Four Queensland couples are about to take on the trip of a lifetime driving their
Model T Fords right across America back to where the cars originally came from –
Detroit, Michigan and Oakville, Canada.
The group, representing Australia for the Ford 100th anniversary celebrations, have
shipped their cars to California where they will start their 5,000 km journey. They will join
with some 40 other Model Ts in Lancaster near Los Angeles on May 25 and travel through
eight US States arriving in Detroit, Michigan on June 12.
“We’ve been told to expect every type of weather from heat waves to below zero
temperatures, driving rain, sleet and even snow!” said team leader Gavin Pocock from
Caboolture who is the President of the Brisbane Vintage Car Club. “We will go across
deserts and the Rocky Mountains as well as the flat farming lands of the Mid-West. Some
days we will be doing runs of more than 320km.”
Gavin and his wife Karen are quite sure the cars will make it but “car heaters weren’t an
option in the Model T so we hope the people make it!” he said. They drive a 1915 Runabout
that was restored by Gavin’s parents Warren and Maurine in 1975.
The other three cars from Australia are the 1924 Roadster owned by George and Chris
Schoenauer from Narangba, a 1925 Roadster belonging to Merv and Margaret Kroll of
Redcliffe (both these couples are also members of the Brisbane Vintage Auto Club) and
the 1926 Doctor’s Coupe of Bob Collett and Trish Hanlon from the Gold Coast. Bob and
Trish belong to the Veteran Car Club and the Gold Coast Car Club.
“We started preparing for the trip 18 months ago,” Gavin said. “It’s a lot to ask of cars that
are well over 75 years old but, after all, they are Model Ts so we are pretty sure they will do
the job. One of the only modifications fitted to each car is a Ruckstell 2-speed rear axle that
was an aftermarket option when the cars were new.”
The world’s largest automotive homecoming rally is expected to attract more than 10,000
Ford vehicles to Detroit for the massive centennial celebrations. The Californian-based tour
will meet up with several other tours coming from all states of America prior to arriving at
Detroit.
Following the four-day celebrations in Detroit, the four Aussie Model Ts will visit the famous
Greenfield Village for a display before they cross the border that afternoon into Canada
where they will return to Oakville near Windsor, Ontario – the town where they were all
originally made before being shipped to Australia.
Then, as if driving more than 4,000 km across the USA wasn’t enough, the intrepid
Australians will drive south to Baltimore – a further 1,000km – where the cars will be
shipped back home.
The Ubiquitous Model T
Henry Ford released his Model T in 1908 and it became an immediate success
because it offered reliable, simple motoring for a fraction of the cost of other cars
at the time. The car increased in popularity, especially after 1913 when the famous
Ford moving assembly line was introduced. This innovation had a dramatic effect
on production numbers and costs and Henry Ford capitalised on the fact that he
could build and sell Model Ts way below his competitors.
The Model T was simplicity itself. It was designed that way so that local farmers and
blacksmiths could repair it with basic tools. It was often said that all you needed was a pair
of pliers, a hammer and a coil of wire to keep a Model T on the road. With its narrow
wheels, high ground clearance and three-point suspension it could literally go anywhere and
was the favourite car for settlers and explorers opening up the outback.
The Model T soon became a familiar sight on Australia’s roads after the 1908 introduction.
They were initially imported by separate distributors in each State and assembled with local
bodies that varied in style from one distributor to another.
In 1925 Ford Motor Company of Australia was formed and production of the Model T began
in a disused wool store in Geelong while the huge new factory was being built on the
outskirts of that city. The first cars were fitted with bodies built by the company that was to
become Ford’s greatest rival, Holdens of Adelaide! When the new Geelong factory opened
the bodies were then built there by Ford.
The Australian model was rather unique in that, unlike the later US Model T (that was
available in any colour as long as it was black because the black paint dried quicker), it
was available in a large variety of colours.
Some very famous people used Ford Model Ts in their exploits across Australia. Henry
Birtles traversed thousands of miles of the outback in one and Hudson Fysh (later Sir
Hudson and founder of Qantas) used a heavily laden Model T to map out the proposed air
route from Longreach to Darwin.
So popular was the Model T that Ford Australia built a total of 29,000 between 1925 and
1928 – an average of around 1,000 cars and trucks a month! Body styles ranged from the
standard open top 4-door family tourer to the Deluxe Tourer favoured by doctors and
businessmen, to the sporty Runabout, 2-seater beloved by the smart set, and the Deluxe
Runabout for the wealthier ‘man about town’ and his pretty debutante partner.
As well as passenger cars there was a Light Delivery – the forerunner of the ute and a
one-ton chassis that became the preferred vehicle for farmers, tradesmen and carriers. In
those days you could buy a Model T chassis and have the body built to your own
specifications. This led to many one-off styles and lots of special buses, station wagon-type
bodies, covered vans, ambulances and petrol delivery tankers.
What made the Model T so special? Probably its greatest feature after the low price, was
its absolute reliability. The rugged, 4-cylinder engine had a magneto ignition system built
into the flywheel, the transmission was a simple planetary gear system driving the rear
wheels through a completely enclosed tail shaft and the suspension consisted of simple
transverse springs. The chassis and many of the engine parts were made from tough
Vanadium steel.
The Model T, of which 15,000,000 were made between 1908 and 1927, was available in
almost every country in the world. It was usually the first new car most people ever owned
and it provided people all over the world with a freedom of movement previously unheard of
and, until then, totally unaffordable.
Henry’s Model T literally put the world on wheels and set Ford Motor Company on the road
to become one of the world’s greatest motor manufacturers.
