1909
(Click on pictures for expanded views)
Body Type

Factory
# Price

Shipping
Weight

Production
* Total

 
Touring $850 1200 7,728
Tourabout $850 ----- **
Runabout $825 ----- 2,351  
Town Car $1000 ----- 236
Laudaulet $950 ----- 298
Coupe $950 ----- 47

Total   10,660      1909 Ford line in early 1909. Touring, Runabout, Landaulet, Town Car,
    and Coupe. All are “two pedal” cars in these< pictures from the Ford
   Catalog.
Note: 1200 pounds was the figure given for the Touring car “with others in proportion. ” The bare chassis weighed about 900 pounds.
# Prices effective October 1, 1908.
* Fiscal year: October 1, 1908 to October 1, 1909.
** Tourabout shown in Ford Times but not produced until July, and then called “1910”cars.
*** Ford News, Nov. 1, 1920, gives a figure of 10,607.

ENGINE SERIAL NUMBERS:1 to 309, calendar year 1908; 310 to 14,161, calendar year 1909.

MODEL YEAR DATES: October 1908 to July 31, 1909. (Ford called the cars built after July 31 “1910 models.”)

BODY TYPES: Touring, Tourabout,** Runabout, Coupe, Town Car and Laundaulet. Bodies supplied by several manufacturers. Most bodies were all wood but a good number of Beaudett bodies were built with aluminum panels over a wood frame.

EARLY 1909
(First 2500 cars)

COLORS: Touring: Red or Green. Runabout: Gray. Town Car, Landaulet, and Coupe: Green. Fenders, aprons, frame and running gear were painted body color.

UPHOLSTERY: Full leather in the open cars, in a diamond tufted pattern. Closed cars used black leather seats with imitation leather trim on the door panels. The front seats in the Landaulet and Town Car were also leather.

FENDERS: Front: Uniform width top surface, with formed splash apron area. No bill on front. Rear: Similar in style to the front. Support irons were of the “butterfly” style that came out and up under the side of the fender splash apron, not through holes in the apron as in the regular production. These irons were integral with the rear body support.

SPLASH APRON: Fairly uniform from front to rear. Cut back in a concave curve at the rear to clear the brake and radius rods.

RUNNING BOARDS: Black ribbed rubber covered (the same as on the Model R and S) wood with brass trim.

HOOD: Steel, with no louvers. Hinges were integral with the panels. Hold-down clamps had one “ear” and were made of forged steel.

DASHBOARD (Firewall): Wood, with brass edge trim which did not overlap the wood. Added extension piece of several designs used when a windshield was supplied.

CHASSIS: Reinforcing plates riveted inside the side rails, unique to the early 1909 chassis. Rear body support integral with the rear fender iron forging. Painted body color.

STEERING COLUMN ASSEMBLY: Brass quadrant, brass-plated spark and throttle levers, with hard rubber knobs. Gear case was brass, riveted assembly. Wheel was 14-1/4” outside diameter, wood, and painted black. The wheel spider was brass and believed to have not been painted.

FRONT AXLE: “One piece” spindles. Tie rod ran above the radius rod, had integral yoke/ball fitting on right end, and adjustable yoke, with the locking bolt in a horizontal plane (parallel to the road). Drag link threaded 20 t.p.i. at the column end. No oilers on most fittings. Radius rod fastened to the engine with studs and nuts.

REAR AXLE: “No rivet” style. Inner axle and pinion bearings were babbitt bushings. No reinforcing plate in the driveshaft area. Very thin center flange with no reinforcing washers or plates. Axle shafts were non-tapered, with the hubs being secured with a key and a pin. Brake backing plates were relatively thin, with no reinforcing ribs on either side.

DRIVESHAFT HOUSING: No pinion bearing spool. Separate front housing for universal joint assembly.

REAR RADIUS AND BRAKE RODS: Had forged ends. Brake rod support brackets were unique in that the brake rods passed through a hole in them, instead of the “wrap-around” types used later on.

WHEELS: Used 30 by 3 tires in front; 30 by 3-1/2 in the rear. Original tires were an off-white color, with no tread. Hub flanges were 5-1/2 inches in diameter. Front wheels used ball bearings. Hub caps had “Ford” in block letters. Spokes were quite thin and somewhat oval in cross-section. Rear hub was quite long, looking much like the front hub.

SPRINGS: Tapered-leaf, front and rear. “Mae West” style shackles.

RADIATOR: Supplied by Briscoe, Paris, and perhaps McCord. Construction varied, some having separate shells; others being integral assemblies. All used the “winged script” Ford on the top tank, and generally had a “Ford” brass name plate attached to the core near the center and in a horizontal manner (not on a bias as is often seen today).

