Used to have a local guy who would drive a Model T into town for a summer festival. During the two day festival, he would completely dismantle the car into little bits and pieces, then re-assemble it and drive it back home.
Actually the Model T came with a tool kit that you could disassemble the whole car with. Back then do- it- yourself was not just an option. It was a necessary in most locations.😊
Power brakes didn't exist back then. It was leg muscles and weight. The model T was maxed out at 45 miles an hour and the engine would need new crankshaft bearings much sooner driving at 45 mph. The cars didn't have oil pumps. The connecting rods dipped in oil at the bottom of the stroke. When it was time for new bearings which were called babbits, the mechanic would have to make the the babbit/bearings and file them until the connecting rods fit. They were made of tin, copper and antimony.
I've never seen or driven one, but I would imagine that even with full leg muscles and weight you still wouldn't have much braking power from 45 MPH in one of these. Not like what people would expect today, at least.
to be fair, high and low gear is all anyone really needs...even as late as the 1950s some cars had 2 speed push button (although automatic) transmissions, but 1st gear would get you to 55, and 2nd was good up to 110mph.
Just imagine what people back in the day thought the 1st time riding in one, went from a horse that can run around 40+ mph "short distances" to a machine that could do it as long as it had gas. It didn't get tired, it didn't get thirsty, & for the most part it didn't get sick. "Break downs would be equivalent to being sick" One of the best inventions ever.
@@FlexedNoose Plenty of people drove them, if not gasoline vehicles never would've caught on. I'm sure not the ones that couldn't afford them but the ones that could did. And that's why Henry Ford invented the assembly line to make them more affordable for everyone.
Adoption was slow because a lot of people got car sick. They weren't raised in something that would go that fast but didn't move like a horse. Plus, there weren't a lot of gas stations around, so "range anxiety" was real.
The Henry Ford Museum gives rides, and they're all different colors, too. Red, green, blue, and black, if I remember right. If you go, look for the section called "Greenwich Village". Happy travels!🙂
My cousin has one. I had just been watching a channel that's all about these cars when we went for a visit and I to see one up close. He bet me $100 that I wouldn't be able to get it started up (I'm a good mechanic with lots of experience with older cars but had never touched a model T). It had never been converted to an electric starter, but having just seen a video showing the process a few weeks earlier, I walked away proud with a crisp Benjamin! Had I not come across that channel, I don't think I could have done it. There's a lever on the steering wheel to slow and advance the timing that's critical to have just right for cold starts beside the standard choke and throttle. And obviously it had to be hand cranked which I've only ever done on a tractor I have even though I have a few cars with the option to. They're neat cars and I appreciate those who have kept them around for us to see, but I'd never want to own one!
Electric start came on most later versions of the model T. Not sure if it was made standard or if it was just an option but there was also two types of ignition coils too. I drove a later pickup version, 1927 from TN to NJ about 25 years ago. The truck had been sitting for 20+ years but a relative had pumped up the tires, got the motor running and told me to come get it if I wanted it. He actually drove it about 100 miles to meet me near the TN state line and I drove it home avoiding major highways the rest of the way. Surprisingly the thing did just fine, it was slow, and I regularly had to keep topping off the coolant and oil but nothing extreme. The brakes were weak but sufficient until I got into the hills with it. I still have it but haven't driven it in quite a while. It sits in the back of the garage. Since it was bought my new by my grandfather, I'll likely die with it. Comfort wise, its a tight fit for a big man, but not as bad as a model A for some reason. I drove a model A sedan from VA to NJ once and it was the most miserable uncomfortable drive I ever did. At 6ft3in tall there was no room for me to both shif and work the pedals, and I had to open the door to use the clutch pedal. If I had known how tight they were I'd have had it brought up by flatbed truck. Mechanically the model A is superior but size wise I suppose they didn't have tall guys in mind when they designed it.
Good job! My buddy made me start his once or twice and it's kind of scary. Most people probably don't know that it's a good way to get your thumb or elbow dislocated if you do it wrong.
