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File:1949 Crosley Station Wagon - Automobile Driving Museum - El Segundo, CA - DSC01980.jpg
Crosley's all-steel Wagons were their best sellers (1947–1952)
File:1950 Crosley Hotshot in dark blue.jpg
The Crosley Hotshot, introduced in 1949, was America's first post-war sportscar

Crosley was a small, independent American manufacturer of economy cars or subcompact cars, bordering on microcars. At first called the Crosley Corporation and later Crosley Motors Incorporated, the Cincinnati, Ohio, firm was active from 1939 to 1952, interrupted by World War II production. Their station wagons were the most popular model, but also offered were sedans, pickups, convertibles, a sports car, and even a tiny jeep-like vehicle. For export, the cars were badged Crosmobile.

Crosley introduced several "firsts" in American automotive history, including the first affordable, mass-market car with an overhead camshaft engine in 1946; the first use of the term 'Sport(s-) Utility' in 1947, for a 1948 model year convertible wagon; and the first American cars to be fitted with 4-wheel caliper type disc brakes, as well as America's first post-war sports car, the Hotshot, in the 1949 model year.

All of Crosley's models were lightweight (Template:Convert) body-on-frame cars with rigid axles front and rear, and engines with less than Template:Convert displacement. With exception of the late introduced Hotshot and Farm-O-Road models, the vast majority of all Crosleys were built on an Template:Convert wheelbase,<ref group=nb>The same as the British 1959 Mini.</ref> and with leaf-springs.

HistoryEdit

Powel Crosley Jr. made his fortune in the automotive parts and accessories business, before diversifying into manufacturing other consumer products and Crosley automobiles in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1925 his company became the largest manufacturer of radios in the world. The financial success of his manufacturing and radio broadcasting businesses provided the funds for Crosley to pursue his lifelong interest in manufacturing automobiles. He introduced the first Crosley compact car in 1939.

During World War II the Crosley company discontinued civilian automobile manufacturing and began production of war-time materials, including development of experimental vehicles. In 1946 Crosley resumed production of compact and subcompact vehicles at its facility in Marion, Indiana, in addition to introducing new models and innovations to its offerings. After gas rationing was discontinued and the Big Three car makers began producing larger cars, consumer interest in Crosley's compact cars declined. The last Crosley car rolled off the assembly line on July 3, 1952, and the company focused on its other, more successful business ventures.

Developer and company founderEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Industrialist Powel Crosley Jr. of Cincinnati, Ohio, owner of Crosley Broadcasting Corporation and the Cincinnati Reds baseball team, among other business interests, had ambitious plans to build subcompact cars. Crosley had built his first automobile at the age of twelve, and in 1907, at the age of twenty-one, formed Marathon Six Automotive in Connersville, Indiana. Crosley built a prototype of the "Marathon Six," a six-cylinder automobile priced at US$1,700, which was at the low end of the luxury car market, but failed to fund its production.<ref name=BigDream29-30>Template:Cite journal</ref>

After working for several auto manufacturers in Indianapolis and Muncie, Indiana, and several more failed attempts to manufacture his own cars, including a cycle car model, Crosley found success in manufacturing automobile accessories as cofounder with Ira J. Cooper of the American Automobile Accessory Company in 1916, and bought out Cooper’s interest in the company. By 1919, Crosley and his younger brother and business partner, Lewis M. Crosley, had sold more than $1 million in parts and were diversifying into other consumer products.<ref name=GS79>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:1939CrosleyTransferable.jpg
1939 Crosley convertible

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Crosley increased his fortune in the 1920s and 1930s by developing, manufacturing, and selling inexpensive radios, such as the "Harko", the Crosley "Pup" and the "Roamio" models. The Crosley Radio Corporation became the world's largest radio manufacturer in 1925. It expanded operations at Camp Washington, a Cincinnati neighborhood, and began commercial radio broadcasting with WLW radio, considered "the Nation's Station."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Crosley's company also introduced new consumer products and home appliances in the 1930s, including the "Shelvador," a refrigerator that had shelves in the doors, and other product innovations. The wealth that Crosley amassed from sales of these products provided the funds to diversify into other areas, including automobile manufacturing.<ref name=BigDream32>Banks, "Big Dream, Small Car," p. 32.</ref><ref name=GS80>Gugin and St. Clair, p. 80.</ref>

