Everything about Karl Benz totally explained
Karl Friedrich Benz, sometimes spelled
Carl, (
November 25,
1844,
Karlsruhe, Germany –
April 4,
1929,
Ladenburg, Germany) was a
German engine designer and automobile
engineer, generally regarded as the
inventor of the
gasoline-powered
automobile. Other German contemporaries,
Gottlieb Daimler and
Wilhelm Maybach, also worked independently on the same type of invention, but Benz
patented his work first and, after that, patented all of the processes that made the
internal combustion engine feasible for use in automobiles. In 1879 Benz was granted a patent for his first engine, which he designed in
1878.
In 1885, Karl Benz created the
Motorwagen, the first commercial automobile. It was powered by a four-stroke
gasoline engine, which was his own design. He was granted a patent for his automobile which was dated
January 29,
1886. The automobile had three wheels, being steered by the front wheel and with the passengers and the engine being supported by the two wheels in the rear—some now refer to it as the Tri-Car.
Among other things, he invented the
speed regulation system known also as an
accelerator,
ignition using
sparks from a
battery, the
spark plug, the
clutch, the
gear shift, the water
radiator, and the
carburetor.
In 1893, Benz also introduced the
axle-pivot steering system in his
Victoria model. The Benz
Victoria was designed for two passengers and intended to be sold for a lower cost to encourage
mass production of the automobile.
In 1896, Karl Benz designed and patented the first internal combustion
flat engine with horizontally-opposed pistons, a design that's still used in some high performance engines used in
racing cars.
Karl Benz founded the
Benz Company, precursor of
Daimler-Benz,
DaimlerChrysler, and
Daimler AG. Before dying he'd witness the explosion of automobile use during the 1920s, thanks to his inventions.
Early life
Karl Benz was born Karl Friedrich Michael Vaillant, in
Karlsruhe,
Baden, which is part of modern
Germany, to
Josephine Vaillant and a
locomotive driver,
Johann George Benz, whom she married a few months later. When he was two years old, his father was killed in a railway accident, and his name was changed to Karl Friedrich Benz in remembrance of his father.
Despite living near poverty, his mother strove to give him a good education. Benz attended the local
Grammar School in Karlsruhe and was a
prodigious student. In
1853, at the age of nine he started at the scientifically oriented
Lyzeum. Next he studied in the
Poly-Technical University under the instruction of
Ferdinand Redtenbacher.
Benz had originally focused his studies on
locksmithing, but eventually followed his father's steps toward locomotive engineering. On
September 30,
1860, at age fifteen, he passed the entrance exam for
mechanical engineering at the
University of Karlsruhe, which he subsequently attended. Benz was graduated
July 9,
1864 at nineteen.
During these years, while riding his
bicycle, he started to envision concepts for a vehicle that would eventually become the
horseless carriage.
Following his formal education, Benz had seven years of
professional training in several companies, but didn't fit well in any of them. The
training started in Karlsruhe with two years of varied jobs in a
mechanical engineering company.
He then moved to
Mannheim to work as a
draftsman and
designer in a
scales factory. In 1868 he went to
Pforzheim to work for a
bridge building company
Gebrüder Benckiser Eisenwerke und Maschinenfabrik. Finally, he went to
Vienna for a short period to work at an
iron construction company.
Benz's Factory and his first inventions (1871 to 1882)
In 1871, at the age of twenty-seven, Karl Benz joined August Ritter in launching a mechanical workshop in
Mannheim, also dedicated to supplying construction materials: the
Iron Foundry and Mechanical Workshop, later renamed,
Factory for Machines for Sheet-metal Working.
The enterprise's first year was a complete disaster. Ritter turned out to be unreliable and local authorities confiscated the business. The difficulty was solved when Benz's
fiancée,
Bertha Ringer, bought out Ritter's share in the company using her dowry.
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In
July 20,
1872 Karl Benz and Bertha Ringer married, later having five children: Eugen (1873), Richard (1874), Clara (1877), Thilde (1882), and Ellen (1890).
Despite such business misfortunes, Karl Benz led in the development of new
engines. To get more revenues, in 1878 he began to work on new
patents. First, he concentrated all his efforts on creating a reliable gas
two-stroke engine, based on
Nikolaus Otto's design of the
four-stroke engine. A patent on the design by Otto had been declared void. Benz finished his two-stroke engine on
December 31,
1878, New Year's Eve, and was granted a patent for it in 1879.
