2003 - Volume #27, Issue #5, Page #23
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Henry Ford's First Car
"I saw a photo of the car in an encyclopedia and tried to build it as close as I could," says Moe. "The original car didn't have an awning, which I added for shade because we often drive the car in parades. My wife and I dress up in antique looking clothes to add to the old-time effect. I wear a bowler hat and she wears a garden party hat."
He started with the frame and axles off a Ford Model T car and added a plywood "body". The car rides on four motorcycle wheels. Power is supplied by a throttle-governed antique gas engine, with a camshaft belt-driving a hydrostatic transmission off a Sears riding mower. "The engine runs on E85 (ethanol) fuel and delivers anywhere from 3 to 5 hp, depending on whether it's idling or revved up," says Moe.
The driver sits on a padded seat made for Moe by an Amish craftsman. Moe uses a tiller to steer. The car also has a horn, a small fan to cool the driver, and Model T kerosene lamps on front that serve as headlights.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Roger Moe, 36911 200th St., Springfield, Minn. 56087 (ph 507 723-5947; email: ram@tier-3.net).
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