"something of an extraordinary nature will turn up..."

Mr. Micawber in Dickens' David Copperfield

Kit Foster's

CarPort

AUTOMOTIVE SERENDIPITY ON THE WEB

CarPort
January 19th, 2005

For all its popularity as an automobile powerplant, the internal combustion engine has one basic flaw: it develops its maximum power and torque in a relatively narrow band of engine speeds – and no power at all when it’s not rotating. Making the engine useful in a car requires multiple ratios of gears, belts or disks, each of which has drawbacks. Thus the automobile did not become a true consumer good until the advent of the modern automatic transmission.

Justus B. Entz had a solution to this problem as long ago as 1897. In that year he invented an electromagnetic transmission, in some ways similar to the drive mechanism used on today’s diesel-electric locomotives. An internal combustion engine drives a generator, and the electricity generated powers an electric motor to drive the wheels. Entz’s transmission was put into production in the Owen Magnetic, “The Car of a Thousand Speeds,” introduced at the New York Auto Show in January 1915. Built by the Baker, Rauch & Lang Co. from 1915-21, it was produced in factories at New York, Cleveland, Ohio, and Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania.

Owen Magnetic

The late Edwin Jameson, Sr., apparently thought this was a good idea, for in 1918 he purchased a new Owen Magnetic touring car. In fact, he thought it was such a good idea that he bought two: the tourer, seen here with Dale Wells (left) and Leroy Cole, both past presidents of the Society of Automotive Historians, and also a roadster. Dale and Leroy were entranced with the Floyd Clymer-style through-the-windshield spotlight with which this car is fitted. Driving an Owen was truly a one-foot adventure.

Both cars, which had remained in the Jameson family, were sold at a Bonhams and Butterfields auction at the Larz Anderson Auto Museum in Brookline, Massachusetts, in May 2003. The tourer, knocked down at $36,000 (plus buyer’s premium), is now being restored by a British owner. The roadster, which sold for $24,000 plus-premium, went to an undisclosed location. Interestingly, the Entz transmission itself ended up in England after the demise of the Owen Magnetic. Ensign Motors, Ltd. of London adopted it for a model of their British Ensign car, sold as the Crown Magnetic (later Crown Ensign) from 1921-23 (photo thanks to Mike Worthington-Williams).

Serendipity: n. An aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident.
“They were always making discoveries, by accident and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of.”
Horace Walpole, The Three Princes of Serendip
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