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The Badger Motor car company of Columbus, Wisconsin, United States, [1] was an automobile company founded in 1910. The company produced 237 cars in two years before it went bankrupt in 1911. [ 2 ]
Rajo Motor started out building spark plugs and other various engine parts. The first design was the Model 30 which had 4 exhaust ports and one intake port all on the right side of the head. The Model 31 had two intakes on the right and four exhaust on the left.
The Stutz Bearcat car was available with either Wisconsin's four-cylinder Type A or their six-cylinder engine. Both engines were rated at 60 horsepower. Stutz began to build their own engines in 1917. Pierce-Arrow was among other customers for Wisconsin engines. Wisconsin engines also powered the trucks made by The FWD Corporation. [1]
The annual awards — hosted in a different country each year — named the Tillamook County Creamery Association the maker of the “Best Cheddar in the World” for the 115-year-old farmer-owned ...
Motor vehicle assembly plants in Wisconsin (2 P) Pages in category "Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Wisconsin" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total.
Costco is made for shoppers who enjoy or need to buy in bulk, but one of their biggest pieces of inventory is turning heads. The wholesale store is selling a 72-pound wheel of cheese.
As early as 1883, Mitchell, Lewis & Company were manufacturing two-wheel and four-wheel wagons in Racine, Wisconsin. Wisconsin Wheel Works was established in the 1890s by the wagon maker Mitchell & Lewis Company, Ltd., to manufacture bicycles and the company developed a motorcycle in 1900. The firm began manufacturing automobiles in 1903 as the ...
Charles T. Jeffery's (Thomas' son) experimental prototypes of 1901 (Models A and B) used at least two radical innovations – steering wheels and front-mounted engines. By the time Charles was ready for production in 1902, his father had talked him out of these wild dreams and convinced him to stick with tillers and engines under the seat.