Karl Benz showed his real
genius, however, through his successive
inventions registered while designing what would become the production standard for his two-stroke engine. Benz soon patented the
speed regulation system, the
ignition using sparks with
battery, the
spark plug, the
carburetor, the
clutch, the
gear shift, and the water
radiator.
Benz's Gasmotoren-Fabrik Mannheim (1882 to 1883)
Problems arose again when the
banks at Mannheim demanded that Karl Benz's
Gas Factory enterprise be
incorporated due to the high production costs it maintained. Benz was forced to improvise an association with
photographer Emil Bühler and his brother (a
cheese merchant), in order to get additional bank support. The company became the
joint-stock company Gasmotoren Fabrik Mannheim in 1882.
After all the necessary agreements, Benz was unhappy because he was left with merely five percent of the
shares and a modest position as director. Worst of all, his ideas weren't considered when designing new products, so he withdrew from that corporation just one year later, in 1883.
Benz & Cie. and the Motorwagen
1885 Benz Patent Motorwagen>
|
|
| Three wheels |
| Tubular steel frame |
| Rack and pinion steering, connected to a driver end tiller; wheel chained to front axle |
| Electric ignition |
| Differential rear end gears(mechanically operated inlet valves)
|
| Water-cooled internal combustion engine |
| Gas or petrol four-stroke horizontally mounted engine |
| Single cylinder, Bore 116 mm, Stroke 160 mm |
| Patent model: 958 cc, 0.8 hp, 600 W, 16 km/h |
| Commercialized model: 1600 cc, ¾ hp, 8 mph |
Benz's lifelong
hobby brought him to a bicycle repair shop in Mannheim owned by
Max Rose and
Friedrich Wilhelm Eßlinger. In 1883, the three founded a new company producing industrial machines:
Benz & Company Rheinische Gasmotoren-Fabrik, usually referred to as,
Benz & Cie. Quickly growing to twenty-five employees, it soon began to produce gas engines as well.
The success of the company gave Benz the opportunity to indulge in his old passion of designing a
horseless carriage. Based on his experience with, and fondness for, bicycles, he used similar technology when he created an
automobile. It featured wire wheels (unlike carriages' wooden ones)
with a four-stroke engine of his own design between the rear wheels, with a very advanced coil ignition but, unlike Daimler, only evaporative cooling, rather than a radiator. Power was transmitted by means of two
roller chains to the rear axle. Karl Benz finished his creation in
1885 and named it the
Benz Patent Motorwagen. It was the first
automobile entirely designed as such, not simply a motorized carriage, which is why Karl Benz is regarded by many as its
inventor.
The beginnings of the
Motorwagen in 1885 were less than spectacular. The tests often attracted many onlookers who laughed mockingly when it smashed against a wall because it initially was so difficult to control. It was patented on
January 29,
1886 as
DRP-37435: "automobile fueled by gas". The first successful tests were carried out in the early summer of 1886 on public roads. The next year Benz created the
Motorwagen Model 2 which had several modifications, and in 1887, the definitive
Model 3 with
wooden wheels was introduced, showing at the Paris Expo the same year.
Benz began to sell the vehicle—advertising it as the
Benz Patent Motorwagen—making it the first commercially available automobile in history. The first customer, in late summer of 1888, is alleged later to have been committed to an insane asylum. The second buyer, Parisian
bicycle manufactuerer
Emile Roger, who purchased an 1888 Benz, had a profound effect on Benz's success. Roger had been building Benz
engines under
license from Karl Benz for several years, and in 1888, decided to add his automobiles to the line. Many of the early Benz automobiles were indeed built in France and sold by Roger, since the Parisians were more inclined to purchase automobiles at the time.
Early customers faced significant problems. At the time, gasoline was available only from pharmacies that sold it as a cleaning product, and they didn't stock it in large quantities. The early-1888 version of the
Motorwagen had to be pushed when driving up a steep hill. This limitation was rectified after
Berta Benz made her famous trip driving one of the vehicles a great distance and suggested to her husband the addition of another gear.
