Ever wonder who first planted the seed for the idea behind your 
speedy coupe or beastly SUV? The history of the automobile takes root in
 humble origins:
It
 all began with several Italians who recorded designs for wind-driven 
vehicles. First among them was Guido da Vigevano in 1335, who created a 
windmill type drive to gears and thus to wheels. Vaturio designed a 
similar vehicle which was also never built. Later, Leonardo da Vinci 
designed a clockwork-driven tricycle with tiller steering and a 
differential mechanism between the rear wheels.
In 
1712, Thomas Newcomen built his first steam engine. It had a cylinder 
and a piston and was the first of this kind to use steam as a condensing
 agent to form a vacuum and with an overhead walking beam, pull on a rod
 to lift water. The steam was not under pressure, so Newcomen's lift 
would have only been limited by the length of the rod and the strength 
of the valve at the bottom.  It was not until 1765 that James Watt 
developed the first pressurized steam engine, which proved to be much 
more efficient and compact than the Newcomen engine.
The
 first recorded vehicle to move under its own power was designed by Nicholas Joseph Cugnot and constructed by M. Brezin in 
1769. A second unit was built in 1770 which weighed 8000 pounds and had a
 top speed of 2 miles per hour on the cobblestone streets of Paris.
Above,
 you will see the first model on its first drive around Paris, when it 
hit and knocked down a stone wall. This unsteady prototype also had a 
tendency to tip over forward unless its weight was counterbalanced with a
 canon in the rear, for which purpose it was built to carry out.


 
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