Everything about Nicolas-joseph Cugnot totally explained
Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot (
26 February,
1725 –
2 October,
1804) was a
French inventor. He is believed to have built the first self-propelled mechanical vehicle. This claim is disputed by some sources, however, which suggest that
Ferdinand Verbiest, as a member of a
Jesuit mission in China, may have been the first to build a 'car' around
1672.
Background
Cugnot was born in Void,
Lorraine, (now
departement of
Meuse),
France. He trained as a military
engineer. He experimented with working models of
steam-engine-powered vehicles for the French Army, intended for transporting
cannon, starting in
1765.
The first self-propelled vehicle?
Cugnot was one of the first to employ successfully a device for converting the reciprocating motion of a steam piston into rotary motion by means of a ratchet arrangement. A small version of his three-wheeled
fardier à vapeur ran in 1769. (A
fardier was a massively built two-wheeled horse-drawn cart for transporting very heavy equipment such as cannon barrels).
The following year, a full-size version of the
fardier à vapeur was built, specified to be able to carry 4 tons and cover 2
lieues (7.8 km or 4.8 miles) in one hour, a performance it never achieved in practice. The vehicle, which weighed about 2.5 tonnes
tare, had two wheels at the rear and one in the front where the horses would normally have been; this front wheel supported the steam boiler and driving mechanism. The power unit was articulated to the "trailer" and steered from there by means of a double handle arrangement.
The vehicle was reported to have been very unstable due to poor weight distribution - which would have been a serious disadvantage seeing that it was intended that the
fardier should be able to traverse rough terrain and climb steep hills. In 1771, the second vehicle is said to have gone out of control and knocked down part of the Arsenal wall, (the first known
'automobile' accident?); however according to Georges Ageon, the earliest mention of this occurrence dates from 1801 and it doesn't feature in contemporary accounts. Boiler performance was also particularly poor, even by the standards of the day, with the fire needing to be relit and steam raised again every quarter of an hour or so, considerably reducing overall speed.
After running a small number of trials variously described as being between Paris and Vincennes and at Meudon, the project was abandoned and the French Army's experiment with mechanical vehicles came to an end. Even so in 1772,
King Louis XV granted Cugnot a pension of 600
livres a year for his innovative work and the experiment was judged interesting enough for the
fardier to be kept at the Arsenal until transferred to the
Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers in 1800, where it can still be seen today.
Later life
With the
French Revolution, Cugnot's pension was withdrawn in
1789, and the inventor went into exile in
Brussels, where he lived in poverty. Shortly before his death, he was invited back to France by
Napoleon Bonaparte and Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot returned to
Paris, where he died on
October 2,
1804.
Further Information
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