The Daimler Engine
The Daimler Engine
The Daimler Engine
In late 1883, Daimler and Maybach patented the first of their engines fueled by Ligroin. This
engine was patented on December 16, 1883. It achieved Daimler's goal of being small and
running fast enough to be useful at 750 rpm (soon after up to 900). Daimler had three engines
built in 1884. Maybach persuaded him to put one in a vehicle, the result being the Reitwagen.[3][self-
published source][4]
• On water (1887). It was mounted in a 4.5-metre-long boat which achieved 6 knots (11 km/h).
The boat was called the Neckar after the river it was tested on and was registered as patent
number DRP 39-367. Motor boat engines would become their main product until the first
decade of the 1900s.
• More road vehicles, including street cars
• In the air. They built the first motorized airship, a balloon based on designs by Dr. Friedrich
Hermann Wölfert from Leipzig. They replaced his hand-operated drive system and flew over
Seelberg successfully on 10 August 1888.
By 1887 they were licensing their first patents abroad, and Maybach represented the company at
the great Paris Exposition Universelle (1889).
First Daimler-Maybach automobile built (1889)[edit]
Steel Wheel Automobile 1889
· fuel vaporization
· 2 cylinders V-configured
· water-cooled
Sales increased, mostly from the Neckar motorboat. In June 1887, Daimler bought land in the
Seelberg Hills of Cannstatt. The workshop was some distance from the town on Ludwig Route
67, because Cannstatt's mayor objected to the presence of the workshop in the town. It covered
2,903 square meters and cost 30,200 goldmarks. They initially employed 23 people. Daimler
managed the commercial issues and Maybach the design department.
In 1889 they built their first automobile to be designed from scratch rather than as an adaptation
of a stagecoach. It was publicly launched by both inventors in Paris in October 1889.
Daimler's engine licenses began to be taken up throughout the world, starting the modern car
industry in: