This article was first published in 2004.
|
The most important instrument in the motor vehicle has passed a remarkable
milestone. Just over one hundred years ago, the eddy current speedometer was
patented by engineer Otto Schulze at the Imperial Patent Office in
Berlin. The invention heralded
the introduction of measuring instruments in the automobile. Very soon, drivers
were getting a whole lot more than just current speed. Driven by the growing
demand for information at the wheel, and the dictates of public authorities, the
speedometer developed from an interesting option to the heart of modern driver
information systems.
At the outset of the automobile age, motorists had little need for a
speedometer. Vehicles were so slow that drivers could literally sense how fast
they were going and adjust their speed. The dangers associated with motoring
were comparatively limited. Only with increasing horsepower and greater speeds
did the early “horseless carriage” begin to travel faster than the driver’s
brain was able to reliably gauge and evaluate. The speedometer, until this time
a curious but dispensable gadget, then became much more useful. Motorists were
able to control their vehicle speed precisely and reliably, with less worry
about pushing a vulnerable machine beyond its limits. Government officials also
heavily promoted the use of speedometers. They viewed with alarm the increasing
speeds of vehicles, growing traffic density and the number of serious accidents
as justification for the first speed limits on public roads. And motorists
needed speedometers to avoid breaking the law.
The Technical History
Widespread interest in gauging speed did not appear until around 1835 with
the emergence of the railroad. At the time, numerous speedometers were
developed, but they were more or less unsuitable for use in the automobile. It
was Otto Schulze, the inventor from
Strasbourg, who finally succeeded in
developing a system for road vehicles with his ‘eddy current speedometer’.
Schulze used a flexible shaft to transmit the rotational speed of the wheel
or transmission to the speedometer, which was equipped with a permanent magnet
in constant rotation. Above the speedo magnet – but not in direct contact – was
a metal disc or metal cup attached to a pointer. The revolving magnet induced
“eddy currents” which the metal disc and pointer tried to follow. However,
because the metal disc was attached to a spring, it could only manage a slight
turning movement instead of a complete rotation. With the increasing speed of
the magnet, the force of the eddy currents rises so that the pointer on the
metal disc indicates a higher speed.
It was not until 1910 that automobile manufacturers such as Ford Motor Co.
began to include the speedometer as standard equipment. But the First World War
and the world economic depression of the 1930s kept production down.
Nevertheless, there were major advances. By the mid-1930s, an instrument cluster
attached to the steering column grouped all the important gauges and indicators
together, including those for engine revs, fuel, lights and turn signals.
Although integration at that time was limited to a common mounting plate for
separate scales and dials – a bracket really – it was nevertheless the first
step towards combining several different instruments into a single instrument
cluster.
It is not until the mid-1950s that automobile speed measurement enjoyed its
next major technology leap with the introduction of the electric speedo -
originally developed by VDO for city buses. Instead of communicating wheel
revolutions by means of a lengthy shaft, the rotational speed of the wheel or
transmission was transformed into an electric signal with a dynamo. An electric
motor on the speedometer then used this current to move the needle. Parallel to
this development, VDO developed a moving coil instrument in which the voltage
generated by the dynamo is displayed as the current speed. Also, a stepper motor
was developed to drive the odometer. It all fitted into an 80mm housing that
remained the worldwide speedometer standard well into the 1980s.
The age of the electronic speedometer began in the 1980s. Roller counters for
mileage were replaced by liquid crystal displays. Sensors in the vehicle network
took over the role of shafts, dynamos and rotating magnets. Stepper motors again
transformed electric pulses into pointer deflections using electronic control
systems. All the components were grouped tightly together in the driver’s line
of sight. At a glance, the driver could monitor complex information with a
choice of classic round instruments, text-based displays, indicator lights and
large monitors, or LCD for navigation and communication. The invention of the
light emitting diode, or LED, opened up completely new solutions for the
illumination of the instrument panel.
The graphic presentation of information has always been subject to certain
fashion trends. Sometimes there’s a roller instead of the round dial. Perhaps
only a section of the scale is displayed. There may even be a preference for
speed to be displayed in large digital figures behind the steering wheel. Still,
during the last 100 years, the instrument has retained its dominant
position.
