to one
yielded 88 hp (66 kW) at 3600 rpm and 170 lb⋅ft (230 N⋅m) of torque at 1500 rpm.
A single dry-plate clutch and an unsynchronized three-speed gearbox were bolted
to the engine. The gearbox was operated directly with a central shift lever. The
drive shaft was enclosed in a torque tube and drove the live rear axle through a
spiral bevel drive.
Chassis
The chassis was based on a pressed steel ladder frame with channel-section side
members and fabricated and tubular cross members. Suspension was by
semi-elliptic leaf springs and Watson Stabilator dampers front and rear, with a
tubular beam axle at the front and a live axle and radius rods at the rear. The
standard wheelbase was 134 inches (3,400 mm), with a wheelbase of 141 inches
(3,600 mm) available for seven-passenger bodies. The front and rear tracks were
both 56 inches (1,400 mm) wide. Center-locking wire wheels with 5" x 33" tires
were used front and rear.
The Duesenberg Straight Eight was the first production automobile to use
Lockheed Corporation Hydraulic brakes on all four wheels. The brakes on the
front wheels were 16 inches (410 mm) in diameter and were finned to dissipate
heat. The fluid used in the system was a mixture of glycerine and water.
Reception
The initial production target was 100 cars per month. By the end of 1922, after
slightly more than a year of production, fewer than 150 Duesenberg Straight
Eights had been built. Production of the Straight Eight continued through
several changes in management, placement of the Duesenberg Automobiles and
Motors Company into receivership in January 1924, and the restructuring of the
company into the Duesenberg Motor Company in February 1925, until the purchase
of the company by E. L. Cord in October 1926. About 650 Straight Eights had been
built when Cord ended production in 1926.
Legacy
The Duesenberg Model X, a derivative of the Straight Eight, had a short
production run in 1927. About twelve were built. The Model X had an engine with
the same bore and stroke as the Straight Eight but with a non-crossflow head.
The engine delivered 100 horsepower (75 kW). The chassis had a wheelbase of 135
inches (3,400 mm).
Despite its regional and worldwide automotive firsts, the Straight Eight has
been obscured by the later Model J. It is no longer widely known by the Straight
Eight name under which it was marketed and sold, having been renamed the "Model
A" after the introduction of the Model J.
1923 Duesenberg Model A with touring car body by Leon Rubay
Duesenberg Model A badge and mascot
1926 Duesenberg Model A Roadster at Stahls Automotive Collection
wikipedia.org (en)