Model T Fords right across America back to where the cars originally came from –
Detroit, Michigan and Oakville, Canada.
The group, representing Australia for the Ford 100th anniversary celebrations, have
shipped their cars to California where they will start their 5,000 km journey. They will join
with some 40 other Model Ts in Lancaster near Los Angeles on May 25 and travel through
eight US States arriving in Detroit, Michigan on June 12.
“We’ve been told to expect every type of weather from heat waves to below zero
temperatures, driving rain, sleet and even snow!” said team leader Gavin Pocock from
Caboolture who is the President of the Brisbane Vintage Car Club. “We will go across
deserts and the Rocky Mountains as well as the flat farming lands of the Mid-West. Some
days we will be doing runs of more than 320km.”
Gavin and his wife Karen are quite sure the cars will make it but “car heaters weren’t an
option in the Model T so we hope the people make it!” he said. They drive a 1915 Runabout
that was restored by Gavin’s parents Warren and Maurine in 1975.
The other three cars from Australia are the 1924 Roadster owned by George and Chris
Schoenauer from Narangba, a 1925 Roadster belonging to Merv and Margaret Kroll of
Redcliffe (both these couples are also members of the Brisbane Vintage Auto Club) and
the 1926 Doctor’s Coupe of Bob Collett and Trish Hanlon from the Gold Coast. Bob and
Trish belong to the Veteran Car Club and the Gold Coast Car Club.
“We started preparing for the trip 18 months ago,” Gavin said. “It’s a lot to ask of cars that
are well over 75 years old but, after all, they are Model Ts so we are pretty sure they will do
the job. One of the only modifications fitted to each car is a Ruckstell 2-speed rear axle that
was an aftermarket option when the cars were new.”
The world’s largest automotive homecoming rally is expected to attract more than 10,000
Ford vehicles to Detroit for the massive centennial celebrations. The Californian-based tour
will meet up with several other tours coming from all states of America prior to arriving at
Detroit.
Following the four-day celebrations in Detroit, the four Aussie Model Ts will visit the famous
Greenfield Village for a display before they cross the border that afternoon into Canada
where they will return to Oakville near Windsor, Ontario – the town where they were all
originally made before being shipped to Australia.
Then, as if driving more than 4,000 km across the USA wasn’t enough, the intrepid
Australians will drive south to Baltimore – a further 1,000km – where the cars will be
shipped back home.
The Ubiquitous Model T
Henry Ford released his Model T in 1908 and it became an immediate success
because it offered reliable, simple motoring for a fraction of the cost of other cars
at the time. The car increased in popularity, especially after 1913 when the famous
Ford moving assembly line was introduced. This innovation had a dramatic effect
on production numbers and costs and Henry Ford capitalised on the fact that he
could build and sell Model Ts way below his competitors.
The Model T was simplicity itself. It was designed that way so that local farmers and
blacksmiths could repair it with basic tools. It was often said that all you needed was a pair
of pliers, a hammer and a coil of wire to keep a Model T on the road. With its narrow
wheels, high ground clearance and three-point suspension it could literally go anywhere and
was the favourite car for settlers and explorers opening up the outback.
The Model T soon became a familiar sight on Australia’s roads after the 1908 introduction.
They were initially imported by separate distributors in each State and assembled with local
bodies that varied in style from one distributor to another.
In 1925 Ford Motor Company of Australia was formed and production of the Model T began
in a disused wool store in Geelong while the huge new factory was being built on the
outskirts of that city. The first cars were fitted with bodies built by the company that was to
become Ford’s greatest rival, Holdens of Adelaide! When the new Geelong factory opened
the bodies were then built there by Ford.
The Australian model was rather unique in that, unlike the later US Model T (that was
available in any colour as long as it was black because the black paint dried quicker), it
was available in a large variety of colours.
Some very famous people used Ford Model Ts in their exploits across Australia. Henry
Birtles traversed thousands of miles of the outback in one and Hudson Fysh (later Sir
Hudson and founder of Qantas) used a heavily laden Model T to map out the proposed air
route from Longreach to Darwin.
So popular was the Model T that Ford Australia built a total of 29,000 between 1925 and
1928 – an average of around 1,000 cars and trucks a month! Body styles ranged from the
standard open top 4-door family tourer to the Deluxe Tourer favoured by doctors and
businessmen, to the sporty Runabout, 2-seater beloved by the smart set, and the Deluxe
Runabout for the wealthier ‘man about town’ and his pretty debutante partner.
As well as passenger cars there was a Light Delivery – the forerunner of the ute and a
one-ton chassis that became the preferred vehicle for farmers, tradesmen and carriers. In
those days you could buy a Model T chassis and have the body built to your own
specifications. This led to many one-off styles and lots of special buses, station wagon-type
bodies, covered vans, ambulances and petrol delivery tankers.
What made the Model T so special? Probably its greatest feature after the low price, was
its absolute reliability. The rugged, 4-cylinder engine had a magneto ignition system built
into the flywheel, the transmission was a simple planetary gear system driving the rear
wheels through a completely enclosed tail shaft and the suspension consisted of simple
transverse springs. The chassis and many of the engine parts were made from tough
Vanadium steel.
The Model T, of which 15,000,000 were made between 1908 and 1927, was available in
almost every country in the world. It was usually the first new car most people ever owned
and it provided people all over the world with a freedom of movement previously unheard of
and, until then, totally unaffordable.
Henry’s Model T literally put the world on wheels and set Ford Motor Company on the road
to become one of the world’s greatest motor manufacturers.