First Crosley automobilesEdit

Beginning in the late 1930s Crosley developed low-priced compact cars and other pint-size vehicles.<ref name=OCW_umm/> The first experimental prototype of the Crosley car was the 1937 CRAD (for Crosley Radio Auto Division) that had an Template:Convert rear track. With the assistance of his brother, Lewis, a graduate engineer, Crosley also designed assembly plants for his manufacturing operations at Richmond and Marion, Indiana.<ref name=CrosClubHistory>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

On April 28, 1939, the first Crosley production car debuted at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to mixed reviews.<ref name=GS80/> It was a two-door convertible that weighed under Template:Convert. Initially offered at US$325 for a two-passenger coupe or $350 for a four-passenger sedan,<ref name=CrosClubHistory/><ref name=HemmGiant/><ref group=nb name=2Tops>The two models were essentially the same car, except the sedan had rear side windows.</ref> the Crosley cars were cheaper than the nearest competition, the American Austin Car Company's American Bantam, which sold for $449 to $565.<ref name=HVAcrosley/>

The Crosley car's chassis had an Template:Convert wheelbase and used beam axles with leaf-springs (half-elliptic springs in front, and quarter-elliptic springs in the rear). Under the hood, a Template:Cvt gravity-fed fuel-tank mounted above the motor made it possible for the car to operate without a fuel pump.<ref name=CAC_ACB/> The engine was a small, air-cooled Waukesha two-cylinder boxer, much like that of the Citroen 2CV,<ref name=HVAcrosley>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and had a fan as an integral part of the flywheel. The engine was connected to a three-speed transmission that provided power directly via a torque tube to the rear axle, eliminating the need for joints. This arrangement was judged unreliable, and conventional universal joints were fitted starting in 1941.<ref name=SMCrosley/>

Production for 1939 was 2,017 units; however, only 422 cars were built in 1940.<ref name=CrosClubHistory/><ref name=WWIIpostwar>Template:Cite book</ref> For 1941 a range of new, body-style variations of the Template:Convert wide<ref name=WWIIpostwar/> car were introduced to expand the line-up: a station wagon, two panel vans (one called the "Parkway Delivery" had no front cabin roof), and a pick-up truck and "Covered Wagon" model that could convert into a truck by means of a removable back seat and detachable soft-top over the rear section.<ref name=SMCrosley>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Crosley built nearly 2,300 cars in 1941.<ref name=WWIIpostwar/> When the company introduced its first metal-topped model, the "Liberty Sedan," for 1942, pricing across the model range was $299 to $450.<ref name=SMCrosley/>

During World War II, the Crosley car became attractive due to gasoline rationing and the car's fuel efficiency, an estimated Template:Convert at speeds of up to Template:Cvt.<ref name=LaHurd>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=BigDream33>Banks, "Big Dream, Small Car," p. 33.</ref><ref name="amcars">Template:Cite book</ref> Crosley was the last company to cease production of civilian vehicles in 1942, after building another 1,000 units that year.<ref name=WWIIpostwar/> When the onset of war ended all automobile production in the United States in 1942, Crosley had produced a total of 5,757 cars. During the pre-war years the Crosley company operated manufacturing plants in Camp Washington, Ohio; Richmond, Indiana; and Marion, Indiana. The Crosley factories were converted to wartime production during the war.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

War-time productionEdit

File:Crosley CT-3 PUP (1943).jpg
One of thirty-six Crosley CT-3 'Pup' extra-light, 4WD, mini-jeep prototypes.

The Crosley Corporation was involved in war production planning before December 1941, and like the rest of American industry, it focused on manufacturing war-related products during the war years. The company made a variety of products, ranging from proximity fuzes, radio transceivers, field kitchens, and quarter-ton trailers, to gun turrets, among other items. Powered gun turrets for PT boats and B-24 and B-29 bombers were the company's largest contract.<ref name=UAIWW2CA>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Crosley also produced a number of experimental vehicles during the war for the U.S. government. Crosley's auto manufacturing division, CRAD, in Richmond, Indiana, produced experimental motorcycles, tricycles, four-wheel-drive military light utility vehicles, a self-propelled gun, and continuous track vehicles, some of which were amphibious models.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> All of these military prototypes were powered by the 2-cylinder boxer engine that powered the original Crosley automobiles.<ref name=eWillysPup>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Crosley had nearly 5,000 of the engines on hand when auto production ceased in 1942, and hoped to put them to use in war-time production of miniature vehicles.