The popular story about this
first long distance automobile trip is that, supposedly without the knowledge of her husband, on the morning of
August 5,
1888, Berta Benz took this vehicle on a 106 km (65 mile) trip from Mannheim to
Pforzheim to visit her mother, taking her sons Eugen and Richard with her. In addition to having to locate fuel at pharmacies on the way, she also overcame various technical and mechanical problems and finally arrived at nightfall, announcing the achievement to Karl by
telegram. It had been her intention to demonstrate the feasibility of using her husband's invention for travel and to obtain
publicity that would make more people aware of it. Today the event is celebrated annually in Germany with an antique automobile rally.
Benz's
Model 3 made its wide-scale debut to the world in the
1889 World's Fair in
Paris, and about twenty-five
Motorwagens were built between 1886 and 1893.
Benz & Cie. expansion
The great demand for stationary, static
internal combustion engines forced Karl Benz to enlarge the factory in Mannheim, and in 1886 a new building located on
Waldhofstrasse (operating until 1908) was added.
Benz & Cie. had grown in the interim from 50 employees in 1890 to 430 in 1899. During the last years of the nineteenth century,
Benz & Company was the largest automobile company in the world with 572 units produced in 1899.
Because of its size, in 1899, the
Benz & Cie. became a
joint-stock company with the arrival of
Friedrich Von Fischer and
Julius Ganß, who came aboard as members of the
Board of Management. Ganß worked in the commercialization department.
The new directors recommended that Benz should create a less expensive automobile suitable for
mass production. In 1893, Karl Benz created the
Victoria, a two-passenger automobile with a 3-
hp engine, which could reach the top speed of 11
mph and had a
pivotal front
axle operated by a
roller-chained tiller for
steering. The model was successful with 85 units sold in 1893.
In 1894, Benz improved this design in his new
Velo model. This was produced on such a remarkably large scale for the era—1,200 total from 1894 to 1901—it may be considered the first
production automobile. The Benz
Velo also participated in the first automobile race, the 1894
Paris to Rouen Rally.
In
1895, Benz designed the first
truck in history, with some of the units later modified by the first
bus company: the
Netphener, becoming the first buses in history.
In
1896, Karl Benz was granted a
patent for his design of the first
flat engine. It had horizontally-opposed
pistons, a design in which the corresponding pistons reach top dead centre simultaneously, thus balancing each other with respect to
momentum. Flat engines with four or fewer cylinders are most commonly called
boxer engines,
boxermotor in German, and also are known as
horizontally opposed engines. This design continues to be used.
Although
Gottlieb Daimler died in March of 1900—and there's no evidence that Benz and
Daimler knew each other nor that they knew about each other's early achievements—eventually, competition with Daimler Motors (
DMG) in
Stuttgart began to challenge the leadership of Benz & Cie. In October of 1900 the main designer of DMG,
Wilhelm Maybach, built the engine that would be used later, in the
Mercedes-35hp of 1902. The engine was built to the specifications of
Emil Jellinek under a contract for him to purchase thirty-six vehicles with the engine and for him to become a dealer of the special series. Jellinek stipulated the new engine be named Daimler-
Mercedes (for his daughter). Maybach would quit DMG in 1907, but he designed the model and all of the important changes. After testing, the first was delivered to Jellinek on December 22, 1900. Jellinek continued to make suggestions for changes to the model and obtained good results racing the automobile in the next few years, encouraging DMG to engage in commercial production of automobiles, which they did in 1902.
Benz countered with
Parsifil, introduced in
1903 with a vertical twin and a top speed of 37 mph. Then, without consulting Benz, the other directors hired some French designers. France was a country with an extensive automobile industry based on Maybach's creations. Because of this action, after difficult discussions, Karl Benz announced his retirement from design management on
January 24,
1903, although he remained as director on the Board of Management through its merger with DMG in 1926 and, remained on the board of the new Daimler-Benz corporation until his death in 1929.
Benz's sons Eugen and Richard left Benz & Cie. in 1903, but Richard returned to the company in 1904 as the designer of passenger vehicles.
That year, sales of Benz & Cie. reached 3,480 automobiles, and they remained the leading manufacturer of automobiles.
Along with continuing as a director of Benz & Cie., Karl Benz soon would found another company—with his son, Eugen—closely held within the family, manufacturing automobiles under another brand and using a French spelling variant of Benz's first name for the first initial of the privately-held company (
see discussion in the next section).
