[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

JOY COMETH IN THE MORNING! TRUMP WINS, SENATE IS RED, and HOUSE IS LOOKING GOOD! [Livestream starts at 0800 EST]

‘No show’: Kamala Harris ‘not gracious enough’ to speak to her supporters

Rare Bees Nuke Mark Zuckerberg's Plan For Atomic-Powered AI Data Center

Republicans win the Senate. Trump on track to 300 plus elctoral votes.

The Electrical College

Live Election Map with ticker shows every winner.

He’s BREAKING DOWN Already…. [AKA Dak and Pac's Music thread]

Pepe Escobar: Putin & Iran Drop BOMBSHELL on USA-Israel, Netanyahu & Biden Furious Over BRICS

WikiLeaks: 5 Questions For Donald Trump If He Wins

Protests Explode In Tel Aviv After Netanyahu Fires Defense Minister Gallant

Lefties losing it: Rita Panahi mocks ‘beta loser’ John Oliver’s Trump rant

FISCAL ABSURDITY: U.S. adds $104B in debt daily, totaling $655B since September 26

"How Do You Know About Regular People's Suffering?" Jake Sullivan's Wife Gets Destroyed During Debate

Illegal Alien Gangs Taking Root In Our Schools

(Horse is practicing plagiarism here and it is a crime)Is Plagiarism a Crime? Exploring Its Legal Repercussions

ICE Officers Told Not to Wear Uniforms When Voting So They Don't Intimidate Illegals

RFk Jr: Cut Childhood obesity from 50% to 3%. Vote Trump

Nicole Shanahan makes the best MAGA videos.

'Huge shortage' plagues Israeli army as losses mount in Lebanon, Gaza

Carmine is dangerous food additive. And it is red.

Oprah Winfrey Fearmongers at Kamala Harris Rally, Tells Women They May Never Get the Chance to Vote Again

Dr. says the worlds entire blood supply is contaminated with spike protein

Alastair Crooke : Netanyahu’s Imaginary Victories.

Gutfeld: Did this little squirrel just red pill America?

Threat of Civil War Coming to America is Real - Why Tomorrow's Election Might Not Stop It.

New (Jewish) Order in the Middle East is IMPOSSIBLE

10 Ways You Can Boost Mitochondria

Mitochondrial Imbalance Linked To 90 Percent Of Chronic Diseases

Ukraine to jail people for storing firewood media

Total losses of Ukrainian forces in Russias Kursk Region reach over 29,600 servicemen


National News
See other National News Articles

Title: Through the Grand Canyon in a Metz 22 Speedster, 1914
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://webs4library.blogspot.com/2 ... h-grand-canyon-in-metz-22.html
Published: Aug 26, 2022
Author: Mike Rivero
Post Date: 2022-08-26 20:43:45 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 105
Comments: 1

Early automobile manufacturers used a variety of tests to prove a car's strength, endurance, capability and worthiness. These tests were often adopted as selling points and in advertising brochures to highlight the performance and prowess of the car.

In 1914, the Metz factory branch in Los Angeles, Mr. L. Wing and K. Parker (a young reporter from Los Angeles) chose to show off the car's capabilities by driving his 22-horsepower Metz Speedster car down the Grand Canyon. , first departed from Los Angeles and crossed the desert south of Death Valley.

They had few roads to follow, no reliable maps, and three mountain ranges to cross. After hundreds of grueling miles, they first went to the El Tovar Hotel and searched possible routes to the bottom, but to no avail.

They found a gorge at Peach Springs, crossing the Hulapi Indian Reservation and passing through arroyos, boulders, washouts, and narrow passes. Finally, they traveled 42 miles to the river and came back the next day.

Parker wrote a report about the trip and noted the photo spot (first photo above): "At this point there was a shear wall, creating a neat drop of over two thousand feet, and projected to move Gone so that we could drive the car to the extreme point, and make a photographic record of Metz on the canyon rim at El Tovar Point.