A few years back a friend owned a '25 T roadster. We were at a cruise in show. He bet me I couldn't start the T and drive it away. Little did he know I drove a Model T before that belonged to a relative. Started it and drove it away much to his surprise. He paid for lunch that day. Yes, call your stops with T models. Mechanical rear brakes only.
The Ford Model T came with a tool kit with which you could disassemble the entire car with. Back then do-it- yourself was a necessary not just an option.😊
Theyre very simple with enough knowledge. It doesnt take much to understand them, and that was the birth of the mechanic. Anyone who could do the work and understand it better than their naighbor. Became the man to go to for repairs. And he became the machanic. Ty ford.
VW beetles were simple and easy to work on. If they still made them I would buy one over any newer cars. I can live without AC because I grew up without it.( The original. Not those things they made a few years ago.)
@TrashcanTroubadour certain brands have always been more labor intensive than others. The 3 VWs I owned almost never gave me trouble. Once a fuel pump quit. It's right on top of the motor, so I just took it off, walked a mile to a parts store and got another. Back on the road in less than an hour.
Poorly; every car behind you is expecting the same brake performance as those without modern brakes, so adding them means either only using them when no one is behind you, or getting rear-ended constantly.
It's legal today because it was legal in 1915. You can't retroactively create laws that make it no longer legal. When operated as it was designed to be operated, it will serve for another hundred years.
@@KB10GLthe entirety of the 2A community (and a sizeable portion of the 1A community) would like a word with you on that, but 8 get what you're saying.
Remember that the Model T was essentially an off road vehicle. In the 1910s, there were no such things as 'roads' as you think of them. A better comparo would be to take a Model T through a muddy rutted field and through a stream. Then try the same thing with any modern family sedan.
The Citroen CV2 was designed for the same purpose, more or less. It had to be able to carry a basket of eggs across a rough or muddy field without any of the eggs breaking.
@@merleshand2442 SUVs just take up space. For this reason, they are growing increasingly unwelcome in European streets. Legislation is being enacted to make them very expensive to run in cities.
US sedan, asian sedan or european? Because i am pretty sure an Audi quattro or Mercedes 4matic has no problem with that as long as you dont flood the engine.
Now I want to test that so bad. I drive a newish Challenger and it does not like the snow 😂 I’ve learned to control it enough to drift through corners since basically anything over 10mph makes it start going sideways. But to experience minimal to no sliding while in traffic in deep snow sounds wonderful on so many levels
45mph in any Edwardian era car is terrifying. And a T is barely a step above a horseless carriage. In the same time period, a few people/companies built a few cars that would sustain over 100 mph (for breaking speed records), but were no safer than the T..
The Model T does have brakes, just not implemented the same way modern cars do: that pedal under your right foot is the Transmission brake and the parking brake lever can be utilized as an emergency brake.
Many accidents happened from people trying to stop their machine by pulling the steering wheel and hollering woah! Operating a machine instead of a horse drawn wagon took some getting used to.
@@mowlessbeemore2107The gearbox works by having belt connected to the pedals. The belts gets tightened by the push of the pedals, onto different drums which do different things, like 1st gear and reverse. One of these drums is the braking drum, so when you push the brake pedal, the friction created on the belt when it tightens around the brake drum will slow the car down. Imagine you would tighten a lever against the driveshaft of your car to slow it down, that's essentially what this is doing.
My grandfather has a 1927 model T, but with disk brakes and aluminium wheels, and drives it everywhere. Some of my favourite details are that the gas tank is below the front seat, and that the floor boards are made out of broken down shipping crates.
For the time; the model T was one of the first vehicles meant for traveling through the wilderness. It has literally the same amount of suspension as a jeep.
Did the Model T's have rear differentials, so they could drive both rear wheels? Or did they just have one wheel drive? One wheel drive would be terrible for off-roading.
My dream is to have a model a pick up truck that would be so awesome. I would totally drive it. They’re all out of my price range, but I would like to have one.