One vehicle prototype was the 1942–1943 Crosley CT-3 "Pup," a lightweight, single-passenger, four-wheel-drive vehicle that was transportable and air-droppable from a C-47 Skytrain. Six of the Template:Convert, 2-cylinder Pups were deployed overseas after undergoing tests at Fort Benning, Georgia, but the project was discontinued due to several weak components. Seven of 36 Pups built are known to survive.<ref name=UAIWW2CA/><ref name=eWillysPup/> {{#invoke:Gallery|gallery}}

Template:Multiple image

Post-war continuation; notable innovationsEdit

In the post-war period, Crosley introduced several "firsts" in the American automobile industry, including:

In 1950 Crosley brought the Farm-O-Road model, a Template:Convert wheelbase utility vehicle, decades ahead of the John Deere Gator and other small Utility vehicles. From 1950 onwards, Crosley's main models gained roll-down instead of sliding side windows.<ref name=caristas/>

CrosmobileEdit

Crosleys were built under the Crosmobile marque for overseas export. Crosmobiles were simply badge-engineered Crosleys, and were identical to standard Crosley models except for having Crosmobile-lettered hood and rear badges and hubcaps and instrument-cluster demarcations. The purpose of differentiating the exported Crosleys was to avoid confusion or conflict with Great Britain's non-related Crossley marque. Crosmobiles not only made it to Europe, but also elsewhere, including Cuba.<ref name=caristas>Crosmobile wagon: A little car lasts a long time – Caristas, The car lover's guide to Cuba caristas.blogspot.nl</ref>

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Post-war production and demiseEdit

Post-war production began with 4,999 vehicles in 1946, and increased to five-figure numbers, producing more than 22,500 cars in 1947. Crosley sales peaked in 1948, with 24,871 or 27,707 cars sold, depending on the source;<ref name=CrosClubHistory/><ref name=WWIIpostwar/> however, the CoBra copper and stamped steel "tin block" engine proved a major misstep. Although it had proven reliable in military use, it fared poorly under less diligent civilian maintenance. The CoBra was replaced with a redesigned and more reliable conventional cast-iron engine in 1949, but the company's reputation suffered.<ref name=caristas/> Sales fell to 8,939 units in 1949, and to 7,612 in 1950.<ref name=CrosClubHistory/> The addition of the Crosley "Hotshot" sports model and the "Farm-O-Road" model, a combination farm-tractor and all-wheel-drive vehicle in 1950, could not stop the decline.<ref name=BigDream36-37>Banks, "Big Dream, Small Car," pp. 36–37.</ref>

More trouble came after the Big Three automakers introduced bigger, more lavish cars, and began manufacturing them in higher volumes and priced, in some cases, only a little higher than a new Crosley car. Crosley sales dwindled to 4,839 units in 1951; only 1,522 Crosley vehicles were sold in 1952.<ref name=CrosClubHistory/> Production ended on July 3, 1952.<ref name=caristas/> Crosley sold about 84,000 cars in total before closing down the operation in 1952.<ref name=BigDream36-37/><ref>A plan to sell the Crosley auto concern to Nash failed to materialize, when Nash merged with Hudson. See Nash Club newsletter, 1986, volume 1.</ref> Crosley continued building engines for a short while to fulfill a government contract, but eventually the rights to the engine were sold.<ref name=FW50FOR/> The Crosley plant in Marion, Indiana, was sold to the General Tire and Rubber Company.<ref name=BigDream36-37/>

ModelsEdit

Model summaryEdit

All Crosleys were two side-door models, with a few exceptions that just had two side door-openings or entry carve-outs

Pre-war production with Waukesha Model 150 air-cooled opposed twin engine:<ref name=CAC_ACB>Details on Crosley PreWar Models 1939–1942 – Crosley Auto Club</ref>

