The Franklin Motor Car
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- Опубліковано 27 лип 2024
- Dirk visited the Franklin Trek in Upstate New York to check out these unique automobiles that . Franklin was way ahead of their time, and held the patents on many items that would become standard on other cars.
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Classic Drive Television follows car collector/enthusiast Dirk Burrowes and his co-hosts as they explore the world of automotive restoration, collection, and history. Vintage classics, muscle cars, exotics, race cars...if it has wheels we bring it to you! We feature some of the most amazing automobiles from all around the globe, with owner interviews, museum tours, automotive event coverage, shop visits, and exclusive access to private collections. Plus learn helpful shop tips and discover useful automotive tools and products. Take the journey with us!
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My dad used to own 2 Franklins. Unfortunately he had to sell them years ago.
I took him to a Franklin Museum recently and he was like a kid in a candy store!
Sounds wonderfully like a sowing machine. Beautiful!
I recently found an old photograph from the early 20s of my great grandfathers 1919 Franklin four door touring car.
Excellent cars. I want to buy one, have for years.
The Franklin Air Cooled Engine Company was sold to the Government of Poland in 1991 and reportedly still exists. It is the lineage of the Franklin car company.
What a beauty.
Very neat Franklin. Cars collect with the owners mainly one is my Dad !
What's with the music being louder than the dialogue?
When he explained how that motor worked, he lost me!
It really does sound like a sewing machine!
I think Doc Brown there would love the new fangled Beetle.
I "knew" about air-cooled Franklins, of course, but did not know about concentric valves or dual exhaust porting or why aluminum pistons were such an improvement for them. The cranking technique was a little scary.
Johnathan w Just did a Franklin 1st start in 70 years video and he is putting the Franklin he got in Newyork back on the Carolina roads
He owns the car, and has probably started it many times. So he knows what he is doing......
@@paulstandeven8572 Owning the car and knowing the safest way to crank are not necessarily related. Most of those people generations ago whose wrists or arms or worse were broken (some killed) also owned their cars.
@@wholeNwon Yes, that is true. I was thinking that, and also that the owner may know things too - such as that it's very low compression, and just doen't kick back. Yet........ !! Correct technique is what saves you when the unexpected happens
I liked the music.
The music is WAYYY too loud!!
If I want to listen to music, I'll turn on the radio!
FR FR FR
I couldn't take it. The music drove me away after 1:28.
Excellent
Music is too loud! It's really hard to hear the commentator let alone the sound of the engine
Does UA-cam demand you use music?
I managed 2:44 before the music pissed me off
🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔can't hear with that music playing 🎼🎹🔊🔊🔊🔊too loud.
I love seeing the Franklin though🤗
Would have liked to watch all the post but the background music was far to loud blocking out the commentary. Sad.
1925 in europe you had rock paved roads.and also old rome roads
I can't hear you over that music.
I’m convinced that most of the engineering was much better back then but was unfortunately lost or stolen.
Chitty bang bang..
I'll bet the frames are even made of wood !
Yes the frames were made out of ash until 1930 I believe a guy on UA-cam that I follow just bought a 1928 Franklin that sat in a barn since the late 40's and it has a wooden frame
@@79tazman I knew that...😉
La historia escrita en cuatro ruedas
To the naysayers, from one who despises gratuitous noise added to videos, I suggest that if you want information and concentrate on the dialogue, you will find, as I did, that the music passes pretty well unnoticed.
In looking at light aircraft on Yt a few years back, I recall a very popular model from Piper of the Cub, with a Franklin engine. The name was unknown to me then but it all falls into place now. Thank you!
Franklin air-cooled aircraft engines powered a number of successful light aircraft, including a helicopter. Most Piper J-3 Cubs were powered by Continental or Lycoming air-cooled engines, but the Cub model J-3F was indeed powered by a 65-hp 4-cylinder flat four engine displacing 171 cu. in.
@@brianevans656 In 1978, the tiny FBO I flew out of in high school had a PA-22-108 Piper Colt with a Franklin engine, can't exactly remember the hp rating but I want to say either 65 or 80. Flapless, clipped wing version of a Tri-Pacer, IIRC. Side-by-side seating, the one we had was equipped with spats and pants, was subject to needing a fair bit of runway for a plane it's size, especially with high density altitude days. It would spin abruptly, and had the glide ratio of a streamlined brick - was good to land it with a little power on.
🤝👍👍👍
What a dork😨!!!!
I gave up on this after 2 minutes. Background music f...ed everything up.
Wood frames loud nusic cant do it sorry.
skip the music
Кеппи не по размеру! Подогнать надо было в размер.
Great cars and video…….get rid of lousy music 😮!
music too loud
No music would be better. So wont finish watching.
music loud and wrongggg
Kill the music !
Kill that crappie music so we can hear what's important.