Moline Automobile Company

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moline Automobile Company
TypeAutomobile Manufacturing
IndustryAutomotive
GenreRoadsters, touring cars
Founded1904
Defunct1919
Headquarters,
Area served
United States
ProductsAutomobiles
Automotive parts

The Moline Automobile Company (1904 – 1919) was an American brass era automobile manufacturer in Moline, Illinois known for the Moline-Knight.

History[]

Moline-Knight[]

Moline-Knight Touring L

The Moline-Knight was an American automobile manufactured by the Moline Automobile Company located at 74 Keokuk Street in East Moline, Illinois, from 1904 to 1919. The car used a Knight engine.[1]

In 1911, the Moline 35 was a two-seat roadster with a 4×6-inch (114×152-mm) gasoline engine and self starter,[1] still a rarity then. It came complete with folding top, windshield, and Prest-O-Lite acetylene tank (for the headlights), all for US$1700.[1] By contrast, a Brush Runabout was US$485, the Gale Model A roadster US$500.[1] the high-volume Oldsmobile Runabout US$650, a Colt Runabout US$1500, an US$2000, and American's base model was US$4250.[1]

The 35 was joined in Moline's 1911 lineup by a four and a five-passenger tourer and a four-passenger "toy tonneau", "all with self-starting", the ads bragged.[1]

Moline Automobile Company - 1906

Features found in a Moline-Knight included sleeve valves and a quiet engine.[2] Some drawbacks were its large oil consumption and its carburetor's sensitivity to altitude.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Clymer, Floyd. Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877-1925. New York: Bonanza Books, 1950, pp.32-128.
  2. ^ a b Mayall, Nicholas Ulrich (1970). "Nicholas U. Mayall". In Stone, Irving (ed.). There was light: Autobiography of a university: Berkeley, 1868-1968. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. p. 108. My first ascent of Mount Hamilton was made in a Moline Knight, a car that my father fancied because it had sleeve valves and was the envy of his colleagues because it ran so quietly. What was not publicized was the engine's voracity for oil, and its carburetor's sensitivity to altitude.

External links[]

  • Brass Era car
  • List of defunct United States automobile manufacturers

Sources[]

  • David Burgess Wise, The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Automobiles ISBN 0-7858-1106-0
  • Clymer, Floyd. Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877-1925. New York: Bonanza Books, 1950.


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