Thursday, September 13, 2018

Artists of the day, September 13: 2 generations of automotive engineer. Ferdinand Porsche & Ferdinand Anton Ernst Porsche.

German automotive engineer Ferdinand Porsche (1875-1951) was an automotive engineer and founder of the Porsche car company. At a young age, he had an affinity for technology, and was especially intrigued by electricity. Porsche worked as a successful vehicle engineer from the late 1800s to 1931, when he founded his own firm. In 1934, Porsche and his son, Ferdinand Anton Ernst Porsche (1909-1998), collaborated to develop the first designs of the Volkswagen car.

Porsche left Daimler in 1931 to form his own firm, which he named "Dr. Ing. h. c. F. Porsche GmbH, Konstruktionen und Beratung für Motoren und Fahrzeuge," according to Commercial Register documents from April 1931. In 1934, Porsche became deeply involved in Adolf Hitler's "people's car" project. That year, while working on the project with son Ferdinand Anton Ernst Porsche —also known as Ferry—he developed the first designs for the Volkswagen car. From that point on, father and son worked together.

During World War II, Porsche and his son were tapped by Hitler to produce a heavy tank for the Tiger Program. Porsche submitted a prototype with an advanced drive system that was superior on paper but not on the battlefield. Prone to breakdowns and crucial design flaws, a competing company (Henschel & Sohn) got the contract to produce the Panzer tanks. Ninety to one hundred Porsche Tiger chassis were produced and later some converted into tank destroyers (Panzerjäger) called Ferdinand. Mounted with a Krupps turret and 88 mm anti-tank gun, the long-range weapon could take out enemy tanks before they reached their own range of effective fire.

When the war ended in 1945, Porsche was arrested by French soldiers (for his Nazi affiliation) and forced to serve a 22-month prison sentence. While he was incarcerated, Ferdinand Anton oversaw the creation of a new racing car, the Cisitalia, a Porsche-company product. To his son, upon his return, Porsche reportedly said, "I would have built it exactly the same, right down to the last screw." The father-son team went on to make history in 1950, when they introduced the Porsche sports car.

Porsche visited Henry Ford's operation in Detroit many times where he learned the importance of productivity. There he learned to monitor work. He was also surprised at how the workers and the managers treated each other as equals; even he, as a visiting dignitary, had to carry his own tray in the cafeteria and eat with the workers.






Mr Ferdinand Porsche

Ferdinand Porsche was born. It bore the number 201

1900 Lohner-Porsche was the first front-wheel drive car

1900. First 4-wheel drive car in the world. Ferdinand Porsche sitting next to the driver of a Lohner-Porsche Electromobile

1901 Porsche Semper Vivus

1903 Lohner-Porsche Mixte hybrid driven by F. Porsche

1910 Prince Heinrich Race won by F. Porsche

1910 Prince Heinrich Race, F.Porsche

1926 German GP at Avus, Rudolf Caracciola wins with Porsche

1926, The SS continued a design that had been started in 1926 with the Mercedes 'K' series cars. Power was supplied by a Ferdinand Porsche designed 6.3-liter

1931 Zündapp Type 12

 Type 12 for German motorcycle company Zundap in 1931

1933 Porsche type 32 NSU

1934 Brno GP at Masaryk-Ring, F. Porsche with Hans Stuck and Auto-Union

1934 P52 or “Type 52”

1934 Type 32

1935 V2 Prototype car

1936 Auto Union P52 Supercar plans

1936. Ferdinand Porsche with Porsche Type 22

1937, Ferdinand Porsche with his son Ferdinand Anton Ernst "Ferry" Porsche

1937, Ferdinand Porsche, Volkswagen prototype of the series W30

1938, designer Ferdinand Porsche had arrived at the shape that would define the Beetle

1938, The purpose-built headquarters for Porsche company

1938-41-The first type 64 in front of the Porsche villa in Stuttgart

1939 Berlin Rom Wagen Type 64

1939 T80 had a tuned Daimler-Benz aircraft engine

1939 The DB-603 aircraft engine was removed during the war while the vehicle was moved to safe storage in Kärnten, Austria

1939, Ferdinand Porsche Design - Berlin Rom Wagen

1940-1945 a total 50.435 Porsche designed VW Kübelwagens were made

1941-1944 a total of 15,584 Type 166 Porsche designed VW Schwimmwagens
were produced

1944 Porsche type 205 Panzerkampfwagen VIII "Maus"

1947 Porsche 356

1947, After the war, the "PORSCHE"-sign was put up in Gmünd

1948 Porsche 356

1948 Porsche Type 64, a-prototype built by Dr Ferdinand Porsche in 1938-39

1950, Porsche 356 Coupé “Ferdinand”

1950. Ferdinand Porsche standing next to the 356 "Gmünd Coupé"

1953 Porsche 550 Spyder

1953 Type 540 America Roadster

1954 Hans Herrmann swings this 1954 Type 550-1500 RS Spyder

1954 Porsche’s Type 550 RS at the start of the 1954 Carrera Panamericana

1955 August Veuillet and Zora Arkus-Duntov won first in class at Le Mans in 1955, driving 2,053 miles in twenty four hours.

1955 Porsche 550 Spyder

1957 Porsche 356

1958 Porsche 597

1963 Porsche 356 B 2000 GS Carrera 2 Coupe

Porsche in 1963 with a type 901, which became the 911 after a complaint about

Janis Joplin's 1964 Porsche 356 C 1600 SC

Janis Joplin's 1964 Porsche 356 C 1600 SC

1966 Porsche 911

Mr. Porsche in 1968 with a model of the 911 S Targa

1973 Porsche 917 30 Can-Am Spyder

1990 Porsche 962C Coupe

1994 Porsche 964 Turbo 3.6 S Flachbau

1998 Porsche 993 3.8 Cup RSR

2011 Porsche Cayenne

2015 Porsche 911 Targa

2017 Porsche 718 Boxster

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