enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. American Bantam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Bantam

    [12] [13] American Bantam's 1938 model was the inspiration for Donald Duck's car which was first seen in Don Donald (1937). Despite a wide range of Bantam body styles, ranging from light trucks to woodie station wagons, only about 6,000 Bantams of all types were produced. American Bantam continued to build cars until August 18, 1943. [14]

  3. Bantam BRC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bantam_BRC

    Bantam BRC is an American off-road vehicle designed during World War II, constructed in 1940, and the precursor to the Jeep. Produced in a relatively small number of 2,642 units, in several versions, it was used by the United States , the United Kingdom , and the Soviet Union .

  4. Karl Probst - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Probst

    He was born in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, to Charles and Eva (Knight) Probst.He studied engineering at Ohio State University and graduated in 1906.. Probst was recruited by American Bantam Car Company in 1940 to help it win a contract to provide the U.S. Army with a lightweight reconnaissance vehicle that could transport troops and equipment across rugged terrain.

  5. Willys MB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willys_MB

    Probst initially turned Bantam down, but agreed to work without pay after an Army request and began work on 17 July 1940. [76] Probst laid out full design drawings for the American Bantam prototype, known as the Bantam Reconnaissance Car, or BRC Pilot, in just two days, and worked up a cost estimate the next day.

  6. Jeep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeep

    American Bantam had only a small staff with nobody to draft the vehicle plans, so chief engineer Harold Crist [19] hired Karl Probst, a talented freelance designer from Detroit. After turning down Bantam's initial request, Probst responded to an Army request and began work on July 17, 1940, initially without salary.

  7. Ford Pygmy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Pygmy

    American Bantam was the first to deliver a pilot vehicle to the Army on 23 September 1940. Willys-Overland followed with its Quad on 13 November. On 23 November, [1] Ford delivered two pilot vehicles to Camp Holabird, Maryland for testing: the Pygmy and a second vehicle with a body built by the Budd Company. The Budd-bodied vehicle more closely ...

  8. American Austin Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Austin_Car_Company

    1931 American Austin roadster. The American Austin Car Company Inc. was an American automobile manufacturing corporation incorporated in the state of Delaware. The company was founded on February 23, 1929, [1] and produced motorcars licensed from the British Austin Motor Company from 1930 through 1934, after it had filed for bankruptcy protection.

  9. Bantam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bantam

    Warwick W-3 Bantam, an American homebuilt aircraft design; Bantam (car), a 1913 British cyclecar; American Bantam, name adopted by the former American Austin Car Company in 1935 until 1956; Ford Bantam, a South African pickup truck from 1983; BSA Bantam, a British motorcycle 1948–1971; HNLMS Bantam, a Dutch ship; MS Bantam, a Dutch ship