My parent's first car was a Ford A farm truck. It had wooden floorboards and you could see the road passing by underneath you, through the holes in the floorboards that connected the pedals to the engine! They lived in rural West Australia and Dad bought the truck so that he could get his tomatoes to market (he was a market gardener).
@@coltringcoltring7448 not sure, he passed away in 2020 (not directly VID related), and sold it shortly before he passed. If i had the money at the time i wouldve bought that shit just for the memories of him ;(
@@zombl337og I had to think about what it was called myself for a couple minutes. I just heard grandma on The Waltons asking John Boy if she could be the first to ride in the rumble seat of his car when he was working to get it.
There's a guy in my town who drives a similar vintage car around once in a while. Sometimes when I'm driving through town, I'll see it parked outside one of the taverns or some other popular local spot. Neat car though.
I had a chance to drive one of those about thirty years ago. Felt really weird, slow, rickety, barely any braking power. But it was still super fun. The one I drove was a '23 model with the canvas top on it.
@@Isaac-ho8gh Tesla Is way more Dangerous too lithium battery can spotaneously combust explode and burn 4 days (it actually happened it's not made up) also software updates can lock you in the model T shouldn't be treated like a car but a tractor
I feel like a valuable piece of context is the wonderful smooth new road this is currently driving on. Yea it rides like a dream because infrastructure has updated past cobblestone and brick streets
We have a model T. It's a blast. We still have the wooden wheels. Mostly driving on dirt roads. Ours overheats quickly though. We never really go fast...
My grandmother talked about the Model A car! She used to carry water baskets on top of her head to have water at home in Spain 🇪🇸. Then they moved to California and they had a model A! ❤ what a shift.
Imagine how much fun it would be to see the freeway congested with a bunch of these at rush hour. Like Bumper Cars! No brakes. It’s amazing that humans exist. 😎❤️ Thanks for the adventure!
My uncle has a 1922 in his garage that he inherited from my grand father that recently passed way. I’ve had the pleasure of riding in it at car shows as a youngster. Great memories
My dad and his step-dad would use a Model T off-road in Kansas. They'd drive down to the river and fill a tub with water. Then one guy would walk down the river catching fish, while the other guy drove on down a ways and got out to start fishing on down. The first guy would spot the car, put his fish in the tub, drive it along past the other guy ...
I saw the full episode this taken from and what got me was even though the driver made so many comments about the sloppy steering but he kept turning loose of the wheel all together!
My Papaw (born 1918) told me a story. One of his dad's acquaintances owned a model T. Papaw, his dad, and several local men were riding with him into town. They came to a steep hill, and the owner made everyone get out and walk to the top because the car couldn't handle the extra weight. Maybe that's why whenever Papaw test drove a car, he'd always test it on a hill. 😂
man.. my uncle had one of these when i was little, and took me for a ride in it a few times, can confirm its super confortable. its got a clown horn too. these things are awesome
A real good childhood friend growing up, his grandpa used to make these things or replicas or whatever you call. It put together a few of them. I remember it's Grandpa used to give us a ride in the model t's They lived outside the small village in Northern Wisconsin So he could just take us on the Old country roads by the house so it wasn't a problem but man that thing was fun back then.
Cut through the muck and the mud pretty well too. That was before twin I beam, which gave you traction and steering in the pasture or ruts. This thing, im told you sat on the gas tank.
Wooden frame covered in steel . T ford light cheep. And very different . Epicyclic gearbox in the steering wheel . A crude sort of gearbox but loke an auto . Bands . Three peddles low hi and reverse ! Great fun .
One day Dad found a big stump in the paddock he was ploughing. Some jelly to get it out the ground, then he drove a T (we had two) up to it across the ploughed ground, tied a rope to this stump about a foot thick and 6 feet long, and pulled it out the paddock with the T.
Growing up we had a neighbor that would fix up old cars like model ts and you could hear him coming down the road
Coming
Never coming up the road.
Why?
Did he have a loud voice? 🤔
@@TranceAholicCarl9088 one time he did, he rolled coal and sparks flew. looked like fireworks down at the old mill
@@trueaussie9230Bs story, that's why 😂😂
Used to have a local guy who would drive a Model T into town for a summer festival. During the two day festival, he would completely dismantle the car into little bits and pieces, then re-assemble it and drive it back home.
