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More Tributes

F is for Focus

~Cattereia:iconCattereia: reports, 12h 26m ago
One should always focus their work around what they want their viewer to see...

Stunning Animals: less than 100 faves

~LiveLaughRide:iconLiveLaughRide: reports, 18h 18m ago
Celebrating all creatures, weird and wonderful, in stunning photography with under 100 faves!

Embrace the Cliché 001: Shadows of Hearts in Books

*Lamarcus:iconLamarcus: reports, 1d 3h ago
The first in a series of tributes to dA's most beloved clichés.

More Mermaids on DeviantART #5 July Feature

=raine-angel:iconraine-angel: reports, 1d 2h ago
Mermaids on deviantART our 5th feature for July!
22 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: ~carlylyn

MEMBER FEATURE & CONTESTS

=ShadowDeviantsClub:iconShadowDeviantsClub: reports, 1d 12h ago
This weeks feature from our members! And member contest info
7 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: ~phoenix-18

Featuring Our Subscription Donators

=SkyAndNatureClub:iconSkyAndNatureClub: reports, 1d 9h ago
:star: Featuring Our Subscription Donators :star: Give them some love and support ! :w00t:

Make a Difference #20

=3wyl:icon3wyl: reports, 1d 11h ago
Make a Difference aims to do exactly that. This series of articles will hopefully make a difference to you as well as the artists featured. Just by giving one minute of your time to write constructive comments, favourites and even watches will make a difference to these artists. Click here to make a difference today!

Fatal Attraction vol I

=CRcerberus:iconCRcerberus: reports, 1d 20h ago
Sexy collection with some fatal womans in the history of comics & videogames from east to west.
38 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: *ASSESINA

Great Collection of Villains

=CRcerberus:iconCRcerberus: reports, 2d 9h ago
A small collection, remembering some great villains from the anime's history, comics, TV cartoons, video games, movies and more!..

In dedication to Inqy

=Travis-Person:iconTravis-Person: reports, 2d 20h ago
Angel Yates (A.K.A. Inqy) was one of the greatest artists on DA. She had her whole life ahead of her with her Husband and daughter. But for currently unknown reasons, Angel Yates will never be given the chance to reach her full potential.

Tributes This Week

SHOW US WHERE YOU LIVE FEATURE - WONDERFUL-WORLD

=Wonderful-World:iconWonderful-World: reports, July 7
We asked our members to show us where they live at the =Wonderful-World club and here are the deviations they sent us...

:wow: WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD :clap: :earth: :heart:

Angel "Inqy" Yates 7feb.1980 - 7jul.2009

=anda0105:iconanda0105: reports, July 9
In memoriam of a great person, artist and friend here on deviantArt.
33 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: ~Corsico

Best of June 2009 !

=SkyAndNatureClub:iconSkyAndNatureClub: reports, July 7
Best of June 2009 We feature the best submissions in every month in a news article. Come and have a look at the best of June 2009 ! :w00t:

Fatal Attraction vol I

=CRcerberus:iconCRcerberus: reports, 1d 20h ago
Sexy collection with some fatal womans in the history of comics & videogames from east to west.
38 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: *ASSESINA

In dedication to Inqy

=Travis-Person:iconTravis-Person: reports, 2d 20h ago
Angel Yates (A.K.A. Inqy) was one of the greatest artists on DA. She had her whole life ahead of her with her Husband and daughter. But for currently unknown reasons, Angel Yates will never be given the chance to reach her full potential.

Fantastical Feline Feature

=JasmineJean:iconJasmineJean: reports, July 9
Thanks for viewing!
81 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: *substar

They have UNDER 9000

=HinoNeko:iconHinoNeko: reports, July 7
. . . pageviews, that is.
49 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: ~Batfood

More Mermaids on DeviantART #5 July Feature

=raine-angel:iconraine-angel: reports, 1d 2h ago
Mermaids on deviantART our 5th feature for July!
22 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: ~carlylyn

Condemned to R 'N' R

=CRcerberus:iconCRcerberus: reports, July 9
A small collection of iconic figures in the history of Rock N' Roll.
57 comments   Tributes  Last +fav: *Deepsies

Undercurrent : Issue #009

*Cyantre:iconCyantre: reports, July 8
A weekly news article featuring the work of various, often under-appreciated deviants.