Let’s take a look at how the speedo has visually changed over the last
century.
Speedos Through the Years
The date of birth of the speedo is generally regarded as 7 October 1902, when the Imperial
Patent Office in Berlingranted
Otto Schulze a patent for the eddy current speed indicator, based on an
electromagnetic principle. This image shows an O. S. eddy current speedometer
from 1908.
In the 1920s the company OTA (predecessor company of Siemens VDO Automotive
AG) advertised its instrument panels.
In the 1920s, not long after the speedometer became standard equipment on
many cars, it got a brother: the tachograph. This instrument displays vehicle
speed and makes a record of all speeds during an entire trip. The “Autograph” of
1926 additionally recorded the travelled distance and was therefore also knows
as time/distance recorder.
The speedometer was driven by a flexible shaft that was initially connected
to the wheel hub. For space reasons a further innovation in the design arrived
in 1930 - speedometers with angled transmissions.
In 1933, Kienzle introduced the TCO2 tachograph, a model which formed the
cornerstone of the company’s success for the next 30 years. The heart of the
TCO2 was a clock, a needle of steel or sapphire and a wax-coated disc which
acted as the recording medium.
By the 1940s a typical eddy current speedometer had already become a
sophisticated instrument with some 140 parts, including many needing to be
precision machined. This image shows a 1950s moped speedometer.
There have been numerous variations in the types of display since the 1950s
that followed certain fashions that often did not last long. This is a bicycle
speedometer with a “cheese corner” shape.
Horizontal and vertical indicating devices were extremely popular for a time,
but later disappeared completely from the automobile. There were flat indicators
in both horizontal and vertical form that rotated behind a slot in the
indicator. This is a cylindrical speedometer from the 1950s for Opel.
This photo shows a Volkswagen Beetle instrument from 1953 – note the reverse
sweep speedo.
On the vast majority of the eddy current speedometers – also on this example
of recent times – this driveshaft came out of the back of the speedometer in a
straight line with the pointer axis.
The age of the electronic speedometer began in the 1980s. Roller counters for
mileage were replaced by liquid crystal displays. Sensors in the vehicle network
took over the role of shafts, dynamos and rotating magnets. Shown here is a 1986
VW display.
The classic speedometer was - and still is - a round pointer instrument with
either concentric or eccentric scale. Despite all the variations in type and
form of the indicator, it is ultimately the original form of the analog round
display that has proved to be most popular in the long term.
Only with the development of new cockpit information systems has it been
possible to adapt to the changing demands of vehicles during the last 100 years.
This graphic shows an exploded view of the BMW 7 Series instrument cluster.
Siemens VDO Automotive has created the first car instrument cluster with a
TFT display for the new Audi A8 and thus opened up new degrees of freedom for
graphics and design.
Although vehicles today generate more data, commands and messages that have
to be transmitted, the driver is informed much faster and far more efficiently
than in the past. Siemens VDO Automotive AG is at work on exciting new
developments such as the colored head-up display, which will change information
management behind the steering wheel dramatically.
This photo shows Siemens VDO Automotive’s “Breeze” cockpit study which –
according to the company - integrates innovative operating elements into a
design of maritime and Mediterranean flair.
Siemens VDO Automotive AG
1902 Patent application by Otto Schulze to the Imperial Patent Office in
Berlin
1905 First production of instruments based on the Otto Schulze patent
1921 OSA Apparate GmbH, Frankfurtis founded by Adolf
Schindling, Georg Häuβler and Heinrich Lang for the “manufacture and sale of
speedometers for automobiles”
1925 Renamed OTA Apparate for name protection reasons
1928 Merger of the speedometer division of the Deuta Werke, Berlin with OTA
Apparate in Frankfurt to form VDO Tachometer AG - Vereinigte Deuta OTA,
Frankfurt
1929 Founding of the tachograph manufacturer, Kienzle
1992 Mannesmann-Kienzle is integrated into the VDO Group
1994 Complete takeover of VDO by Mannesmann AG
1997 Renamed Mannesmann VDO AG
2001 Siemens Automotive merges with Mannesmann VDO to form Siemens VDO
Automotive AG
|