  • 1939: Series (C)1A – Convertible Coupe and Convertible Sedan <ref group=nb name=2Tops/>
  • 1940: Series (C)2A – Convertible Coupe, Convertible Sedan / Deluxe Sedan, Station Wagon and Parkway Delivery <ref group=nb>(Open cab panel van version)</ref>
  • 1941: Series CB41 – Convertible Coupe, Sedan and Deluxe Sedan; Station Wagon, Panel Delivery, Parkway Delivery, Covered Wagon and Pickup
  • 1942: Series CB42 – Convertible Coupe and (Deluxe) Sedan, Station Wagon, Panel and Parkway Delivery, Covered Wagon, Pickup and steel-top 'Liberty Sedan'

Post-war production with 1946–1949 CoBra water-cooled straight-four engine

  • 1946: CC Four — fastback Sedan and Convertible coupe
  • 1947: CC Four — fastback Sedan, Convertible coupe and Pickup (roundside)
  • 1948: CC Four — fastback Sedan, Convertible coupe, Station wagon, Panel van, Pickup (square), and 'Sport Utility' convertible wagon

Post-war production with 1949–1952 CIBA water-cooled four-cylinder inline engine <ref>Crosley, Encyclopedia of American Cars, 2003</ref>

  • 1949: CD Four including Deluxe Sedan, Coupe, Station Wagon, Pickup Truck and Panel Truck; VC Four including Hotshot Roadster and Super Sports Roadster
  • 1950: CD Four including Sedan, Super Sedan, Coupe, Super Coupe, Station Wagon, Super Station Wagon; VC Four including Hotshot Roadster and Super Sports Roadster; FR Four including Farm-O-Road (in various submodels)
  • 1951: CD Four including Business Coupe, Super Sedan, Station Wagon, Super Station Wagon, Super Coupe; VC Four including Hotshot Roadster and Super Sports Roadster; and FR Four including Farm-O-Road.
  • 1952: CD Four including Standard Business Coupe, Super Sedan, Station Wagon, Super Station Wagon, Super Coupe; VC Four including Hotshot Roadster and Super Sports Roadster; FR Four including Farm-O-Road.

Crosley CC Four (1946–1948)Edit

Template:Infobox automobile Crosley resumed civilian car production in 1946 with the largely new model CC, designed by the firm of Sundberg & Ferar of Royal Oak, Michigan. The slightly larger and more aerodynamic model CC featured an all new body and engine. The chassis, suspension, brakes, and the rest of the drive-train were carried over from the pre-war models.<ref name=CAC_CC/> Together with the Frazer / Kaiser of the same year, the 1946 Crosley CC was the first American mass-produced slab-sided / ponton-style bodied car.<ref name="Mort2010"/> The post-war Crosleys also had a new, water-cooled, straight-four CoBra engine, carried over from military production. Although not much larger in displacement than its predecessor, power output was doubled to Template:Cvt, improving the car's performance, with a claimed cruising speed of Template:Cvt, while fuel economy remained excellent at Template:Cvt.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Additionally, the CoBra (for Copper Brazed) was America's first affordable mass-production overhead camshaft car engine,<ref name=R&T456ttb/> built in five-figure numbers after Duesenberg built some 650 OHC Straight Eights from 1921–1926.<ref name=Mueller/><ref name=Adler/>

Introduced as a steel roof, two-door, two-box fastback sedan and a fixed profile convertible (with fixed side windows and frames, like the Citroën 2CV and the 2007 Fiat 500),<ref name=Mechanix_Ill/> the car also became available as a pick-up – initially with a pickup-box with the same rounded rear-side panels as the sedan (roundside pickup).<ref name=CAC_CC>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In late 1947 a station wagon was added, as a 1948 model, as well as a panel van – a derivative of the wagon, but with a different floorpan to yield a flatter floor. The panel delivery also had a side opening rear door, as opposed to the Station wagon's above/below split tailgate, while the basic sedan had no outside trunk lid – access to the luggage space was only from inside the car.