It took a lot of patience to get the car down that terrifying plunge, but Mr. Wing, who handled the wheel, had complete confidence in the car and its controls, and didn't brake until the front wheels were right. . Right on the edge of the cliff.

he 1914 Model 22 was a two-seat roadster, or torpedo, claimed to be the "winner of the Glidden Tour". It had a 22 hp (17 kW) four-cylinder water-cooled engine with Bosch Magneto, and full-elliptical springs at the front and rear.

It ran on artillery wheels with Goodrich clincher tires and featured a Prest-o-Lite-type acetylene generator for the headlights. It was billed as "gearless", with a friction drive mechanism.

By 1922, the company was in dire financial straits and was acquired by Waltham National Bank. He reorganized the company and renamed it Waltham Motor Manufacturers Incorporated.

This successor company produced an automobile called the Waltham Six, which did not sell well. This last desperate attempt to save the Metz company failed. Charles Metz filed for bankruptcy in August 1922.

To the Colorado River in a Metz 22 Speedster through the Grand Canyon, 1914 Getting to the bottom of the Grand Canyon by automobile was probably the most difficult undertaking ever in the history of American motoring.

To make that journey and return to a plateau thousands of feet above, on the car's own power, negotiating deep sand arroyos, frighteningly steep grades, great boulder-filled canyons and thin mud flats is an extraordinary feat.

Yet it is accomplished by Mr. L. Wing of the Metz Agency in Los Angeles, accompanied by the author in a 22-horsepower Metz car of the Roadster type.

There are no roads at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, only a roundabout gorge leading from Peach Springs, a small station on the Santa Fe Railroad.

From Peach Springs the gorge cuts deeper and deeper through the plateau, until its walls join the main gorge, through which the Colorado River forces its turbulent path, about a mile above surface level. miles down.

The entire route from Los Angeles to Peach Springs, where the descent into the Grand Canyon actually begins, is through the sand desert south of Death Valley and across the Colorado River onto the Needles.

This part of the journey alone is a serious test for both automobile and man, as it involves long stretches of hot desert waste where water, food and camping equipment are essential for the safety of the traveller.

In addition to the annoying sands of the Colorado Basin, three mountain ranges have to be crossed at an altitude of three thousand to five thousand feet.

Through this variation of elevation, the eerie "blow" of the desert alternates with nearly sea-level sediments of sand, several miles of jagged black lava skirts the road to the Great Uplift; And when obstacles can't be avoided, they have to be negotiated very carefully

This combination of mountains, deserts, sand and lava makes the road difficult to travel, and demonstrates the true power and dependability of a car.

Once such a test is successfully passed, the motorist feels that his machine has the stamina to tackle the dangerous gorge leading to the bottom of the Grand Canyon.

Before descending, we wanted to take the car to the rim of the canyon, so we took the traditional route through the pine forest to the Bright Angel Trail and the El Tovar Hotel, 587 miles from Los Angeles and sixty-five miles from here. Williams, AZ.

In El Tovar where we mentioned that some vehicles going into the valley always stopped at the end of the road, near the hotel.

At this point there was a sheer wall, creating a neat drop of over two thousand feet, and the ledge was projected so that we could drive the car up to the extreme point, and a photographic record of Metz on the canyon rim at L. Can you Tower Point.

It took a lot of patience to get the car down that horrific plunge, but Mr. Wing, who handled the wheel, had complete confidence in the car and its controls and didn't brake until the front wheels were right. on the very edge of the ditch.

I confess that it made me tremble with apprehension, as I looked at him, so calm and confident, where a small slip would mean a drop of two thousand feet in the valley below; And when he finally said, "He will, let's Chuck block him," I was just too happy to slip a good sized rock in front of the rear wheel, so we could leave the car and position for a picture. could shape it.


Poster Comment:

No mention of how long that trip took. A fellow could die driving that route in those days!! I have lived in Williams Az. Elevation is 7,000 feet. (4 images)

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Horse (#0)

Great photos.

Pinguinite  posted on  2022-08-27   1:45:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]