Very informative and no non sense topic in between. Loved every silent b/w video of this time whether it was on the topic of taxonomy, plant and animal life or automobile.
This is just amazing. I have learned in 16 min more than in 44 years of my life about the differential. Thank you very much for these brilliant videos!
this movie was hard to produce at that time for sure, yet super simple to understand today - my kids understood it all without me explaining it. I just gave them control questions and they explained me everything .... amazing.
or even just regular automobile users who just want to own and maintain their car because they don't have the money to just buy a new car every few years, and that repair from a shop looks surprisingly similar to a downpayment just to repair one little system in a whole road motor vehicle layout
i think it's the oldest video of this kind i've ever seen i'm pretty sure this video is over 100 years old (no sound, wooden wheels, leaf springs, a basic chassis and a Ford T looking body...yes this vidéo is about 110 years old). It's so explanative that some explanations become logic (yes, come on, put a housing around the differential, it will protect the mechanism and contain lubrication) i love this kind of videos (why don't we have new videos of this kind, modern videos of this kind)
My husband is a mechanic and has many times explained certain elements of the automobile to me, but he cannot explain the basics of such to me this clearly and simply because a lot of this stuff he understands on an intuitive level.
Talkies appeared between 1927 and 1930, depending on the source. If the tires are actually white that can make this around the beginning of the century. Movies have been around since late 1880s.
Question to US Auto Industry: Do you have the old videos about the mechanics of flight or aviation stuff? This is a great channel because I have learned more here about the mechanisms of auto motive then any where else.
How was this recorded ? Step motion of photos of real parts ? How was light setup so only on the parts are visible ? Do you have some material behind the scenes ?
I'm just wondering where all those movies has been shown back in time when TV wasn't there yet? Was there some kind of special "educational sessions" in movie theaters? And where all this long car commercials from this channel had been shown to general public in the no-TV-era? Some of them are 10-minutes long. Was there 10-min advertising before movie?
its probably public domain... i think there's a limit on copyright and 80 years is probably past that limit, I'll look it up real quick it'll probably only take a second... I was correct, limits on copyright are 70 years. Why do you think so many people were able to rip off motzart?