From the arrival of the station wagon, the pickups were built with the wagon's straight rear panels, giving a wider, more square rear box.<ref name=CAC_CC/> In 1948 Crosley added bolt-on grille-bars and a chromed bull-nose to the front for the '48½ model year,<ref name=CAC_CC/> and introduced a new convertible wagon variant without doors, dubbed the "Sports Utility." The vehicle was advertised with a quarter-ton payload capacity for utility use, and its rear seat was optional. The entire range of CC models were based on the same two-door car and frame.<ref name=SMCrosley/> The 1948 Station Wagon became the most popular model Crosley built, with 23,489 units made.<ref name=CAC_CC/>

A 1947 test of the Crosley sedan and convertible determined that "There is leg room for a man as tall as six feet two or three but due to the over-curve of the top and the window design, he may have to duck to see left or right", and unless he is narrow-shouldered "he will have to ride these things side saddle or not at all".<ref name=Mechanix_Ill>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Further, the tester felt that the engine lacked bottom-end power, and that the true cruising speed was between Template:Cvt — the car will do Template:Cvt, and he drove one faster than that, but at these speeds "the little 4-cylinder engine screams like a banshee with the hot-foot" and driving felt quite uncomfortable. Also, the inside door handles were placed too far back, and the two-piece, sliding door windows made it impossible to comfortably drive with one arm out of the window. On the other hand the tester deemed that 'the chassis rides exceptionally well", ".. undoubtedly the best of the miniature type ever made in this country".<ref name=Mechanix_Ill/>

Crosley CD Four (1949–1952)Edit

Template:Multiple image In 1948 Crosley replaced the CC with the 1949 model year CD. Front and rear bodywork were redesigned on the sedan / coupe and convertible, though rear bodywork on the station wagon and pickup remained largely unaltered. A significant change was fitting the cast-iron block CIBA engine instead of the stamped-steel CoBra engines, that were lighter, but required more maintenance, or else would yield reliability problems.

For 1949 and 50 there were standard and Deluxe models. The '49 model year still had sliding glass side windows in the doors, but from the 1950 model year, roll-down windows and electric wipers were offered.<ref name=SMCrosley/> For 1951 and 1952 the front was again redone; the Deluxe model replaced the standard model as the bottom of the range, and 'Super' models were introduced as the new top of the line.<ref name=CAC_CD>Details on Crosley CD Models 1949–1952 Crosley Auto Club, crosleyautoclub.co</ref>

The CD models started with the same Template:Cvt mechanical brakes as previous Crosleys on the 1949 model, but switched to 4-wheel Goodyear–Hawley aircraft-type disc brakes in May 1949, However, they were short-lived, and only continued through mid 1950. The alloy disc material was found to rust, and had freeze-up problems in parts of the country where salt was used on the roads.<ref name=SMCrosley/> So Template:Cvt hydraulic brakes were phased back in, and these remained til the end of production.<ref name=CAC_CD/>

Crosley HotshotEdit

Template:Infobox automobile After building only bottom-end of the market economy cars since its inception, Crosley introduced a little sports car in 1949, the doorless Hotshot roadster. It also featured a largely new, dropped frame – both more low slung, and for the first time with a wheelbase that diverged from all the previous Crosley models' Template:Cvt wheelbase by Template:Cvt extra. The rear suspension used a combination of coil springs, assisted by single leaf quarter-elliptical leaf-springs that doubled as torque-rods, and the car had disc brakes on all four wheels.<ref name=PSHotshot>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name=dailykos/> The engine was placed behind the front axle, for a front mid-engined layout. The Template:Cvt long Hotshot, introduced for $849, weighed just Template:Cvt. But to go racing, the weight was further reducible to Template:Cvt, by temporarily discarding such things as the detachable windscreen, and the non-folding (stowed) soft-top and side-curtains. There was no trunk lid — the spare wheel was mounted on the down-sloping rear deck, above the rear bumper, and access to the rear stowage room was by folding the seat-backs forward. Powered by a Template:Cvt CIBA engine, the Hotshot was capable of more than Template:Cvt.<ref name=PSHotshot/><ref name=JalopHotsh>Crosley Hotshot Is America's Smallest Sports Car Jalopnik, jalopnik.com</ref>

A Super version of the HotShot was added in 1950, featuring solid hinged doors and a fold-down top that didn't have to be stowed,<ref name=SMCrosley/> and "full red plastic leather upholstery and lining".<ref>1951 Crosley Line-up advertisement classiccarcatalogue.com</ref> For 1951 and 1952 the Super Hotshot was simply renamed the Super Sports.<ref name=SMCrosley/>

Regardless of its short life and small size, the Hotshot is remembered as an impressive sports car within its class. A Hotshot won the Sam Collier Memorial Endurance Grand Prix,<ref>Sam Collier Memorial Sebring Grand Prix of Endurance Six Hours www.racingsportscars.com, Retrieved on 31 July 2012</ref> (averaging Template:Cvt), as well as the "index of performance" — an award which took speed and engine size into account — at the 1950 Six Hours of Sebring;<ref name=JalopHotsh/> and a Siata 300 fitted with Crosley power won the SCCA's 12 hour Vero Beach race.

