Vacuum Control (1938) Chevrolet Gearshift

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2010
  • AN EXPLANATION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF THE NEW VACUUM GEARSHIFT, AND HOW IT CONTRIBUTES TO COMFORT, EASE OF DRIVING, & SAFETY.
  • Авто/МотоАвто/Мото

Комментарии • 441

  • @Andrew-ep4kw
    @Andrew-ep4kw 8 лет назад +463

    Gotta love the guy handling a crap ton of mercury with his bare hands.

    • @punman5392
      @punman5392 7 лет назад +20

      Jared Connell It can be absorbed by your skin.

    • @SaberusTerras
      @SaberusTerras 7 лет назад +35

      Check out Cody's Lab.

    • @pc_screen5478
      @pc_screen5478 6 лет назад +35

      Matt Bowen only if it's injured. Your skin itself won't do that

    • @mokelv
      @mokelv 6 лет назад +27

      played with it all the time circa 1950

    • @edh2246
      @edh2246 5 лет назад +32

      When I was teen in the 60’s my brother bought a small bottle of mercury from the neighborhood drug store. We enjoyed playing with it. We liked to drop some on the floor and watch it burst into little beads and go everywhere. We also liked to shine pennys with it.

  • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
    @JohnLeePettimoreIII 5 лет назад +149

    Vacu-um
    Eff-fort
    Gotta love those careful and deliberate pronunciations.

    • @hotrodray9884
      @hotrodray9884 5 лет назад +16

      proper American english
      now lets tauk abut tars

    • @textech4056
      @textech4056 3 года назад +3

      I love the guy sucking on a cigar to demonstrate vacuum. Politically incorrect now.

  • @jakewagner7416
    @jakewagner7416 4 года назад +66

    "Greater safety for all."
    As they place an unsecured child in the front seat.
    How times have changed.

    • @Kit_Bear
      @Kit_Bear 2 года назад

      You stole my comment Sir ! :)

    • @ironcito1101
      @ironcito1101 Год назад +2

      Well, it _was_ greater safety than the unsecured child in the front seat entering the car on the side close to traffic 😛

    • @rhuttrho88
      @rhuttrho88 Год назад +1

      It was! Now we are all in danger from wimpy, whiney, grown up babies! The, they, them crowd!🙄

    • @__KursK__
      @__KursK__ 10 месяцев назад

      lmao

    • @David-vp3eq
      @David-vp3eq 4 месяца назад

      And the lab guy handles mercury with his bare hands. We had chads back then

  • @whitehorse1959
    @whitehorse1959 4 года назад +123

    I love the science lesson given in impeccable English as part of the overall advertisement for Chevy. Those times, those people are now gone. Lost, like tears in rain.

    • @jordanrodrigues1279
      @jordanrodrigues1279 4 года назад +6

      I wonder if it was because they were selling to a trained audience returning from the war.

    • @fredericgadoury6610
      @fredericgadoury6610 4 года назад +2

      And baby-boomers fuck this all up (not everyone it’s just the overall generation even though there are still positive things about it)

    • @pierremorin5397
      @pierremorin5397 3 года назад +2

      Impeccable english but with angry tone.

    • @LMike2004
      @LMike2004 3 года назад +4

      @@pierremorin5397 "Angry" or simply authoritative?

    • @chriskoop4888
      @chriskoop4888 3 года назад +3

      @@pierremorin5397 It does not sound angry to me, just more forceful.

  • @MeanGeneSanDiego
    @MeanGeneSanDiego 4 года назад +41

    The innovative thinking to place the shifter on the steering column! We couldn't wait to buy a Hurst shifter and put it back on the floor!😲

  • @p47thunderbolt68
    @p47thunderbolt68 4 года назад +50

    I remember when those gear shifts on the steering column would wear out you could by a "Hurst" floor shift for about $40.00 at a K Mart or an Advance Auto and replace it .
    Had to saw a hole on the floor and most transmissions had the bolt holes . Just hook up the linkage and it usually worked great .

    • @jimcollins3411
      @jimcollins3411 2 года назад +3

      Still can buy them new for some transmissions but not all of them .

    • @trainsntile
      @trainsntile Год назад +2

      My buddy bought a "somewhat" complete '57 Nomad project car (back in the 80's). The previous owner did just what you mentioned- ripped off the column shifter & cut a hole in the floor, even though he left the 3-speed trans in. He also didn't want the factory bench seat. He stuck in bucket seats. My buddy found the correct column shift lever & cut out the hump of a junk '57 & welded the 'patch' back into the floor. Last time I spoke to him, he was still trying to locate the correct bench seat, which was ONLY for the Nomad & ONLY for the '57!

    • @rhuttrho88
      @rhuttrho88 Год назад

      Pepperidge Farm remembers.🫡

  • @Mercmad
    @Mercmad 10 лет назад +41

    A friend of mine restored a 39 Chev a long time ago which had vacuum shift when new. During WW2 it was requisitioned by the US army ,whose engineers removed the vacuum shift and fitted a regular floor shift cover on the trans. When returned to it's owner at the end of the war it retained the floor shift. Obviously the military engineers felt it was an over complicated device that wasn't necessary.

    • @mendonesiac
      @mendonesiac 5 лет назад +8

      I'm going to assume that's why column shift didn't make it past the 70s, amazing it made it that far.

    • @redtra236
      @redtra236 5 лет назад +5

      Chevy made trucks in column shift until the mid 80's. The linkage is much longer though and can lock up. I can see why the military wouldn't want such a system.

    • @straightpipediesel
      @straightpipediesel 2 года назад +2

      @@redtra236 Foreign taxis, where they needed a front bench seat, were the last. Mercedes sold an E-Class with 4-speed column shift 1996, the Toyota Crown Comfort had a 5-speed column shift till 1999.

    • @redtra236
      @redtra236 Год назад

      @Bohappenstance Click It's still more complicated and more prone to failure though even if you're went that long without major issues. I don't think it's a bad design but I can see why the military mostly went with floor shifts.

  • @Catcrumbs
    @Catcrumbs 7 лет назад +151

    Tip for headphone users: pull the jack slightly out of the socket to hear in both ears.

    • @riperchetobg
      @riperchetobg 5 лет назад +15

      I am using bluetooth headphones ;(

    • @sreerajnr689
      @sreerajnr689 5 лет назад +13

      I saw this comment only after watching the whole video😢

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 5 лет назад +8

      Switch receiver to "mono" mode.

    • @unclebuck0
      @unclebuck0 5 лет назад +3

      Cool actually works

    • @jacknguyen3997
      @jacknguyen3997 5 лет назад +2

      Thanks, it works

  • @4seeableTV
    @4seeableTV 3 года назад +8

    These old film clips do a great job explaining the basics about cars.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 7 лет назад +453

    My right ear stills knows nothing about vacuum control.

    • @dahahaka
      @dahahaka 5 лет назад +16

      You have your headphones the wrong way

    • @thechosenone8466
      @thechosenone8466 4 года назад +6

      Its not stereo bruh. Just mono

    • @Alfalfa88888
      @Alfalfa88888 4 года назад +1

      woosh?

    • @AlainHubert
      @AlainHubert 4 года назад +22

      @@thechosenone8466
      Mono can also play in both audio channels if people uploading know what they're doing.

    • @dragonking7092
      @dragonking7092 4 года назад +3

      WTF I HAD ONE EAR OFF ON MY HEADPHONES I JUST GOT SO FREAKED OUT but then I realized the mono sound -_-

  • @exaviorvolgimesh8540
    @exaviorvolgimesh8540 5 лет назад +76

    Does anybody else get bummed out watching these old videos, knowing that most of the people featured in them are either dead or old😩 life is too short.

    • @normc62
      @normc62 4 года назад +7

      That kid at the end was probably a couple of years old, making him close to 85 years old now, if still living. My bet is everyone has passed on by now.

    • @TheJunky228
      @TheJunky228 4 года назад +5

      Never thought of that...I think about how these seem like better educational material than what we get nowadays... it feels like our education system has shifted and is now failing us

    • @erwinrommel2055
      @erwinrommel2055 3 года назад +1

      So nice to watch old video clips.

    • @pierremorin5397
      @pierremorin5397 3 года назад +3

      Be happy to be alive for now. Our turn to die will come like any person on earth.

    • @morenoortu9569
      @morenoortu9569 3 года назад

      @Muckin 4on yeah its so true...

  • @donmoore5716
    @donmoore5716 5 лет назад +35

    The only vacuum shift car I remember was my '68 "automatic" VW bug. When you pressed slightly on the shifter, a vacuum device engaged the clutch instead of using a clutch pedal. Yeah, it sucked.

    • @firebird9711
      @firebird9711 2 года назад +2

      I had a 67 floor shifter. Always wondered if that Auto Stickshift system worked well. Did you mean it sucked as in it was bad, or that it sucked as in, it uses vacuum?

    • @foxtrot312
      @foxtrot312 2 года назад

      A real vw bug with automatic anything... well that's Witchcraft

    • @valiroime
      @valiroime Год назад +1

      **rimshot** 🥁

    • @nzs316
      @nzs316 Год назад

      I never understood why they need the bug with an automatic transmission. It’s was just wrong.

  • @dhy5342
    @dhy5342 3 года назад +13

    The change from a floor shift to a column shift was mainly for passenger comfort. It meant you could have three passengers in the front seat or a driver with a close friend seated together.

    • @Riverrockphotos
      @Riverrockphotos Год назад +1

      Close friend lol.🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @daviddavidson2357
      @daviddavidson2357 Год назад +3

      Yeah, stops your 'close friend' from accidentally deepthorating the shift lever at night.

  • @officialbazzargaming
    @officialbazzargaming 7 лет назад +48

    My left ear loved this video

    • @rommysoeli
      @rommysoeli 7 лет назад +1

      me too, I think my right speaker cable on headphone broken

    • @Genaro_Flores
      @Genaro_Flores 4 года назад

      My right one missed it all

    • @gabodenos
      @gabodenos 3 года назад

      Use the audio in mono
      I write this to later xD (if i write bad i am sorry)

  • @robb.675
    @robb.675 7 лет назад +52

    I remember when the wipers used to be vacuum operated. They worked well until the car was going up a hill, and the vacuum was low, and the wipers almost quit working. How things have changed.

    • @bigstuff52
      @bigstuff52 6 лет назад

      me too Rob...

    • @mendonesiac
      @mendonesiac 5 лет назад +7

      The good old days, coming to a stop and your wipers do to.

    • @hotrodray9884
      @hotrodray9884 5 лет назад +2

      GM ....LOL

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 4 года назад +4

      @Casey Russel... only if you have an intake leak. Cars produce most vacuum at idle.

    • @rooftopvoter3015
      @rooftopvoter3015 3 года назад +2

      I remember when the wipers used to be vacuum operated. They worked well until the car was going up a hill, and the vacuum was low, and the wipers almost quit working. How things have changed.
      Going downhill, your wipers would redline until you reached level ground.

  • @andyharman3022
    @andyharman3022 3 года назад +2

    Vacuum power was in the public discourse back then. There were even proposals to to make a trans-Atlantic vacuum tube to propel people-carrying pods across the ocean.

  • @bcgrittner
    @bcgrittner 3 года назад +3

    My late father talked about the vacuum shift going out on his late 30's Chevrolet. He bought a full manual shift linkage conversion kit. But then he discovered oil ports in the vacuum shift assembly. A few drops of oil and the vacuum shift came back to life. The conversion kit went to the junk yard in 1963.

    • @MrJohnnyDistortion
      @MrJohnnyDistortion 3 года назад

      If he only had Google or RUclips he could have found the answer.

  • @frankbiz
    @frankbiz 3 года назад +10

    Old information but still on point. You learn something from these videos all the time. Thanks. Amazing the effort that went into these videos.

  • @1979mackdriver
    @1979mackdriver 4 года назад +5

    I remember the coal furnace cleaners , a good number of the chimney sweep companys also offered the service. I used to watch them when I was a kid . I saw a patch blow off a bag once boy o boy what a mess ..

  • @machia0705
    @machia0705 5 лет назад +16

    You can learn a lot from these early presentations.
    Newer presentations are often confusing.

    • @isaiahkmwale1959
      @isaiahkmwale1959 4 года назад

      Yes very much confusing

    • @Kevin-jb2pv
      @Kevin-jb2pv 2 года назад +2

      I think this is for 2 reasons:
      1) the tech today that's being explained is way more advanced and a lot more abstract (not physical, mechanical stuff you can see and feel)
      2) A lot of the times these folks were made for people who may have only received a 3rd grade education before they had to help on the farm or start working in the factory. They're made for people who are assumed to be much less educated. This was legit a problem in WW2, and you'll notice that a lot of the time the educational films for the military will pause for weirdly-long periods of time (by today's standards) whenever there is text on screen to give the people watching, _who may actually be almost illiterate,_ time to sound out the words, if they need to, and keep up.
      Doesn't mean that these films aren't great. They're fantastic for explaining basic, universal, timeless concepts precisely because they are intentionally made to be as simple as possible. And also because a lot of the times they will explain the same thing over and over in different ways to cast as wide a net as possible. The one thing I think has been lost with 3D modeling is when they build actual, physical models of what they're demonstrating right in front of you, which really helps to make these concepts seem real.

    • @machia0705
      @machia0705 2 года назад

      @@Kevin-jb2pv
      I instruct people on concrete placement and testing, basic engineering principles and construction techniques. These people range from every level of education and they all understand what I’m saying because I put it in basic and tangible terms. A more technical question gets an answer, but without solid basics people get confused.
      But I also understand your point.
      Perhaps presentations should be presented as basic as possible no matter how complex the subject matter, unless you know the education level of your audience.
      What I’m referring to are presentations for example, about lawn mower repair.
      Watch a film from the 1950’s vs a RUclips presentation today. One is very concise and full of information, that being the one from the 1950’s. The newer one is often rushed and assumes that the audience knows more than they do.
      Just my opinion. Thanks for the comment.

  • @DamnStraightM35A2
    @DamnStraightM35A2 13 лет назад +42

    Nowadays "a flip of the finger " while driving usually means something else.....

  • @johnmarshall4442
    @johnmarshall4442 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for finding this old film footage ( video ) really cool how this was explained.

  • @4570govt8
    @4570govt8 2 месяца назад

    Love these old videos. These are so interesting.

  • @YOUGOTIT210
    @YOUGOTIT210 11 лет назад +12

    I agree. A lot of "old ideas" are still good ideas.

  • @YMSI1
    @YMSI1 3 года назад +6

    Oh, I appreciate my amp's mono mode more now

  • @davegilbertmusic
    @davegilbertmusic 3 года назад +3

    That vacuum assist shifter was offered by Chevrolet in 1939, it cost $10

    • @foxtrot312
      @foxtrot312 2 года назад +2

      Wow! 10 bucks was worth a lot back then

    • @trainsntile
      @trainsntile Год назад +1

      A good amount of $$ for the time!

  • @soavioes153
    @soavioes153 4 года назад +2

    Good footage, clear vision in 1938. Very good.

  • @tonyfremont
    @tonyfremont 3 года назад +2

    Over 45 years of working on cars and I've never once seen this system on one. Lots of other vacuum controlled things though, like cruise control, power brakes, automatic transmission shift firmness, headlight covers and even windshield wiper motors.

    • @trainsntile
      @trainsntile Год назад

      My mom had vacuum wipers on her 60 Mercury Comet. Crapiest set up I've ever seen. You're waiting at a stop light & the wipers are going 240. Step on the accelerator & they'd slow to a snail's pace! After 8 years of this, my mom asked my dad to get her a new car

  • @TeeroyHammermill
    @TeeroyHammermill 9 лет назад +93

    Didn't need child safety seats or seatbelts back in 1938.

    • @VinnyDaQ
      @VinnyDaQ 8 лет назад +15

      dstarks80 Nah, let them die, we'll just have more kids. : P

    • @addagwenlyn9662
      @addagwenlyn9662 8 лет назад +3

      +dstarks80 Yeah, we wouldn't need those for another 30 years. Did you notice this car had emergency brakes ? We no longer have those either, they're now parking brakes. Whatever, they never did work in emergencies any how.

    • @mdogg1604
      @mdogg1604 7 лет назад +7

      My '52 Plymouth had a true E-brake. It was a brake that squeezed the drive shaft to stop the car. It saved my butt at least once in the hills of Dubuque. Those were the days of single chamber master cylinders.

    • @punman5392
      @punman5392 7 лет назад +12

      Those were the days when you were lucky if you weren't impaled by the steering column in a head on crash

    • @bradyspace
      @bradyspace 5 лет назад

      ..or don't need safe passenger side access away from traffic in 2018?

  • @SmartassX1
    @SmartassX1 7 лет назад +12

    That was some vacuum cleaner.

  • @sirpuffball6366
    @sirpuffball6366 2 года назад

    What the fuck how are these ancient videos so efficiently educational

  • @henrykoplien1007
    @henrykoplien1007 4 года назад +1

    Wow😳 The handling with such amount of mercury was incredible.

  • @CarminesRCTipsandTricks
    @CarminesRCTipsandTricks 5 лет назад +10

    There's more than I thought involved with the old Three on a Tree!!
    But.... LESS effOrt involved!! 😜

    • @toddburgess6792
      @toddburgess6792 3 года назад +1

      You find out how involved when your tree breaks and it's back to the floor. All I had was 2nd and reverse. I could drive, but only about 30mph, until JCWhitney came to my rescue.

  • @papamike9866
    @papamike9866 4 года назад +4

    You won't see people playing with copious amounts of mercury like that now days. Wow!

  • @emjayay
    @emjayay 3 года назад +2

    I didn't know about those giant post office vacuum tubes. Smaller versions used to be used in department stores and some offices. Chevrolet used vacuum shifters from 1937 or so until 1948. The system often didn't work right though and was dropped after that. But cars since the 1960's (Chryslers then anyway) have used vacuum to open doors directing air in heating/ventilation systems instead of a manual lever.

    • @MisterMikeTexas
      @MisterMikeTexas Год назад +1

      Motor bank drives at bank and credit union branches still use them.