Nice , бомбово
& each time there is always a piece or 2 leftover 😂
@@motog4-75😂😂😂
Actually the Model T came with a tool kit that you could disassemble the whole car with. Back then do- it- yourself was not just an option. It was a necessary in most locations.😊
Thats freaking awesome
Power brakes didn't exist back then. It was leg muscles and weight.
The model T was maxed out at 45 miles an hour and the engine would need new crankshaft bearings much sooner driving at 45 mph.
The cars didn't have oil pumps. The connecting rods dipped in oil at the bottom of the stroke.
When it was time for new bearings which were called babbits, the mechanic would have to make the the babbit/bearings and file them until the connecting rods fit. They were made of tin, copper and antimony.
Heck yeah! Awesome historical trivia rewind 🎉 incredible how far the engineering has went by 2024
Time to give it a built engine with Clevite bearings and proper oil galleries.
I've never seen or driven one, but I would imagine that even with full leg muscles and weight you still wouldn't have much braking power from 45 MPH in one of these. Not like what people would expect today, at least.
Isnt that what engine bearings are made of today ?
@@peterruiz6117 High-end aftermarket ones are clevite, yeah. IDK about normal ones. Probably just steel.
😂 “theres only two of them “ 😂
Banging through gears on the twisties.... Not in this thing!
I mean you could bang through gear
@@TFLcar I gather that’s not the best idea, though
@@TFLcarnot making of u bro just funny sounded to me at least keep the good work up do I’m rooting for ya🙏🔥
to be fair, high and low gear is all anyone really needs...even as late as the 1950s some cars had 2 speed push button (although automatic) transmissions, but 1st gear would get you to 55, and 2nd was good up to 110mph.
Just imagine what people back in the day thought the 1st time riding in one, went from a horse that can run around 40+ mph "short distances" to a machine that could do it as long as it had gas. It didn't get tired, it didn't get thirsty, & for the most part it didn't get sick. "Break downs would be equivalent to being sick"
One of the best inventions ever.
No one drove these first time round because they either were afraid of them, were poor, or didn’t like them enough to buy.
@@FlexedNoose
Plenty of people drove them, if not gasoline vehicles never would've caught on. I'm sure not the ones that couldn't afford them but the ones that could did.
And that's why Henry Ford invented the assembly line to make them more affordable for everyone.
Adoption was slow because a lot of people got car sick. They weren't raised in something that would go that fast but didn't move like a horse. Plus, there weren't a lot of gas stations around, so "range anxiety" was real.
Don't forget Harley Davidson's...
They didn’t have many suitable roads back in the day
The little sputter it gives off is so old movies classic. I would LOVE TO RIDE IN ONE!
The Henry Ford Museum gives rides, and they're all different colors, too. Red, green, blue, and black, if I remember right. If you go, look for the section called "Greenwich Village". Happy travels!🙂
Me TOO
The engine had a very unique 25HP sound!
My cousin has one. I had just been watching a channel that's all about these cars when we went for a visit and I to see one up close. He bet me $100 that I wouldn't be able to get it started up (I'm a good mechanic with lots of experience with older cars but had never touched a model T). It had never been converted to an electric starter, but having just seen a video showing the process a few weeks earlier, I walked away proud with a crisp Benjamin! Had I not come across that channel, I don't think I could have done it. There's a lever on the steering wheel to slow and advance the timing that's critical to have just right for cold starts beside the standard choke and throttle. And obviously it had to be hand cranked which I've only ever done on a tractor I have even though I have a few cars with the option to. They're neat cars and I appreciate those who have kept them around for us to see, but I'd never want to own one!
Pretty cool! Yeah my uncle has a store of them....👀 haven't gotten to ride in one of those yet. Soon enough. They are rad.
Electric start came on most later versions of the model T. Not sure if it was made standard or if it was just an option but there was also two types of ignition coils too.