Throughout the 1950s, Crosley engines dominated 750 cc sports car racing, winning 10 out of 12 SCCA west-coast races alone.<ref name=SMCrosley/><ref name=Howstuff>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

File:1951CrosleySuperSport-rear.jpg
1951 Crosley Super Sport rear

Crosley Farm-O-RoadEdit

Template:Infobox automobile Crosley had produced different products for the war effort, including the 'Pup' 4x4 prototype, a tiny air-portable 4WD.<ref name=FW50FOR>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=wehs2cub150/> In 1950, to broaden its line-up into the commercial and agricultural market, the Farm-O-Road was introduced – an ATV sized utility vehicle that looked like a small Jeep. It was a combination of a light tractor, a small pickup and a passenger vehicle, and was intended for rural customers who wanted a vehicle for doing chores around the farm, but which could also take them into town. According to Crosley, the Farm-O-Road was designed: “To do big jobs on small farms, and smaller jobs on big farms.”<ref name=dailykos/> Although it could be viewed as a precursor to today’s Side by Side UTV's, the Farm-O-Road was fully street-legal, with a top speed estimated at Template:Cvt on the highway.<ref name=OCW_umm>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Farm-O-Road took its cues from the Jeep and the wartime Pup. It had a boxy, minimalist body, riding on a Template:Cvt wheelbase, and it weighed Template:Cvt. The Farm-O-Road was powered by the same Template:Cvt Template:Cvt CIBA engine as the other Crosley models at the time, mated to a three-speed Warner T-92 transmission with a two-ratio, PTO-capable range box mounted behind it.<ref name=FW50FOR/> In addition to normal gearing, it offered a 4-to-1 low reduction.<ref>Farm-O-Road advertisement classiccarcatalogue.com</ref> The base price was $795, or $939 with a hydraulic system including a hydraulically operated drawbar.<ref name=FW50FOR/> Template:Multiple image Options included dual rear wheels, a detachable pickup bed which could come with a hydraulic dump, power take-offs on both front and rear, a rear seat, a soft-top, and side window curtains.<ref name=dailykos/> An extensive range of farm-implement attachments was available, including a Template:Cvt single bottom plow, a moldboard plow, snow plow, a cutter-bar mower, sickle-bar mower, three-gang reel-type mower, a rolling coulter, disc harrow, cultivator, hay rake, row crop seeders, fertilizer unit, row guide, velocity governor, hand throttle, radiator chaff screen, post-hole digger, and spring blocks.<ref name=FW50FOR/><ref name=dailykos/><ref name=OCW_umm/> Crosley even offered steel front snow skis that could be strapped to the front tires to convert the Farm-O-Road into a snowmobile. For the rest, equipment was spartan. Most Farm-O-Roads had only one windshield wiper – a right wiper was optional; and a heater or radio were not offered.<ref name=OCW_umm/>

Exact production numbers aren’t known, but historians with the Crosley Automobile Club estimate less than 600 Farm-O-Roads were built. Later, Crofton Marine Engineering bought the rights and tooling for the rig and put it back into production from ’59-’63 as the "Crofton Bug", resulting in another ~250 units.<ref name=FW50FOR/> The Farm-O-Road measured Template:Cvt long (without the optional, detachable bed) by Template:Cvt wide (excluding the side-mounted spare wheel), and Template:Cvt high (with the windshield and top up), and offered a Template:Cvt payload. Axles were rigid front and rear – as on all other Crosleys – with a 5.38:1 ratio Spicer 23 in the rear.<ref name=FW50FOR/>

The little 1950 vehicle was also compared with the 1959/1960 M422 Mighty Mite, the U.S. military's smallest jeep, originally with a Template:Cvt wheelbase.<ref name=OCW_umm/>

