1927 Oakland - Slansky okruh 2023
Edward M. Murphy of the Pontiac Buggy Company began producing Oakland cars in 1908. He was joined by Alanson P. Brush, who had been responsible for the design of the early Cadillacs, eventually leaving to work as an engineering consultant in Detroit. Brush had shown Murphy his design for a vertical two-cylinder engine that rotated counterclockwise that Cadillac had rejected. Murphy acquired the idea and organized the Oakland Motor Car Company in the summer of 1907. The first Oakland motor cars were ready for display by January 1908. By this point, Brush had left Pontiac, Michigan, and met Frank Briscoe, who financed the single-cylinder Brush Runabout of Detroit, Michigan.
The Oakland motor car sold poorly, with 278 examples built in 1908. For the following year, the company went in a different direction, offering a line of four-cylinder models that developed 40 horsepower and were backed by sliding gear transmission. Unfortunately, Mr. Murphy passed away suddenly in September of that year at the age of 44. Just five months earlier, he had met with William C. Durant, and Oakland had become part of Durant's General Motors conglomerate. Murphy had sold half of the company to Mr. Durant, and after he passed away, GM acquired the remaining rights to Oakland.
Within the General Motors hierarchy, the Oakland marque was positioned as the entry-level brand, below Oldsmobile, Buick, and Cadillac. Chevrolet was acquired in 1917.
After GM assumed operations of Oakland, production was relocated to the factory that manufactured Cartercar in Pontiac, Michigan, where the Oakland Model 40 was produced. By 1910, the Oakland vehicles were powered by four-cylinder flathead engines with five available wheelbase sizes. The Oakland Six joined the lineup in 1913 and was followed by the Model 50 in 1916, equipped with a 365 cubic-inch flathead V8 engine sourced from Northway Motor and Manufacturing company. Production of the Model 50 lasted from 1915 through 1917 and was offered solely as a seven-passenger Touring sedan rested on a 127-inch wheelbase and priced at $1,600.
During the early 1920s, quality control had become problematic, so when Fred Hannum became the new General Manager in 1921, he established a consistent production schedule that resolved many of the quality issues. Both Chevrolet and Oakland shared the GM A platform. By this point, Oakland was exclusively powered by six-cylinder power, with a wheelbase size of 115 inches from 1921 through 1923. A 113-inch wheelbase was used from 1924 through 1927 before growing to 117 inches in 1928. A variety of body styles were offered, including a tourer, roadster, coupe, landaulet, coupe, and sedan during this time.
The lower-priced Pontiac 'companion car' joined General Motors in 1926, and it was an immediate success, quickly overshadowing the more costly Oakland. Both had six-cylinder power with a wide range of body styles, but the lower-priced Pontiacs were more appealing, e
Edward M. Murphy of the Pontiac Buggy Company began producing Oakland cars in 1908. He was joined by Alanson P. Brush, who had been responsible for the design of the early Cadillacs, eventually leaving to work as an engineering consultant in Detroit. Brush had shown Murphy his design for a vertical two-cylinder engine that rotated counterclockwise that Cadillac had rejected. Murphy acquired the idea and organized the Oakland Motor Car Company in the summer of 1907. The first Oakland motor cars were ready for display by January 1908. By this point, Brush had left Pontiac, Michigan, and met Frank Briscoe, who financed the single-cylinder Brush Runabout of Detroit, Michigan.
The Oakland motor car sold poorly, with 278 examples built in 1908. For the following year, the company went in a different direction, offering a line of four-cylinder models that developed 40 horsepower and were backed by sliding gear transmission. Unfortunately, Mr. Murphy passed away suddenly in September of that year at the age of 44. Just five months earlier, he had met with William C. Durant, and Oakland had become part of Durant's General Motors conglomerate. Murphy had sold half of the company to Mr. Durant, and after he passed away, GM acquired the remaining rights to Oakland.
Within the General Motors hierarchy, the Oakland marque was positioned as the entry-level brand, below Oldsmobile, Buick, and Cadillac. Chevrolet was acquired in 1917.
After GM assumed operations of Oakland, production was relocated to the factory that manufactured Cartercar in Pontiac, Michigan, where the Oakland Model 40 was produced. By 1910, the Oakland vehicles were powered by four-cylinder flathead engines with five available wheelbase sizes. The Oakland Six joined the lineup in 1913 and was followed by the Model 50 in 1916, equipped with a 365 cubic-inch flathead V8 engine sourced from Northway Motor and Manufacturing company. Production of the Model 50 lasted from 1915 through 1917 and was offered solely as a seven-passenger Touring sedan rested on a 127-inch wheelbase and priced at $1,600.
During the early 1920s, quality control had become problematic, so when Fred Hannum became the new General Manager in 1921, he established a consistent production schedule that resolved many of the quality issues. Both Chevrolet and Oakland shared the GM A platform. By this point, Oakland was exclusively powered by six-cylinder power, with a wheelbase size of 115 inches from 1921 through 1923. A 113-inch wheelbase was used from 1924 through 1927 before growing to 117 inches in 1928. A variety of body styles were offered, including a tourer, roadster, coupe, landaulet, coupe, and sedan during this time.
The lower-priced Pontiac 'companion car' joined General Motors in 1926, and it was an immediate success, quickly overshadowing the more costly Oakland. Both had six-cylinder power with a wide range of body styles, but the lower-priced Pontiacs were more appealing, e
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