Bioskop45 adalah Situs Nonton Film Bioskop Online Terbaru Gratis Terlengkap Dengan Subtitle Indonesia Full Movie, Film Streaming, Cinema 21, Box Office.
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Contents.Biography Miller was born on December 9, 1875, in, to Jacob Miller (1833–1900) and Martha Ann (Tuttle) Miller (c1835–1922).Miller's first work in the automotive business was with the short-lived. From Yale he moved to, to work for motoring pioneer at, where he was employed as a race mechanic during the early Vanderbilt cup races. After a poor 1906 race season, Miller left for, to open a small machine shop specializing in carburetor production.Among Miller's innovations include perhaps the first engine mounted on a bicycle and the first outboard motor. Miller built a 4 cylinder engine and mounted it on a boat. His neighbor, removed two cylinders and patented the first outboard motor. Miller also produced the first aluminum pistonsdeveloped the aluminum alloys still used in engine development todayand the first carburetors and induction system to use Helmholtz resonators.
Miller also produced the first front drive race cars and the first 4 wheel drive car. His involvement with the racing side of his carburetor business led first to repairing and then building race cars. In the 1910s, Miller was making $1 million per year through sales of his carburetors. In the early 1920s, he built his own 3.0 litre (183 in³) engine.
Inspired by multiple engine designs including Duesenberg and engines which had been serviced in his shop, it had 4 cylinders, dual overhead camshafts and 4 valves per cylinder. Tommy Milton supplied the financial backing to produce this engine but it was Jimmy Murphy who first won with it. It powered 's to victory in the 1922 Indianapolis 500. Miller then progressed to making Miller single-seater race cars that used supercharged versions of his 2.0 and 1.5 liter (122 and 91 in³) engines.
The engines took four more wins in the 500 up to 1929, twice (1926 and 1928) in Miller chassis, and won the race another seven times between 1929 and 1938 (twice again, in 1930 and 1932, in Miller chassis). The Miller 122 racing car. 1924 Miller 122/183 'Convertible' (designed to be converted quickly from one engine to another) ran at 151.26 mph, at Muroc Dry LakeIn the 1920s and 1930s, Miller engines also powered speedboats to several race wins. Among those that won with his engines on the water was the great.Miller declared bankruptcy in 1933. His shop foreman and chief machinist Fred Offenhauser purchased the business and continued development of the engine as the which raced successfully until the 1980s.After bankruptcy, Miller built race cars with Indianapolis 500 enthusiast, and in 1935 they formed Miller and Tucker, Inc., whose first job was to build ten modified Ford V-8 racers for. With insufficient time available for their development and testing, all these cars dropped out when the steering boxes, installed too close to the exhaust, overheated and locked up. The design was later perfected by, and examples ran at Indianapolis through 1948.Miller and Tucker, Inc., moved to Indianapolis and continued race car development and construction.
In the late 1930s, Miller and Tucker also developed the and tried unsuccessfully to sell it to the Dutch and U.S. The car was capable of 115 mph (185 km/h) on pavement and 65 mph (105 km/h) on rough terrain, and had several innovative features including a power-operated gun turret, which the U.S.
Government bought and used in numerous applications including the and, and landing craft.Miller took some of the design elements from the Tucker Combat Car, notably the suspension, to, where he was involved with the development of the first.Tucker and Miller worked together off and on until Miller's death in 1943. Tucker helped Miller's widow pay the funeral costs.
It was while working with Miller that Tucker had met chief mechanic John Eddie Offutt, who would later help him develop and build the first prototype of the.Miller died on May 3, 1943, at in, at age 67. Awards. He was named to the in 1990.
He was inducted into the in 1999. He was inducted into the in 2003.Tribute Miller was honored at the 1993References. The Miller/Offenhauser Historical Society. Retrieved 23 November 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2015. Pittsburg Post-Gazette.
United Press. Retrieved 23 November 2015. Miller, 68 sic. at theFurther reading. Mark L. Dees, The Miller Dynasty: A Technical History of the Work of Harry A. Miller, His Associates, and His Successors (Barnes, Scarsdale, 1981; second edition Hippodrome, Moorpark, 1994) This is the definitive work on Miller.
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Griffith Borgeson, Miller (Motorbooks International, Osceola, 1993). Griffith Borgeson, The Last Great Miller: The Four-Wheel-Drive Indy Car (, Warrendale, 2000).
This car was built with sponsorship from the of Clintonville, Wisconsin. Griffith Borgeson, The Golden Age of the American Racing Car (Bonanza, New York, 1966; second edition, Warrendale, 1998). Gordon Eliot White, 'The Marvelous Mechanical Designs of Harry A. Miller' (Iconografix, Hudson, Wisconsin, 2004).External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to. Archived from on 23 January 2004.
Retrieved 23 November 2015. Archived from on 6 August 2012. Retrieved 23 November 2015. Ludbigsen, Karl (February 2006).
Hemmings Sports & Exotic Car. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
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