  • @Sandy-oy2lr
    @Sandy-oy2lr 6 лет назад +30

    It's fun to watch these early developments. The engineering was great. But, the execution with assembly line issues and lack of really precise consistency made a lot of this very troublesome. Still, it's super interesting to see how engineering overcame these issues.

    • @artdecotimes2942
      @artdecotimes2942 3 года назад +1

      What are you saying, where did you uncover that pathetic attempt of research. Do you kids hear the things you type at a mental level, or is that your freeforall to educational matters to spew false lies however and whenever you can. Why can't it be both, why do all of you always say the same damn thing "well they look nice, but work not well". They were extremely precise, and had multiple educational pieces you would watch through, measurements of science to the very millionth of a centimeter were put in correct place to mark precisely whereas something is pinpointed to, hell atompointed toward.

  • @davinreeves
    @davinreeves 3 года назад +2

    My first car was a 1960 Plymouth station wagon(in 1990) with push button drive

    • @firebird9711
      @firebird9711 2 года назад

      Those were cool. My gramps had that exact model station wagon. It also had the speedometer which filled up columns in red like liquid filling up little cups. The push buttons were a little awkward to reach though, did it seem to you?

  • @spanishlanguageeducational3737
    @spanishlanguageeducational3737 4 года назад +2

    I love these videos....

  • @freddiemaxwell8959
    @freddiemaxwell8959 10 лет назад +23

    3 on the tree!

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota 3 года назад

      My old pick-up had three-on-the-tree ... I don't think any young person would even know what to do now-a-days.
      It's getting to where my 6-speed Acura at the car wash, only the "old guys" can pull it onto the rack. Most young people never drove a stick.

  • @mauprivas6861
    @mauprivas6861 4 года назад +1

    los que pusieron dislike a estas obras maestras bien explicadas, no deben saber inglés no veo otra razón.

  • @jaswmclark
    @jaswmclark 12 лет назад +10

    This worked great until the seals wore, or the air filter got plugged or failed and allowed grit into the system, or in the winter moisture got in and froze. You could buy a kit to eliminate the vacuum cylender, which I did. Three on the tree was initally an option, at extra cost, then standard from about 1939. About 1960 floor mounted "stick shift" became an optional extra. Such is progress.

    • @davidclark4469
      @davidclark4469 5 лет назад

      I had a 42 Chevy which had been converted to a mechanical clutch , from vacuum. It had a three on the tree and it never seemed hard to shift, to me.

    • @6h471
      @6h471 5 лет назад +1

      David Clark Same here. I had a '41 with vacumn shift. It leaked and didn't work well at all. My dad converted it to straight linkage for me. He said those vacuum shift canisters were a problem practically from new.

  • @thaithai39
    @thaithai39 13 лет назад +3

    Very good,in fact outstanding!

  • @mdogg1604
    @mdogg1604 7 лет назад +13

    Awesome video! Note at the end how the announcer touts "greater safety for all" as mommy puts little junior in the front seat! Today mommy would be cited and maybe charged with child endangerment.

    • @justcarcrazy
      @justcarcrazy 6 лет назад +1

      Then again, there were fewer cars, lower speeds and generally less driving anyways back then.

    • @mendonesiac
      @mendonesiac 5 лет назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing as they tossed junior onto the bench seat. They didn't even have seatbelts back then, but moving the shifter off of the floor made it a safer car for the little ones!
      Thank you Ralph for fighting to save us from ourselves.

    • @Jarl_Thidrandi
      @Jarl_Thidrandi 5 лет назад +3

      That's because the government has become a nanny state and is out of control.

    • @sheputthelimeinthecoconut629
      @sheputthelimeinthecoconut629 5 лет назад +2

      Don’t forget crucified by the media

    • @firebird9711
      @firebird9711 2 года назад

      I wonder how many things people 85 years from now will mock and condemn us for. Probably alot. But we'll be dead so it won't bother us, just like people in 1935 don't give a rats arse what we think either.

  • @AlexanderKrivacsSchrder
    @AlexanderKrivacsSchrder 4 года назад +27

    It says a lot about today's attention spans compared to back then that they didn't even mention their brand or even cars or their invention until more than five minutes of video had passed.

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 4 года назад +5

      It says absolutely nothing about attention spans.
      Go listen to a 30 second radio spot from the era.

    • @Kevin-jb2pv
      @Kevin-jb2pv 2 года назад +1

      It's easy to completely hold someone's attention for as long as you like when they have to sit in a blacked out room/ theater with no cell phones. Also, I think people overestimate how often people just completely zoned out during these types of films whenever the topic was something they had no interest in.

