Cartercar
{{short description|Defunct American motor vehicle manufacturer}}
{{Infobox company
|name = Cartercar
|logo = Cartercar.png
|logo_size = 200
|image = Cartercar factory in pontiac.jpg
|image_caption = Carter Car factory located at 220-230
First Street in Pontiac, MI (1907)
|type = Private (1905–09)
Subsidiary (1909–15)
|genre =
|foundation = 1905
|founder = Byron J Carter
|fate = Acquired by General Motors in 1909
|location_city = Pontiac, Michigan
|location_country = United States
|key_people =
|area_served = United States
|industry = Automotive
|products = Automobiles, auto parts
|services =
|market cap =
|revenue =
|operating_income =
|net_income =
|assets =
|equity =
|num_employees =
|title =
|parent = General Motors
|divisions =
|subsid =
|brands =
|owner =
|homepage =
|defunct = {{end date and age|1915}}
|footnotes =
}}
Cartercar was an American automotive manufacturing company established in 1905 in Jackson, Michigan, and founded by Byron J. Carter. After several relocations in other cities, Cartercar was acquired by General Motors in 1909.
History
= Beginning =
After leaving the Jackson Automobile Company due to a disagreement with his business partners over the choice of transmissions in 1905, Byron J. Carter formed the Motorcar Company in Jackson. The firm relocated to Detroit by the end of the year, due to having financing there. Starting in 1907, the company was named Cartercar Company and was relocated to Pontiac, thereupon merging with the makers of the Pontiac High wheeler. The Cartercar was given a warm reception in the press, largely due to the friction drive transmission, which was a sort of forerunner of the CVT of today, as both offered an infinite number of engine speeds. At 4,000 miles, the paper fiber rims that were part of the friction-drive could be replaced for no more than US$5 (${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|5|1905}}}} in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars {{inflation-fn|US}}), which was less than half the price that would be expended on grease packing in a regular geared transmission.{{cite book |last1=Kimes |first1=Beverly Rae |author-link1=Beverly Rae Kimes |last2=Clark |first2=Henry Austin Jr. |title=Standard Catalog of American Cars: 1805-1942 |edition=3rd |location=Iola, Wisconsin |publisher=Krause Publications |year=1996 |page=258 |isbn=0-87341-428-4}}
= Sale to General Motors =
Sales more than doubled between the first and second full years of production, from 101 in 1906 to 264 in 1907. The next year sales were up again, now at 325. On October 26, 1909, Cartercar was bought by General Motors in the acquisition spree that William Durant went on after founding GM. In explaining the reason he purchased Cartercar, Durant said:
"They say I shouldn't have bought Cartercar. Well, how was anyone to know that Carter wasn't to be the thing? It had the friction drive and no other car had it. How could I tell what these engineers would say next?"{{cite book |last=Pelfrey |first=William |title=Billy, Alfred, and General Motors: The Story of Two Unique Men, A Legendary Company, and a Remarkable Time in American History |location=New York, New York |publisher=AMACOM |year=2006 |page=151 |isbn=0-8144-0869-9}}
Durant lost control of GM in 1910, and by the time he had regained control in 1915, the GM board had already decided to discontinue the Cartercar, largely because sales never approached the 1000-2000 annually that Durant had predicted. The GM board decided to use the factory instead to produce the Oakland.
= Powertrain =
The company began with a flat-twin engine; this was used alongside vertical fours in the 1909 range of cars. By 1910, four-cylinder engines were the sole motor available. Two models, both pair-cast fours, appeared in 1912; the Model R was 4160 cc, while the Model S was 5437 cc. Each had a single chain drive. Even though there were other friction-drive cars on the market at the time, such as Lambert, Metz, and Petrel, none of them lasted as long or were as famous as the Cartercar.
= Death of Byron Carter =
Tragedy struck when Byron Carter died in 1908 as a result of trying to start a stalled car; the crank kicked back and hit him in the jaw, causing gangrene which ultimately proved fatal. Carter was a personal friend of Cadillac founder Henry Leland, and his unfortunate death prompted Leland to urge Charles Kettering's development of the Self-Starter (introduced in 1912), the first successful motor vehicle electric starting system, thus eliminating the dangerous crank. An ad for the 1912 Cartercar states that it includes a self-starter.{{cite magazine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Af5YAAAAYAAJ&q=cartercar+self-starter&pg=RA1-PA33 |title=Cartercar advertisement |magazine=Automobile Journal |volume=XXXIII |number=2 |page=33 |date=March 1, 1912 |location=Pawtucket, Rhode Island}}
Advertisements
Gallery
File:Carter Car Motorcar Company Final Assembling Department.png|Interiof of the final assembling dept.
File:1909 Cartercar Model H Touring.jpg|1909 Cartercar Model H Touring
File:Stahls Automotive Collection December 2021 018 (1910 Cartercar).jpg|1910 Cartercar
File:Cartercar 1912.JPG|1912 Cartercar
File:1912 Cartercar Model R Number 6678.jpg|1912 Cartercar Model R (#6678). One of three known to exist
Cartercar 1912 ad.jpg|1912 ad
See also
Notes
{{reflist}}
References
- {{cite book |first=David |last=Burgess-Wise |author-link=David Burgess-Wise |title=The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Automobiles |publisher=Greenwich Editions |year=2003 |isbn=978-0862882587}}
External links
{{commons category}}
- [https://www.cartercar.org/ Cartercarg.org], Cartercar enthusiasts' website
- [http://www.ritzsite.nl/Archive/0707.htm Cartercar Model R] at RitzSite
{{General Motors brands}}
{{JacksonCars}}
Category:1905 establishments in Michigan
Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1905
Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1915
Category:Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United States
Category:Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Michigan
Category:Cars powered by boxer engines