ENGINE: Open valve type with integral water pump and gear-driven fan assembly. Cylinder head was quite flat, with water outlet on the top surface. Oil filler pipe was on the left-front side of the crankcase.

ENGINE PAN: One-piece type (no inspection door). Front bearing (support) was quite long, with rear rivet inside the engine area. Oil dam behind fourth cylinder area. No reinforcement at the rear flange.

OIL FILLER CAP: Long thin brass tube with a cup at the upper end, on left front side of the engine. Top of filler pipe was cup-shaped funnel with a screen covering. A small cap was used as a cover for the center tube, inside the top funnel.

ENGINE CRANK: Hard rubber handle. Crank was held “up” when not in use by a ratchet arrangement.

ENGINE FAN: Gear-driven from the water pump. Steel blades were riveted to the driving shaft flange.

MANIFOLDS: Exhaust was cast iron; pipe fitted inside the threaded end and was packed with asbestos and held with a brass nut. Intake was aluminum, “dog legged” style.

CARBURETORS: Kingston “five-ball” or Buffalo. Neither used a choke or a heating arrangement at the air intake.

CARBURETOR STOVE ASSEMBLY: None used.

MUFFLER: Cast iron ends, mounted with pressed metal brackets. Short, straight rear exhaust pipe extension. Wrapped with asbestos, secured with three steel straps.

FUEL TANK: Cylindrical, under the front seat. Mounting brackets were riveted to the tank. The outlet was at the right end, outside the frame rail, and was riveted in place.

TRANSMISSION: The first 750 (approximately) cars used the two pedal, two lever system. One of the levers was the rear brake; the other operated the neutral and reverse gear. At about number 750 the three pedal system began to be used and  three pedals became standard. Pedals were marked with “C,” “R,” and “B.” The transmission cover was pressed steel in earliest production, then cast aluminum, with both types apparently being used at the same time during early production. (All two-pedal cars are believed have had the pressed-steel cover.) The inspection door was held with a single “bolt” that operated a latching lever on the underside.

COIL BOX ASSEMBLY: Kingston 4200 apparently used on all production according to factory blueprint data.. (The Heinze, with high tension (spark plug) terminals on the underside, a continuation of the type used in the N-R-S Fords, was used on car number 220 when it was first found. Whether this had been changed during 220’s life, or if it came from the factory, is unknown.)

LAMPS: Side and tail lamps were standard, made by either Edmond and Jones (E&J) or Atwood-Castle. Headlamps were optional, and supplied by the same firms. Prestolite tanks were often installed at the factory instead of the carbide generators.

HORN: Bulb type, double twist, all brass. Standard equipment on most cars.

WINDSHIELD: Optional equipment on open cars, but when supplied by the factory, most were either Rands or Mezger (Automatic). Other makes were also used in very limited quantities.

TOP: (Open cars) Optional equipment. More than one supplier. Some had wool linings, generally in a dark red color. Top color was black on the Touring, and either black or gray on the Runabout. Top sockets were oval in cross-section and fastened to a forged railing on the body. Top sockets curved outward from the body.

SPEEDOMETER: Optional. Stewart Models 11 and 12, National, and Jones were used by the factory.


1909
(After first 2500 cars)

BODY TYPES: Touring, Tourabout (after about June 1909), Runabout, Landaulet (very few, if any), Town Car, Coupe. Generally a continuation of the bodies used on the first 2500 cars. The Beaudett (“Pontiac”) body with the aluminum panels was discontinued in September 1909.

COLORS: Touring: Red, Green, and a few Gray. Runabout: Gray. Town Car and Landaulet: Green. Coupe: Green. All cars were Brewster Green after June 1909. Fenders, aprons, running board, chassis and running gear were painted body color.

UPHOLSTERY: Full leather in the open cars, in a diamond tufted pattern. Closed cars used a cloth material with an ornate pattern. The front seats in the Landaulet and Town Car were leather.

FENDERS: Front: Uniform width top surface, with formed splash apron area. Bill added on front. Rear: Similar in style to the front. Support irons were of the “butterfly” style and now passed through holes in the fender apron instead of under the apron.

SPLASH APRON: Fairly uniform from front to rear. Cut back in a concave curve at the rear to clear the brake and radius rods. (Later models may have had a straight cut at the rear.)

RUNNING BOARDS: Pressed steel with embossed ribs running the length of the board.

HOOD: Steel, with no louvers. During the year the hood was changed to aluminum and the hinges were now separate from the panels, and riveted in place. Hold-down clamps had one “ear” and were of forged steel. The steel hood former still had the “notch” on both sides which was necessary to clear the earlier hood hinges.

DASHBOARD (Firewall): Wood, with brass edge trim that did not overlap the wood. Added extension piece of several designs used when a windshield was supplied.

CHASSIS: Rear body support integral with the rear fender iron forging. The riveted-in-place reinforcement inside the side rails was discontinued.