  • @merikmalhads1676
    @merikmalhads1676 Год назад +1

    Considering I've only driven automatic, this is the part which I have no experience of. Still, it is useful to better understand the shifting that is automatically done for me

  • @d-boymiller2392
    @d-boymiller2392 5 лет назад +1

    Super... Old is gold

  • @jeffreyhicks4651
    @jeffreyhicks4651 3 года назад +2

    Wow I learned more in this 11 minute video than I did in 11 years of school i definitely didn't know that is how lightning is formed and the air pressure above and below the wings. I learn so much from these videos it amazes me how much smarter people were back then and how much they knew and how stupid people have become in such a short time and back then they didn't have the answer to pretty much anything they would ever need to know in there hand or pocket as we do now

  • @geoben1810
    @geoben1810 3 года назад +2

    Using and controlling air pressure to produce work is known as pneumatics. Using fluids in the same manner is known as hydraulics. 👍🏻😉

  • @Pertamax7-HD
    @Pertamax7-HD 7 лет назад

    nice gearbox sir

  • @hugolafhugolaf
    @hugolafhugolaf 3 года назад +1

    Back when learning was made cool. I'm still amazed at what these people accomplished with next to nothing.

  • @davidjames666
    @davidjames666 4 года назад +1

    Yep, they had vacuum control gear shifts back in 1938, but audio on the right side bewildered them

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 4 года назад +1

      Mono sound. There was only one speaker or bullhorn.

  • @punjabifreethinker2939
    @punjabifreethinker2939 4 года назад

    I am impressed

  • @baklys
    @baklys 13 лет назад

    Thanks!!

  • @SteveCarras
    @SteveCarras 14 лет назад +2

    They were sure trying to use all kinds of gearshift and clutch tricks in the thirties. Semi-automatic transmissions had somehting like this as well.

  • @YOUGOTIT210
    @YOUGOTIT210 11 лет назад +1

    Great memories -- I remember my dad's 1947 Chevy and him telling me that it had vacuum shift, which was a great improvement over his older Chevy.
    The gear shift on the column has now re-appeared in the form of the paddle shift. There is nothing new under the sun.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk 5 лет назад

      Yea man... Anytime you see something new theres a good chance its been around but due to engineering limitations or metallurgy it isnt reliable.
      4 valves per cylinder and water injection are 2 that popped in my mind.
      4 valves might go back to the teens, its from the 20s at the minimum and water injection came about in the 30s.

    • @hotrodray9884
      @hotrodray9884 5 лет назад

      electrical....
      more crap to ruin a car in 7 yrs.

    • @MisterMikeTexas
      @MisterMikeTexas Год назад

      Did it still have a clutch pedal?

    • @YOUGOTIT210
      @YOUGOTIT210 Год назад

      @@MisterMikeTexas Yes

  • @Robert-xp4ii
    @Robert-xp4ii 5 лет назад +4

    And now we've began making your car a nightmare to work on. 😃 It's cool seeing their thought processes though.

  • @goattactac8790
    @goattactac8790 Год назад +1

    1938年当時に、これだけの解説番組を制作したアメリカが如何に偉大な国だとわかります。

  • @danielbuckner2167
    @danielbuckner2167 5 месяцев назад

    In later years they did away with vacuum assist on 3 on the tree setups. It was funny to hear them say " better safety for all" while putting a toddler in the front with no seat belts and metal everywhere

  • @Rainer67059
    @Rainer67059 9 лет назад +5

    *****
    Very widepread.
    To some extent it was superseded by the automatic transmission. But on the one hand, American cars would have levers for automatic transmission shaped just like this gear lever for many decades. On the other hand the power brakes that would soon be standard in American cars and later also in European cars work by the same principle as this power shifter. They use the sucking power ("Saugkraft") of the engine.
    Also: such a shifting lever was in the Trabant, the one car of the GDR, German Democratic Republic. Although: the lever was longer. I'm not sure whether they used this power system.

  • @johnpaulsartorius9390
    @johnpaulsartorius9390 6 лет назад +49

    Just put the dang shift lever on the floor! Geeze

    • @EnergeticWaves
      @EnergeticWaves 5 лет назад

      John Paul Sartorius exactly

    • @democratsaretheDEVIL
      @democratsaretheDEVIL 4 года назад +3

      My 38 was last year of floor stick, shifts with ease.

    • @rooftopvoter3015
      @rooftopvoter3015 3 года назад

      Install a Lenco and be done with it.

    • @Meinstein
      @Meinstein 3 года назад +2

      I would rather have a short-throw floor shift than all this garbage that is designed to wear out. This is the first of planned obsolescence.