I drove a later pickup version, 1927 from TN to NJ about 25 years ago. The truck had been sitting for 20+ years but a relative had pumped up the tires, got the motor running and told me to come get it if I wanted it. He actually drove it about 100 miles to meet me near the TN state line and I drove it home avoiding major highways the rest of the way. Surprisingly the thing did just fine, it was slow, and I regularly had to keep topping off the coolant and oil but nothing extreme. The brakes were weak but sufficient until I got into the hills with it. I still have it but haven't driven it in quite a while. It sits in the back of the garage. Since it was bought my new by my grandfather, I'll likely die with it.
Comfort wise, its a tight fit for a big man, but not as bad as a model A for some reason. I drove a model A sedan from VA to NJ once and it was the most miserable uncomfortable drive I ever did. At 6ft3in tall there was no room for me to both shif and work the pedals, and I had to open the door to use the clutch pedal. If I had known how tight they were I'd have had it brought up by flatbed truck. Mechanically the model A is superior but size wise I suppose they didn't have tall guys in mind when they designed it.
Good job! My buddy made me start his once or twice and it's kind of scary. Most people probably don't know that it's a good way to get your thumb or elbow dislocated if you do it wrong.
A few years back a friend owned a '25 T roadster. We were at a cruise in show. He bet me I couldn't start the T and drive it away. Little did he know I drove a Model T before that belonged to a relative. Started it and drove it away much to his surprise. He paid for lunch that day. Yes, call your stops with T models. Mechanical rear brakes only.
The Ford Model T came with a tool kit with which you could disassemble the entire car with. Back then do-it- yourself was a necessary not just an option.😊
Theyre very simple with enough knowledge.
It doesnt take much to understand them, and that was the birth of the mechanic.
Anyone who could do the work and understand it better than their naighbor. Became the man to go to for repairs. And he became the machanic.
Ty ford.
VW beetles were simple and easy to work on. If they still made them I would buy one over any newer cars. I can live without AC because I grew up without it.( The original. Not those things they made a few years ago.)
@TrashcanTroubadour certain brands have always been more labor intensive than others. The 3 VWs I owned almost never gave me trouble. Once a fuel pump quit. It's right on top of the motor, so I just took it off, walked a mile to a parts store and got another. Back on the road in less than an hour.
@CitizenDirt tell that to the Germans
It's a ford gotta fix or repair daily. 😂
I wonder how well an entrepreneur could do in those years, selling an aftermarket brake kit that was up to today's standards.
Poorly; every car behind you is expecting the same brake performance as those without modern brakes, so adding them means either only using them when no one is behind you, or getting rear-ended constantly.
@Cloud30000 a worthy point,
But it could still save a pedestrians life, just as a for instance
Back then you probably saw a car every 40 minutes on most streets
You’d literally fly through the front windshield 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Nationof300 Excellent point.
Superior stopping force calls for superior restraint
this is street legal, but a 1990’s japanese kei mini truck isnt?
Road laws are wacky like that
It's legal today because it was legal in 1915. You can't retroactively create laws that make it no longer legal.
When operated as it was designed to be operated, it will serve for another hundred years.
@@KB10GL kei trucks were legal before
@@KB10GLwhat are you talking about ? They change laws all the time 😂
@@KB10GLthe entirety of the 2A community (and a sizeable portion of the 1A community) would like a word with you on that, but 8 get what you're saying.
I love how the quick solution when the wood spokes of the wheels would shrink was to park the car in a creek overnight to expand the wood.
It was basically a horseless carriage!!!🐎
Remember that the Model T was essentially an off road vehicle. In the 1910s, there were no such things as 'roads' as you think of them. A better comparo would be to take a Model T through a muddy rutted field and through a stream. Then try the same thing with any modern family sedan.
The Citroen CV2 was designed for the same purpose, more or less. It had to be able to carry a basket of eggs across a rough or muddy field without any of the eggs breaking.
Most modern "SUVs" can't go where these can
Yep. 😂
We had fun on our trailbikes 40 years ago.
There were still dirt roads and tracks.
