ITotD: Doble Steam Cars / The steam engine's last stand | |
| Doble Steam Cars / The steam engine's last stand Posted: 27 Oct 2014 12:00 AM PDT Back in the mid-1980s when I was in college, I had a car whose gas mileage routinely reached 40 miles per gallon. At that time, most people assumed that as technology advanced, cars’ average mileage would steadily improve. But of course, that didn’t happen, and today, except for hybrids and a few other small cars, the sort of fuel efficiency I got 20 years ago is the exception rather than the rule. I’m well aware of all the technological, political, and financial issues that have combined to create this reality, but every time I think about it I just shake my head. History could have unfolded differently, and high-mileage, low-emissions vehicles might have been the norm today. More than 80 years ago, you could buy a car that was highly fuel-efficient (even by today’s standards), produced almost no pollution (again, even by modern standards), required very little maintenance, and was virtually silent. It used kerosene as fuel to power a steam engine, and even though the car weighed more than today’s average SUV, it accelerated rapidly and handled smoothly. The car would have been one of several Doble steam car models designed and manufactured by Abner Doble and his three brothers. Fill It Up…with Water Not everyone was convinced, though. Abner Doble was a San Francisco native who had moved to Massachusetts in 1910 to attend M.I.T. He dropped out after just one semester and, along with his brothers, began working on improving the design of steam engines for cars. Doble’s first major innovation was extending the steam car’s range. All existing steam-powered cars lost a lot of water and had to be refilled frequently. Doble made innovative changes to the condenser system that recirculated water; in so doing he increased the car’s range to as much as 1500 miles (2400km) with a full 24-gallon (91 l) water tank. Full Steam Ahead In 1921, after the death of John Doble, Abner and his two remaining brothers moved back to California to give the car business another go, this time as Doble Steam Motors. They solved most of the outstanding engineering problems and added several more innovations, increasing the car’s acceleration and improving its reliability. Unlike other steam cars—and most internal-combustion-engine cars—their new Series E car could start almost instantly even in freezing weather, and could go from 0 to 75 miles per hour (120kph) in 10 seconds. Because steam engines produce a great deal of torque at almost any speed, the car required no transmission, clutch, or gear shifting. And because the kerosene fuel was burned at very high temperatures but low pressure, almost all the waste carbon was consumed, while other common pollutants were never generated in the first place. Driven to Perfection The first Doble Series E was sold in 1924, and Doble Steam Motors continued to manufacture steam-powered cars—very slowly—for the next seven years. The total number produced before the company went out of business in 1931 has been reported variously as 24, 42, or 43. A few of those cars are still on the road, having racked up hundreds of thousands of miles. But despite the cars’ reliability, Doble simply couldn’t compete against the cheaper mass-produced internal-combustion-engine cars. Although today most people think of the steam engine (an external combustion engine) as a quaint artifact of history, it’s nothing of the sort. In fact, BMW is reportedly working on something they call a turbosteamer, which supplements a regular gasoline engine with modern steam technology to improve gas mileage. I’d like to think that one day we’ll see new, fully steam-powered cars that live up to Doble’s 80-year-old standards. —Joe Kissell Permalink • Email this Article • Categories: Clever Ideas, History, Technology & Computing More Information about Doble Steam Cars...Thanks to reader Steve Andrews for suggesting today’s topic! This article was featured in the Carnival of Cars for September 8, 2006 and History Carnival XXXIX. In 1916 (after the first nine years of his work with steam-powered cars), Abner Doble presented a paper titled Steam Motor-Vehicles, which covered all the major technological innovations he’d developed to that point. This page has some additional technical information on the Doble boiler itself. The Online Archive of California has a page full of various documents (drawings, photographs, brochures, and so on) relating to Doble cars (see also this page). There are several good pictures of Doble Steamers at StanleySteamer.com. For more information about Abner Doble and his cars, see:
BMW is working on turbosteamer technology that will use steam to improve the gas mileage of existing cars. Related Articles from Interesting Thing of the Day
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