    • @JTLowry
      @JTLowry 3 года назад +2

      3 on the tree was the new hotness

  • @diegoochoa572
    @diegoochoa572 5 лет назад +5

    "Vacu-ohm"
    "eff-ohrt"
    What a time

  • @Pertamax7-HD
    @Pertamax7-HD 5 лет назад

    Ok sir

  • @sargonba2
    @sargonba2 9 лет назад +3

    power steering really changed our lives

  • @curtn7076
    @curtn7076 5 лет назад +1

    Wish Chevy still cared about its buyers like this great explanation video. now Chevy now, quite frankly, doesn't give a damn.

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 4 года назад

      They never cared about anything but your dollars.
      They invented planned obsolescence so you’d throw away your perfectly good car and buy a new one.

    • @democratsaretheDEVIL
      @democratsaretheDEVIL 4 года назад

      I wish they cared about quality still.

  • @wcsii
    @wcsii Месяц назад +1

    I got one lesson in meteorology and one in automotive engineering….

  • @juanrivera-jo4xy
    @juanrivera-jo4xy 10 месяцев назад

    This is when chevy had real engineering and were pioneers to many automotive features or made it better!

  • @johnrroberts7900
    @johnrroberts7900 4 года назад +1

    9:45 - No 'flip of the finger there' - that lady had to muscle it into second!

  • @paulbroderick8438
    @paulbroderick8438 4 года назад +2

    Lady all in a tangle at 5.25!

  • @billhershkowitz5759
    @billhershkowitz5759 Год назад

    As I understand it, when the engine stalled, it was almost impossible to move the shift lever. This was one idea that was interesting, but didn't make much sense, especially once Hydra-Matic and Powerglide were offered...

  • @NoName-ik2du
    @NoName-ik2du 2 года назад +1

    6:01 - "...the most accessible, convenient position: Right alongside the steering wheel."
    And then for some dumb reason auto makers eventually forgot this and moved the thing back to the floor where it could be in the way all over again...

  • @vip01
    @vip01 3 года назад

    They also had vacuum operated windshield wipers for a few years.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 2 года назад

      Perfect vacuum. Sounds like a Democrats head.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 2 года назад

      The vacuum operated wipers were a headache when you tried to climb a tall hill during a storm.

  • @textech4056
    @textech4056 3 года назад +1

    The shifter on top of the transmission is just way to simple. Lets see if we can complicate the hell out of this thing.

  • @42luke93
    @42luke93 2 года назад

    I wish the column shifter didn't have to phase away like it is doing now. I really like that shifter. It died with manual transmissions and now Automatic is phasing away : (

  • @cengeb
    @cengeb Год назад

    Then back to the floor was actually easier and more ergonomic, my current VW Golf R Manual stick of course 6 speed on the floor! 3 on the tree is where i learned how to drive

  • @santiagorubio833
    @santiagorubio833 6 лет назад +2

    Very interesting transmission. But the car of video is a 1939 Chevrolet.

  • @InflatablePlane
    @InflatablePlane 2 года назад

    Looks like one of those missing links between things like the Hydra Matic, Reo's Self Shifter and Hudson's Drive Master.

  • @farisman8675
    @farisman8675 3 года назад

    And that is how we chat each other

  • @YOUGOTIT210
    @YOUGOTIT210 11 лет назад

    I agree.

  • @whitehorse1959
    @whitehorse1959 4 года назад

    10:40 "... and GREATER SAFETY for all". What a way to close off. They wanted to show that a child could now sit right next to the driver and not interfere with the gear-shifting or the park-brake lever. How ironic that they used those words to close off. A Jam Handy Production.

  • @johanrosenberg6342
    @johanrosenberg6342 4 года назад

    I didn't know post was sent with vacuum-tubes. Although email is better, and I don't mind waiting a couple of days for my packages.

  • @geoben1810
    @geoben1810 3 года назад

    Rods and plungers and gears!!! Oh my! 😲

  • @valiroime
    @valiroime Год назад

    Much prefer the gearshift on the floor where the gods intended it to be. I’ve driven a column mount manual Maverick (back when they were cars, not the pretender pickup) back in the late ‘70s and didn’t care for it in the least.

  • @Handiman544
    @Handiman544 11 лет назад +10

    I wish they would have left the headlight dimmer on the floor. It is much more convenient and safer to adjust headlight beams with your foot than with your left hand, that has to remain in basically the same position on the steering wheel to instantly deflect your headlight beam when approaching an on-coming car. The "button" on the left side of the floor was a better idea.