@@merleshand2442
SUVs just take up space. For this reason, they are growing increasingly unwelcome in European streets. Legislation is being enacted to make them very expensive to run in cities.
US sedan, asian sedan or european? Because i am pretty sure an Audi quattro or Mercedes 4matic has no problem with that as long as you dont flood the engine.
Best vehicle for getting through mud and snow. Tyres cut right down to the hard surface, and pretty good ground clearance.
Now I want to test that so bad. I drive a newish Challenger and it does not like the snow 😂 I’ve learned to control it enough to drift through corners since basically anything over 10mph makes it start going sideways. But to experience minimal to no sliding while in traffic in deep snow sounds wonderful on so many levels
My grandfather drove one from NY to California through route 66 in the summer.
45mph in any Edwardian era car is terrifying. And a T is barely a step above a horseless carriage. In the same time period, a few people/companies built a few cars that would sustain over 100 mph (for breaking speed records), but were no safer than the T..
Funniest part is the Chevy camera car lol
“Chevy camera”
@@randomtransitadventures did bro forget how to read
@@WheaggWhat’s a “to read”?
LOL
I guess it is to showing that this video is NOT sponsored by Ford
And it almost got overtaken by a Ford😂
The Model T does have brakes, just not implemented the same way modern cars do: that pedal under your right foot is the Transmission brake and the parking brake lever can be utilized as an emergency brake.
Yup, it's drum brakes are mostly at the rear end,
Many accidents happened from people trying to stop their machine by pulling the steering wheel and hollering woah! Operating a machine instead of a horse drawn wagon took some getting used to.
You down shifted to brake?
@@mowlessbeemore2107The gearbox works by having belt connected to the pedals. The belts gets tightened by the push of the pedals, onto different drums which do different things, like 1st gear and reverse. One of these drums is the braking drum, so when you push the brake pedal, the friction created on the belt when it tightens around the brake drum will slow the car down. Imagine you would tighten a lever against the driveshaft of your car to slow it down, that's essentially what this is doing.
Well at least you can go faster than the Amish!!
There is no telling how many of those my Papaw junked in his day!
You must've not seen that one Amish dude drift his horse and carriage....sparks and all..
Yeah most likely. But probably not their horses,
@goodguy...badrep. oh yea I remember that. Crazy sh*t.
My grandfather has a 1927 model T, but with disk brakes and aluminium wheels, and drives it everywhere. Some of my favourite details are that the gas tank is below the front seat, and that the floor boards are made out of broken down shipping crates.
For the time; the model T was one of the first vehicles meant for traveling through the wilderness. It has literally the same amount of suspension as a jeep.
Did the Model T's have rear differentials, so they could drive both rear wheels? Or did they just have one wheel drive?
One wheel drive would be terrible for off-roading.
@@carultch Look it up.
Built by Dodge Brothrtd to Henry's idea. Their transmission made it successful
Ironically today's dodge transmissions suck
Love the bumper shot - so dynamic!
I have a model T and no its not that bad, smooth ride and lots of looks!
But trust me, 45 in a Ford model T is absolutely terrifying🤣
Great video! I love to see old things still going😃
man i love 1977 Ford f 150 super cab ac cold breaks are good 64k miles daily diver
piss on the floor
pickup trucks suck
@@randomtransitadventuresolder ones are pretty nice tho
@@randomtransitadventuresfound the car guy
I prefer Toyota pickups and SUVs, mainly ones between the 90s and 00s, very reliable mfs
At first I thought some guy was recording you while you just drove at him
The hand throttle is a feature present on tractors from this era, and even ones made way after.
Driving that car must have been awesome.
So long as you don’t pump it all the way up to 45, then I imagine it becomes close to horrifying
It is when it first came out
Done so for years, it's great. Most people don't 'get it' though
Got to drive one down a dirt road near Yosemite. It's a pretty capable off-road vehicle. There's lots of clearance and low-end torque.
My dream is to have a model a pick up truck that would be so awesome. I would totally drive it. They’re all out of my price range, but I would like to have one.