EnginesEdit

Waukesha Model 150 Cub TwinEdit

The original engine is the Waukesha Model 150 Cub Twin, a Template:Cvt or Template:Cvt air-cooled L-head opposed twin-cylinder engine, putting out Template:Cvt at 3,200 rpm,<ref name=HemmGiant>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=wehs2cub150>Twin Cub 150 Waukesha Engine Historical Society, Inc, www.wehs.net</ref> built by Waukesha Engines of Waukesha, Wisconsin, and used from 1939 through 1942. The engine was originally designed to power orchard sprayers. However, many of the over 12,000 built between 1938–44, were used in the pre-war (1939–42) Crosley mini-cars and the military during WWII, some of which were also used for Auxiliary Power Units (APU).<ref name=wehs2cub150/>

It was replaced in 1946 with the CoBra (for "Copper Brazed"), a Template:Cvt overhead-cam four with a Template:Cvt bore and Template:Cvt stroke. That engine in turn was replaced in 1949 by the new and more reliable CIBA (Crosley Cast Iron Block Assembly) engine utilizing five main bearings.

Crosley CoBra (1946–1949)Edit

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The CoBra (Copper Brazed, also known as "The Mighty Tin") was originally developed by Lloyd Taylor, of Taylor Engines in California, for military use aboard PT boats and Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers. The engine was made from sheet metal rather than cast iron like most other engines. This was done to get a thin, uniform wall thickness and thus avoid the creation of hot spots around the combustion chamber that could ignite the fuel, causing pre-ignition (knocks), which in turn limited the compression ratio. These engines were used mainly to power generators, refrigeration compressors, etc., and were widely praised for their successes in the war effort.

The engine was adopted for automobile use in 1946. It was a small, lightweight engine with single overhead camshaft driven by two sets of bevel gears and a vertical shaft at the front of the block.<ref name=R&T456ttb>Template:Cite journal</ref> It was America's first overhead camshaft automobile engine to be produced in five-figure numbers,<ref name=R&T456ttb/> after Duesenberg built some 650 overhead cam Straight Eights from 1921–1926.<ref name=Mueller>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=Adler>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Dead link</ref> The unitary block and cylinder headTemplate:Sfn weighed only Template:Convert dry; complete with all accessories (including the flywheel) weighing only Template:Convert.<ref>Crosley Engine Sports Racer Network dsr.racer.net</ref> The engine displaced Template:Cvt and produced Template:Cvt at 5,400 rpmTemplate:Sfn and Template:Cvt at 1,200 rpm.<ref name=AC46CC>1946 Crosley CC-Series Sedan full range specs automobile-catalog.com</ref> Because of its remarkable power to weight ratio, and super efficiency for its time, the CoBra engine has been compared to Ford's 1.0 litre inline-3 EcoBoost engine.<ref>Decades Before Ford's Tiny EcoBoost, There Was The CoBra Sheetmetal Engine Jalopnik, jalopnik.com</ref> Longevity was measured in hours and was strictly controlled by equipment maintenance schedules for the wartime duties,Template:Citation needed but corrosion became a problem for these engines in civilian service. This problem with these automotive powerplants had tarnished Crosley's reputation by 1948.Template:Sfn

Crosley CIBA (1949–1952; 1955)Edit

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Crosley racing engine with a supercharger

The Crosley CIBA (Cast Iron Block Assembly) was a more traditional and more reliable engine utilizing a cast-iron block. Nevertheless it had a unique design. Instead of a removable cylinder head, the combustion chambers, valve seats, cam supports, ports and cylinders are one casting, and the crankcase is another. In both the early and later cast-iron engines, the crankcase is aluminum. The Template:Cvt engine produced Template:Cvt at 5,400 rpm and Template:Cvt at 3,000 rpm.<ref name=FW50FOR/>

When Crosley Motors, Inc. was sold, the engine was renamed "AeroJet" and production continued. Production of the AeroJet ended in 1955 and the engine rights were sold to Fageol and later to a series of different companies ending in 1972 with the Fisher-Pierce Bearcat 55. Maritime modifications mostly included increasing displacement and converting the engine to operate with a vertical axis.

In Europe the Crosley CIBA would be used to great advantage in 750cc sports car class, eventually maturing to a double overhead camshaft (DOHC) design used in the Bandini 750 sport internazionale as well as Nardi 750LM and Siata Amica.

Notable Crosley ownersEdit

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See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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  • Sports Cars Illustrated Magazine Article by Carl Ludvigsen. "PBX Crosley Special" May 1956.

Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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