    • @mendonesiac
      @mendonesiac 5 лет назад +1

      I totally agree. When I was a kid they called the stick mount Euro-style. I guess it made your Pontiac feel like a BMW. Then the Japanese decided everything but the hazards should be on a stick or on your steering wheel...I hate it. My dimmer went out on my old 78 k20, and it cost $6 and took me five minutes to replace. I miss it.

    • @davidclark4469
      @davidclark4469 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah, but my wife could never reach the floor dimmer. Ha...

    • @redtra236
      @redtra236 5 лет назад

      Yeah the truck I drive is on the floor. Much better design I see no reason for it to have been moved to the column. On most newer vehicles its the same lever as the turn signal which can result in you accidentally activating your signal.

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 4 года назад

      Good luck finding the floor high beam switch _IN THE DARK!!_
      Or you have to hover your foot over it instead of resting it on the (probably non existent) dead pedal.
      No.. the Japanese made vehicle controls the right way from the beginning... all lights on the left stalk, all wipers on the right stalk. Easy to find. and don’t have to take your hands off the steering wheel to operate them.
      And the proof is how many times American manufacturers changed their layouts until almost universally they follow the Japanese method starting in the early 90s.

  • @Skoda130
    @Skoda130 14 лет назад +1

    And how widespread got this invention actually?

  • @youmeandeveryone5893
    @youmeandeveryone5893 4 года назад +1

    Now we know it's called plasma and it's not empty.

  • @johnmorgan4368
    @johnmorgan4368 4 года назад +6

    Seems like a real Rube Goldberg system. I'll stick with the floor shift.

  • @Jrez
    @Jrez 5 лет назад

    Fewer and fewer cars today are even using vacuum control, everything is electronic. It can help lower costs and gives a greater amount of control, but electronics are always the part of the car that goes first.

    • @hotrodray9884
      @hotrodray9884 5 лет назад

      today vacuum is out because LEAKS screw with the computer and emissions

    • @Jrez
      @Jrez 5 лет назад

      @@hotrodray9884 I'm not saying computers aren't the reasonable choice, just that I appreciate the engineering that went into mechanical engine control more. Like why I prefer carburetor to efi.

    • @firebird9711
      @firebird9711 2 года назад

      Yep, and millions of cars and trucks are sitting in manufacturer storage yards waiting for electronic brains which are in short supply right now.

  • @jamest.5001
    @jamest.5001 3 года назад

    That far advanced in shifting, but still using knee action shocks in 1938, I guess it's better than friction shocks I guess, but changes will be comming, especially after the war years,

  • @kunjupulla
    @kunjupulla 3 года назад

    Was this shown in the TVs or was this a video for attracting investors?

  • @punkly8423
    @punkly8423 4 года назад

    bench seating is a safety feature bring it back

  • @cengeb
    @cengeb Год назад +1

    Even the license plates where simpler

  • @SammyM00782
    @SammyM00782 7 лет назад +2

    I wonder how many people watching this video were talking shit about the women getting in on the passenger side.......forgetting that this was clearly covered in your drivers manual :-). Try that shit today LOL.

    • @rommysoeli
      @rommysoeli 7 лет назад +1

      it still possible on todays car but it require some effort

    • @redtra236
      @redtra236 5 лет назад

      If your vehicle has bench seats no problem but its a pain in the ass with bucket seats.

  • @daviddavidson2357
    @daviddavidson2357 Год назад

    Everyone here talking about how gimmicky and inconvenient column shifting was.
    Car manufacturers today:
    "We now offer two shift lev- uhh paddles on the steering column as an option, it's the future!"

  • @soldtobediers
    @soldtobediers 4 года назад

    Jam Handy to the rescue

  • @helioselexandros
    @helioselexandros 2 года назад

    7:45: 3 on the tree. My papaw taught me yo drive. On thid type of manual transmission.

  • @rommysoeli
    @rommysoeli 7 лет назад

    Sorry but now you can only enter driver seat from it side, in 2015 most manual car put the shift stick back again to the floor, and now most car have center console storage to put your drinks and other things,

  • @miker252
    @miker252 3 месяца назад

    I hope it worked better than those vacuum windshield wiper motors. The idea must not have lasted very long. I started my career as a mechanic in the sixties and have never seen a standard transmission car with that technology.

  • @ADEEZY1926
    @ADEEZY1926 Год назад

    Mind blowing genius creation

  • @MicahAubert-of1ej
    @MicahAubert-of1ej 16 дней назад

    Emergency brake is on the dash wild

  • @rooftopvoter3015
    @rooftopvoter3015 3 года назад

    5:09, dumps mail all over floor. This is why I never get my mail, probably still on the floor at this place.
    6:03, first shift clocks passenger in head.