My parent's first car was a Ford A farm truck. It had wooden floorboards and you could see the road passing by underneath you, through the holes in the floorboards that connected the pedals to the engine! They lived in rural West Australia and Dad bought the truck so that he could get his tomatoes to market (he was a market gardener).
“Gotta brake fast! Quick throw out the anchor”
"James, we're going to be killed!"
I had a friend who owned one in Los Angeles. Late 80's early 90's and we would cruise around in it. Hope Lewis is going great. It's been many years.
rumor has it, he's still rolling down that road.
Love the videos of them driving this.
I had the joy of riding in one often as a child. Great cars!
For a second, I thought it had been retrofit withbsome kind of disc break at the front wheels.
my grandpas has a modtel t with the bumper seat in the back
Is it the Doctor Coupe ?
What, like a rumble seat?
@@julienielsen3746 thats what i meant, just used the wrong word lol
@@coltringcoltring7448 not sure, he passed away in 2020 (not directly VID related), and sold it shortly before he passed. If i had the money at the time i wouldve bought that shit just for the memories of him ;(
@@zombl337og I had to think about what it was called myself for a couple minutes. I just heard grandma on The Waltons asking John Boy if she could be the first to ride in the rumble seat of his car when he was working to get it.
There's a guy in my town who drives a similar vintage car around once in a while. Sometimes when I'm driving through town, I'll see it parked outside one of the taverns or some other popular local spot. Neat car though.
Good spooky car still in working condition 😀 like it.
I've driven one, it was a blast. My grandfather restored it, and would bring Santa to the neighborhood sitting in the rumble seat. Wonderful.
How do you stop if there is no brakes?
Stop giving it gas
Foot break and yelling Yabadabadoo !!
Find a hill
Downshift
Jump out of the seat into a tuck and roll
No brakes ? 😯
Yeah who needs them anyway 🤷🏽♂️😊
brakes are for quitters 😂
My old man use to have an old model T. Great stories
I had a chance to drive one of those about thirty years ago. Felt really weird, slow, rickety, barely any braking power. But it was still super fun. The one I drove was a '23 model with the canvas top on it.
that voice you're doing should be considered a war crime
It's Blippi
That's his normal voice 😂
So how do you break?
I think he means that there are breaks but they are very weak
Brake and brakes!
Use the Flintstone method. Fred can give you some pointers.
@@nickpalance3622Through the courtesy of Fred's two feet ...
@@michaelt.anderson4430 until it breaks
Immense skill. Ive switched to timed kick out because of inspiration from your vids and its worked out pretty good, gonna watch more content niw
My great uncle had 2 of these. And a M-38 Jeep. And a Piper Cub.
You should try an engine swap or so it’s got a v8
No
Yeah
i would take this over any Tesla
Despite Model Ts also being rather dangerous, fair enough lol
@@Isaac-ho8gh Tesla Is way more Dangerous too lithium battery can spotaneously combust explode and burn 4 days (it actually happened it's not made up) also software updates can lock you in
the model T shouldn't be treated like a car but a tractor
Idiot 😂
That's cool! I've seen a bunch of these but never actually seen anybody driving one. Lol👍🏼
I feel like a valuable piece of context is the wonderful smooth new road this is currently driving on. Yea it rides like a dream because infrastructure has updated past cobblestone and brick streets
We went 30-35mph in home made gocarts in the 80s.
Grow some sack.
Jew flattening machine 😅
Best comment ever!❤❤❤
Traveling from newyork to California gona take days
Still does!
Yup. With a light load, my truck governed at 68, coupled with fed regs, it takes me just over four days to make that trip.
Hearing that car reminds me of when I was a kid watching the Waltons
We have a model T. It's a blast. We still have the wooden wheels. Mostly driving on dirt roads. Ours overheats quickly though. We never really go fast...
My grandmother talked about the Model A car! She used to carry water baskets on top of her head to have water at home in Spain 🇪🇸. Then they moved to California and they had a model A! ❤ what a shift.
