First Car Invention

 Standing in Stuttgart's Mercedes-Benz Museum, however, is a moment of awe and wonder to see the world's first car. In fact, the term used at the time, "horseless carriage" seems more appropriate, yet it is Benz's carriage, patented in 1886, that is credited with being the first ever car, although Other road vehicles preceded his work by several years. 




Of course it could be argued that a ridiculously talented genius, known to his friends as Leo, beat Benz to design the first automobile by several hundred years.

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Among the great Leonardo da Vinci's many incredible inventions was the design of the world's first self-propelled carriage (no horses required).


His ingenious contraption, drawn by his hand in 1495, was spring-powered and required wounding before setting off, but it was extremely complicated and, as it turns out, entirely feasible.

Even more amazingly, the primitive design included the world's first steering column, and a rack and pinion gear system, the basis of which we still drive our cars today.


Although, to be fair, Leonardo probably never got around to building his idea into a prototype - it would have been nearly impossible with the tools available to him at the time - or driving it around town. They even forgot to include the seats.


And, when it comes to the most common modern automobiles we know today, his automobiles didn't have anything significant that Benz could boast about. The first internal combustion engine, and thus the first gasoline car.

It is the use of this fuel, and the design of this engine, that eventually won the race to build the world's first horseless carriage, and why the Germans go to the credit, despite the fact that a Frenchman named Nicolas-Joseph Cignot Made the first car. , a self-propelled road vehicle, originally a three-wheeled tractor for military use in 1769. 

Yes, it could only go 4 km/h and wasn't really a car, but the main reason it missed out as a household name is that its contraption was powered by steam, which From then on it became an overland train.

Similarly, Robert Anderson misses out on claiming to have built the world's first car, as his self-driving car, built in Scotland in the 1830s, was an "electric carriage", not an internal combustion one. K engine.


Of course, it's important to note that Karl Benz wasn't the first to come up with the engine. As early as 1680, a Dutch physicist named Christian Huygens came up with the idea of ​​an internal combustion engine, and it's probably a good thing he never built it, since his plan was to power it with gunpowder.


And Karl Benz even got help from another colleague with a name familiar to Mercedes-Benz (or Daimler-Benz as it's otherwise known) fans, Gottlieb Daimler.

When the first car was invented is a question as much up for debate as its definition. Certainly, Gottlieb Daimler has his own claim to the title, as he came up with not only that first basic engine in 1889, but a much improved version that followed, featuring a V-shaped, four-cylinder engine. 

There was a two-stroke, two-cylinder engine. The Benz patent is much closer to the designs still used today than the single cylinder unit on the motor wagon.


In 1927, Daimler and Benz merged to form the Daimler Group, which would one day become Mercedes-Benz.

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