Tributes


Go Pimp My Ride

*GramMoo:iconGramMoo: reports, January 12, 2008
Go Pimp My Ride

:star: This weeks feature is a tribute of a collection of awesome automobiles, with a little bit of history too :nod:

Past-Present-Future and The Unexpected

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Automobiles may not have been born in the 20th century, but they were not yet out of diapers when it began. Even after Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz introduced their improved four stroke internal combustion engine, autos in both the United States and Europe were still poking along at a few miles an hour (a sizable proportion of them still running on electricity or steam). They could boast no battery starter, roof, or windows and were priced only for the rich. Then Henry Ford fine-tuned the mass production of his Tin Lizzie and the world drove off into the age of affordable transportation—forever altering our notions of place, distance, and community.


1901 The telescope shock absorber developed

C. L. Horock designs the "telescope" shock absorber, using a piston and cylinder fitted inside a metal sleeve, with a one-way valve built into the piston. As air or oil moves through the valve into the cylinder, the piston moves freely in one direction but is resisted in the other direction by the air or oil. The result is a smoother ride and less lingering bounce. The telescope shock absorber is still used today.

1901 Olds automobile factory starts production

The Olds automobile factory starts production in Detroit. Ransom E. Olds contracts with outside companies for parts, thus helping to originate mass production techniques. Olds produces 425 cars in its first year of operation, introducing the three-horsepower "curved-dash" Oldsmobile at $650. The car is a success; Olds is selling 5,000 units a year by 1905.

1902 Standard drum brakes are invented

Standard drum brakes are invented by Louis Renault. His brakes work by using a cam to force apart two hinged shoes. Drum brakes are improved in many ways over the years, but the basic principle remains in cars for the entire 20th century; even with the advent of disk brakes in the 1970s, drum brakes remain the standard for rear wheels.

1908 William Durant forms General Motors

William Durant forms General Motors. His combination of car producers and auto parts makers eventually becomes the largest corporation in the world.

1908 Model T introduced

Henry Ford begins making the Model T. First-year production is 10,660 cars.

Cadillac is awarded the Dewar Trophy by Britain’s Royal Automobile Club for a demonstration of the precision and interchangeability of the parts from which the car is assembled. Mass production thus makes more headway in the industry.

1911 Electric starter introduced

Charles Kettering introduces the electric starter. Until this time engines had to be started by hand cranking. Critics believed no one could make an electric starter small enough to fit under a car’s hood yet powerful enough to start the engine. His starters first saw service in 1912 Cadillacs.

1913 First moving assembly line for automobiles developed

Ford Motor Company develops the first moving assembly line for automobiles. It brings the cars to the workers rather than having workers walk around factories gathering parts and tools and performing tasks. Under the Ford assembly line process, workers perform a single task rather than master whole portions of automobile assembly. The Highland Park, Michigan, plant produces 300,000 cars in 1914. Ford’s process allows it to drop the price of its Model T continually over the next 14 years, transforming cars from unaffordable luxuries into transportation for the masses.

1914 First car body made entirely of steel

Dodge introduces the first car body made entirely of steel, fabricated by the Budd Company. The Dodge touring car is made in Hamtramck, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit.

1919 First single foot pedal to operate coupled four-wheel brakes

The Hispano-Suiza H6B, a French luxury car, demonstrates the first single foot pedal to operate coupled four-wheel brakes. Previously drivers had to apply a hand brake and a foot brake simultaneously.

1922 First American car with four-wheel hydraulic brakes

The Duesenberg, made in Indianapolis, Indiana, is the first American car with four-wheel hydraulic brakes, replacing ones that relied on the pressure of the driver’s foot alone. Hydraulic brakes use a master cylinder in a hydraulic system to keep pressure evenly applied to each wheel of the car as the driver presses on the brake pedal.

1926 First power steering system

Francis Wright Davis uses a Pierce-Arrow to introduce the first power steering system. It works by integrating the steering linkage with a hydraulics system.

1931 First modern independent front suspension system

Mercedes-Benz introduces the first modern independent front suspension system, giving cars a smoother ride and better handling. By making each front wheel virtually independent of the other though attached to a single axle, independent front suspension minimizes the transfer of road shock from one wheel to the other.

1934 First successful mass-produced front-wheel-drive car

The French automobile Citroën Traction Avant is the first successful mass-produced front-wheel-drive car. Citroën also pioneers the all-steel unitized body-frame structure (chassis and body are welded together). Audi in Germany and Cord in the United States offer front-wheel drive.

1935 Flashing turn signals introduced

A Delaware company uses a thermal interrupter switch to create flashing turn signals. Electricity flowing through a wire expands it, completing a circuit and allowing current to reach the lightbulb. This short-circuits the wire, which then shrinks and terminates contact with the bulb but is then ready for another cycle. Transistor circuits begin taking over the task of thermal interrupters in the 1960s.

1939 First air conditioning system added to automobiles

The Nash Motor Company adds the first air conditioning system to cars.