STEERING COLUMN ASSEMBLY: Brass quadrant, brass-plated spark and throttle levers, with hard-rubber knobs. Gear case was brass, riveted assembly. Wheel was 14-1/4” outside diameter, wood, and painted black. The wheel spider was brass and believed to have not been painted.

FRONT AXLE: “One-piece” spindles. Tie rod ran above the radius rod, had integral yoke/ball fitting on right end, and an adjustable yoke, with the locking bolt in a horizontal plane (parallel to the road). Drag link threaded 20 t.p.i. at the column end. No oilers on most fittings. Radius rod fastened to the engine with cap screws.

REAR AXLE: “No rivet” style. Inner axle and pinion bearings were babbitt bushings. No reinforcing plate at the driveshaft area. Thin center flange with reinforcing washers added in later production. Axle shafts were non-tapered, with the hubs being secured with a key and a pin. The driveshaft with removable pinion gear began at about number 7000 (July). Babbitt inner axle bearings were changed to roller at about number 12,000 (October 1909).

DRIVESHAFT HOUSING: Redesigned with larger rear flange and held with larger bolts. No pinion bearing spool. Separate front housing for universal joint assembly.

REAR RADIUS AND BRAKE RODS: Had forged ends. Brake rod support brackets now folded down along the side of the clamp, then out and wrapped up and around the brake rods.

WHEELS: Same as used in the earlier 1909 cars.

SPRINGS: Tapered-leaf, front and rear. “Mae West” style shackles.

RADIATOR: Supplied by Detroit, Briscoe, McCord, and Ford (Ford beginning about October). All were integral assemblies. All are believed to have used the winged script “Ford” on the top tank (except, possibly, for the Ford-made radiators), and generally had a “Ford” brass name plate attached to the core near the center and in a horizontal manner (not on a bias as is often seen today).

ENGINE: Open-valve type, now with thermo-siphon cooling system. Water outlet was now on the front of the cylinder head. No babbitt in upper main bearing (cylinder) halves.

ENGINE PAN: One-piece type (no inspection door). Shorter front bearing, moving rear rivet outside the engine. No reinforcement at the rear flange. Had oil dam at rear of crank area.

OIL FILLER CAP: Thin brass tube with a screen at the upper end, on right side of the engine and part of the timing gear cover.

ENGINE CRANK: Hard-rubber handle. The ratchet arrangement used on the early cars was discontinued.

ENGINE FAN: Driven by a leather belt from a pulley at the front of the engine. The fan hub was brass (bronze), with the blades riveted in place. The fan blades had a much deeper embossed reinforcement than the 1911 and later types. Adjustment was by means of a spring between the fan arm and the engine front plate.

MANIFOLDS: Exhaust was cast iron; pipe fitted inside the threaded end and was packed with asbestos and held with a brass nut. Intake was aluminum, “dog legged” style.

CARBURETORS: Kingston “five ball” or Buffalo. Neither used a choke or a heating arrangement at the air intake.

CARBURETOR STOVE ASSEMBLY: None used.

MUFFLER: Cast iron ends, mounted with pressed metal brackets. Short, straight rear exhaust pipe extension was now integral with the rear cover plate. Wrapped with asbestos, secured with three steel straps.

FUEL TANK: Cylindrical, under the front seat. Mounting brackets were riveted to the tank. The outlet was at the right end, outside the frame rail, and was riveted in place.

TRANSMISSION: Three pedal standard-design. The brake lever now operated the clutch as well as the rear brakes. Pedals were marked with “C,” “R,” and “B.” Transmission cover was cast aluminum. The inspection door was held with four screws.

COIL BOX ASSEMBLY: Kingston, with high tension (spark plug) terminals on the back side, passing through the firewall.

LAMPS: Side and tail lamps were standard, made by either Edmond and Jones (E&J), Atwood-Castle, or Brown (after about 10,000). Headlamps were optional, and supplied by the same firms. Prestolite tanks used on some production instead of a carbide generator.

HORN: Bulb type, double twist, all brass. Standard equipment on most cars.

WINDSHIELD: Optional equipment, but when supplied by the factory, most were either Rands, Mezger (Automatic), or Troy (wood and brass frames). Other makes may have been used in very limited quantities.

TOP: (Open cars) Optional equipment. More than one supplier. Some had wool linings, generally in a dark red color. Top color was black on the Touring, and either black or gray on the Runabout, until about June when all tops were then supplied in black. Top irons attached to a forged railing on the body. Top sockets were oval cross-section and curved outwards from the body.

SPEEDOMETER: Optional. Stewart Models 11, 12, and 24, National, and Jones Models 20 and 21 were used by the factory.

COMPREHENSIVE DESCRIPTION
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© Bruce W. McCalley. Rev. January 23, 2007.