My grandad restored a 1925 Model T from the floor boards up and I remember riding in it
Imagine how much fun it would be to see the freeway congested with a bunch of these at rush hour. Like Bumper Cars! No brakes.
It’s amazing that humans exist.
😎❤️
Thanks for the adventure!
Everytime I'm in my Dad's model T's I can't help but smile from ear to ear!
"Los clásicos no mueren" 💪🏼
"Classics never die" 💪🏼
Saludos desde Venezuela 🇻🇪
Best regards from Venezuela 🇻🇪
I drove through south central LA in one of these with my grandfather. Man we got so many looks.
Soy de Posadas Misiones Argentina supimos tener un Ford t de 1926 era una hermosura.
A guy I reenact with has a Ford model t ambulance from ww1, coolest thing I've seen brought to reenactments in a while
The shocks are cracking me up 😂
"It's like you're always stuck in second gear" gets a whole new meaning
Awesome Video!😊
Looks like FUN ❤
You got to love the driving experience with push and pray brakes
Good to see you are wearing protective glasses.
My uncle has a 1922 in his garage that he inherited from my grand father that recently passed way. I’ve had the pleasure of riding in it at car shows as a youngster. Great memories
You sold me on “ no break at all “ part. Easy maintenance 🤙
A work of art ❤
Its beautiful.
Growing up in Maine, my dad used to collect model T’s and restore them
My dad and his step-dad would use a Model T off-road in Kansas. They'd drive down to the river and fill a tub with water. Then one guy would walk down the river catching fish, while the other guy drove on down a ways and got out to start fishing on down. The first guy would spot the car, put his fish in the tub, drive it along past the other guy ...
I saw the full episode this taken from and what got me was even though the driver made so many comments about the sloppy steering but he kept turning loose of the wheel all together!
Man those thin wheels are terrifying
My Mother drove a Model T when she was young. Mom was born in 1916 and died in 2004. Love you Mom.
“It’s a ton of fun” he says in the most terrified voice
My Papaw (born 1918) told me a story. One of his dad's acquaintances owned a model T. Papaw, his dad, and several local men were riding with him into town. They came to a steep hill, and the owner made everyone get out and walk to the top because the car couldn't handle the extra weight.
Maybe that's why whenever Papaw test drove a car, he'd always test it on a hill. 😂
Some say they never stopped.
man.. my uncle had one of these when i was little, and took me for a ride in it a few times, can confirm its super confortable. its got a clown horn too. these things are awesome
My Grandfather had a 1914 T. he would drive it on weekends. My brother has it now.
You say its not usable in modern traffic when people are out here driving nissan altimas held together with duct tape and hope lmao
Gorgeous engineering
They called them flivvers in the Roaring '20s! (1920s)
Well that's just some 'ol flemflam!
@@HwoarangtheBoomerang 😂😂
Thats a cool Car!!
legend has it they are still rolling to a stop
Damned things will run for ever as long as you maintain them right.😊
A real good childhood friend growing up, his grandpa used to make these things or replicas or whatever you call. It put together a few of them. I remember it's Grandpa used to give us a ride in the model t's They lived outside the small village in Northern Wisconsin So he could just take us on the Old country roads by the house so it wasn't a problem but man that thing was fun back then.
Cut through the muck and the mud pretty well too.
That was before twin I beam, which gave you traction and steering in the pasture or ruts.
This thing, im told you sat on the gas tank.
Wooden frame covered in steel . T ford light cheep. And very different . Epicyclic gearbox in the steering wheel . A crude sort of gearbox but loke an auto . Bands . Three peddles low hi and reverse ! Great fun .
Hit the switch for the FLUBBER to kick in😊
"This ride is absolutely terrifying but it's a comfy ride!"
Dude you are literally living one of my dreams
"A lot of fun" fully terrified
My grandpa has one, and I remember it being such a bumpy ride that I felt sick
One day Dad found a big stump in the paddock he was ploughing. Some jelly to get it out the ground, then he drove a T (we had two) up to it across the ploughed ground, tied a rope to this stump about a foot thick and 6 feet long, and pulled it out the paddock with the T.