1940 Jeep is designed

Karl Pabst designs the Jeep, workhorse of WWII. More than 360,000 are made for the Allied armed forces.

Oldsmobile introduces the first mass-produced, fully automatic transmission.

1950s Cruise control is developed

Ralph Teeter, a blind man, senses by ear that cars on the Pennsylvania Turnpike travel at uneven speeds, which he believes leads to accidents. Through the 1940s he develops a cruise control mechanism that a driver can set to hold the car at a steady speed. Unpopular when generally introduced in the 1950s, cruise control is now standard on more than 70 percent of today’s automobiles.

1960s Efforts begin to reduce harmful emissions

Automakers begin efforts to reduce harmful emissions, starting with the introduction of positive crankcase ventilation in 1963. PCV valves route gases back to the cylinders for further combustion. With the introduction of catalytic converters in the 1970s, hydrocarbon emissions are reduced 95 percent by the end of the century compared to emissions in 1967.

1966 Electronic fuel injection system developed

An electronic fuel injection system is developed in Britain. Fuel injection delivers carefully controlled fuel and air to the cylinders to keep a car’s engine running at its most efficient.

1970s Airbags become standard

Airbags, introduced in some models in the 1970s, become standard in more cars. Originally installed only on the driver's side, they begin to appear on the front passenger side as well.

1970s Fuel prices escalate, driving demand for fuel-efficient cars

Fuel prices escalate, driving a demand for fuel-efficient cars, which increases the sale of small Japanese cars. This helps elevate the Japanese automobile industry to one of the greatest in the world.

1980s Japanese popularize "just in time" delivery of auto parts

The Japanese popularize "just in time" delivery of auto parts to factory floors, thus reducing warehousing costs. They also popularize statistical process control, a method developed but not applied in the United States until the Japanese demonstrate how it improves quality.

1985 Anti lock braking system (ABS) available on American cars

The Lincoln becomes the first American car to offer an antilock braking system (ABS), which is made by Teves of Germany. ABS uses computerized sensing of wheel movement and hydraulic pressure to each wheel to adjust pressure so that the wheels continue to move somewhat rather than "locking up" during emergency braking.

1992 Energy Policy Act of 1992 encourages alternative-fuel vehicles

Passage of the federal Energy Policy Act of 1992 encourages alternative- fuel vehicles. These include automobiles run with mixtures of alcohols and gasoline, with natural gas, or by some combination of conventional fuel and battery power.

1997 First American car maker offers automatic stability control

Cadillac is the first American car maker to offer automatic stability control, increasing safety in emergency handling situations.

***
source of history information found here [link]

Devious Comments

love 0 0 joy 1 1 wow 0 0 mad 0 0 sad 0 0 fear 0 0 neutral 0 0

*TJPHOTOGRAPHY:iconTJPHOTOGRAPHY: Jan 12, 2008, 11:54:14 PM
WOW...Thank you very much...I feel honored!

--
Every time an elder passes we loose a dictionary. Make footprints of your life to pass on.
~femalevsnature:iconfemalevsnature: Jan 13, 2008, 12:05:02 AM
Oh wow...I am honoured that you featured my hudson hornet..thank you!!!!!!!

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My Personal Website: [link]
*Pinktutu:iconPinktutu: Jan 13, 2008, 2:00:22 AM
Thank you for the feature! :dance:

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Ne Obliviscaris

Puzzle Pirates
^kkart:iconkkart: Jan 13, 2008, 2:37:30 AM
:w00t: THank you so much for featuring my work!

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deviantART Gallery Moderator of Photography>Animals, Plants & Nature
Join me in the Photography>Animal, Plants & Nature Chat [link]

website
~hyroshwf:iconhyroshwf: Jan 13, 2008, 4:09:28 AM
thanks for the feature :)

--
my heart is tuned to the quietness of which nature inspires
*GramMoo:iconGramMoo: Jan 13, 2008, 12:11:15 PM
You're welcome !

--
:star: “Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others.”
~Jonathan Swift


How to get page views without doing a thing. :lol:
*GramMoo:iconGramMoo: Jan 13, 2008, 12:11:27 PM
you're welcome ! :hug:

--
:star: “Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others.”
~Jonathan Swift


How to get page views without doing a thing. :lol:
*GramMoo:iconGramMoo: Jan 13, 2008, 12:11:40 PM
you're welcome ! :)

--
:star: “Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others.”
~Jonathan Swift


How to get page views without doing a thing. :lol:
*GramMoo:iconGramMoo: Jan 13, 2008, 12:11:59 PM
you're very welcome ! :)

--
:star: “Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others.”
~Jonathan Swift


How to get page views without doing a thing. :lol:
 

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