In 1909, the
Blitzen Benz was built in Mannheim by Benz & Cie. The bird-beaked vehicle had a 21.5-liter (1312ci), 200-horsepower engine, and on 9 November, in the hands of
Victor Hémery of France, the
land speed racer at
Brooklands, set a record of 202.68 km/h (125.94 mph), said to be "faster than any plane, train, or automobile" at the time, a record that wasn't exceeded for ten years. It was transported to several countries, including the United States, to establish multiple records of this achievement.
Benz Söhne (1906 to 1923)
Karl Benz, Bertha Benz, and their son, Eugen, moved 10 km east of Mannheim to live in nearby
Ladenburg, and solely with their own capital, founded the private company, C. Benz Sons (German:
Benz Söhne) in 1906, producing automobiles and gas engines. The latter type was replaced by petrol engines because lack of demand.
This company never issued stocks publicly, building its own line of automobiles independently from Benz & Cie., which was located in Mannheim. The
Benz Sons automobiles were of good quality and became popular in
London as
taxis.
In 1912, Karl Benz liquidated all of his shares in
Benz Sons and left this family-held company in Ladenburg to Eugen and Richard, but he remained as a director of Benz & Cie.
During a birthday celebration for him in his home town of
Karlsruhe on
November 25,
1914, the seventy year-old Karl Benz was awarded an honorary
doctorate by his alma mater, the
Karlsruhe University, thereby becoming—Dr. Ing. h. c. Karl Benz.
Almost from the very beginning of the production of automobiles, participation in
sports car racing became a major method to gain publicity for manufacturers. At first, the production models were raced and the Benz
Velo participated in the first automobile race:
Paris to Rouen 1894. Later, investment in developing
racecars for
motorsports produced returns through sales generated by the association of the name of the automobile with the winners. Unique race vehicles were built at the time, as seen in the photograph here of the Benz, the first
mid-engine and
aerodynamically designed,
Tropfenwagen, a "teardrop" body introduced at the
1923 European Grand Prix at
Monza.
In the last production year of the
Benz Sons company, 1923, three hundred and fifty units were built. During the following year, 1924, Karl Benz built two additional 8/25 hp units of the automobile manufactured by this company, tailored for his personal use, which he never sold; they're still preserved.
Toward Daimler-Benz and the Mercedes Benz of 1926
During the
First World War,
Benz & Cie. and
Daimler Motors (
DMG) both had massively increased their production for the war effort. After the conflict ended, both manufacturers resumed their normal activities, but the German economy was chaotic. The automobile was considered a
luxury item and as such, was charged a 15% extra
tax. At the same time, the country suffered a severe lack of petroleum. To survive this difficult situation, in
1919 Benz & Cie. proposed a cooperation suggested by Karl Benz through a representative,
Karl Jahn, but
DMG rejected the proposal in December.
The German economic crisis worsened. In 1923
Benz & Cie. produced only 1,382 units in Mannheim, and
DMG made only 1,020 in Stuttgart. The average cost of an automobile was 25 million
marks because of rapid inflation. Negotiations between the two companies resumed and in
1924 they signed an
Agreement of Mutual Interest valid until the year 2000. Both enterprises standardized design, production, purchasing, sales, and advertising—marketing their automobile models jointly—although keeping their respective brands.
On
June 28,
1926, Benz & Cie. and DMG finally merged as the
Daimler-Benz company, baptizing all of its automobiles Mercedes Benz honoring the most important model of the DMG automobiles, the 1902 Mercedes-35hp, along with the Benz name. The name of that DMG model had been selected after ten-year-old Mercedes Jellinek, the daughter of Emil Jellinek (by then one of DMG's partners) who had set the specifications for the new model. Benz was a member of the new Board of Management for the remainder of his life. A new
logo was created, consisting of a three pointed star (representing Daimler's
motto:
"engines for land, air, and water") surrounded by traditional
laurels from the Benz logo, and was labeled
Mercedes-Benz.
The next year, 1927, the number of units sold
tripled to 7,918 and the
diesel line was launched for truck production. In 1928 the
Mercedes Benz SS was presented.
On
April 4,
1929, Karl Benz died at home in Ladenburg at the age of eighty-four from a
bronchial inflammation in his
lungs. Until her death on
May 5,
1944,
Bertha Benz continued to reside in their last home. Members of the family resided in the home for thirty more years. The Benz home now has been designated as historic and is used as a scientific meeting facility for a nonprofit foundation, the
Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz Foundation, that honors both Bertha and Karl Benz for their roles in the history of automobiles.
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